Colyear v. Tobriner

62 P.2d 741, 7 Cal. 2d 735, 109 A.L.R. 191, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 703
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 25, 1936
DocketS. F. 15495
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 62 P.2d 741 (Colyear v. Tobriner) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colyear v. Tobriner, 62 P.2d 741, 7 Cal. 2d 735, 109 A.L.R. 191, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 703 (Cal. 1936).

Opinion

SEAWELL, J.

Plaintiff brought this action to obtain a judicial determination that he had exercised an option to renew contained in a lease of premises in San Francisco *737 owned by defendants, and was entitled to possession of said premises for a term of two years. From a judgment which decreed that plaintiff had not exercised said option, and that defendants and cross-complainants should be restored to possession, plaintiff prosecutes this appeal.

The lease in question was executed by one Kurz, then owner of the property, for a term of one year expiring on May 9,1934, at a monthly rental of $45. The option to renew is as follows: “It is hereby agreed that the Lessee upon expiration of this lease have a two year option to renew this lease at a monthly rental not to exceed 20% increase of the present rental basis.” It is agreed between the parties that this provision gave the lessee an option to renew the lease for a two-year term, the option to be exercised before expiration of the one-year lease period. Plaintiff conducted a shop on the leased premises for the sale of automobile accessories under the name of Colyear Motor Sales Company. Said shop was one of a number conducted by plaintiff in various cities in this state.

Defendants Mathew 0. Tobriner and Oscar Tobriner purchased the property on or about February 2, 1934. The firm of Madison & Burke, real estate brokers in San Francisco, handled the transaction. Said firm and Kurz, the lessor, notified plaintiff after the sale to the Tobriners to remit the monthly rent payments to Madison & Burke. Plaintiff complied with this request. Madison & Burke regularly deducted a collection commission, and sent their checks for the balance to the Tobriners.

On February 16, 1934, almost three months before the lease was to expire, Mr. Dean Morrison, an employee of the firm of Madison & Burke, wrote to plaintiff as follows: “The new owners of your store at First Avenue and Geary Street have asked us to inquire of you if you intend to exercise the option provided for in your existing lease.

“Will you kindly notify us at your earliest convenience, as to your intentions.”

Morrison testified that the defendant in fact had not asked him to ascertain plaintiff’s intention with regard to the renewal; that he made the inquiry of his own initiative because if plaintiff did not wish to renew, he had another prospective tenant. In reply to Morrison’s letter, Mr. F. B. *738 Nolen, for plaintiff, wrote to Madison & Burke as follows on February 19: “It is our intention, and you may consider this a notice, that we will exercise our option at the First Avenue and Geary Street location, which I believe to been a two year basis.

“This answers your note of February the 16th and please advise if any further notice is necessary to the new owners. ’ ’

On February 22, Mr. Nolen sent another letter by registered mail as follows: “This will be a notice that we will renew the lease by exercising our option on the expiration date, May the 9th, and we assume the monthly rental will remain the same, as conditions do not warrant any change, as I think you will agree.”

It is upon these two letters, written before the expiration of the lease term, that plaintiff relies to establish an exercise of the option to renew. The court found that in the circumstances shown plaintiff had not exercised the option. Defendant Mathew Tobriner testified that he refused this offer of plaintiff, communicated to him by Morrison of the real estate firm, to pay a monthly rental of $45 for a renewal, as he had a right to do, since the option authorized the lessor to demand an increased rental not to exceed $54 monthly. Said defendant directed Morrison to inform plaintiff that he had not exercised the option by offering to pay $45 a month; that defendants would not renew the lease for a rental of less than $54 a month; but that plaintiff could remain in possession after expiration of the term in May as a tenant from month to month for $45 until defendants should elect to terminate the tenancy.

Morrison testified that he informed Mr.' Nolen and Mr. Pimentel, manager of plaintiff’s shop in San Francisco, of Tobriner’s decision, including his offer that plaintiff might remain in possession upon a month to month basis at $45 a month after expiration of the lease term. Mr. Nolen and Mr. • Pimentel denied that Morrison had informed them in accordance with this testimony. By its judgment for defendants, the trial court resolved all conflicts in the evidence in favor of defendants.

Plaintiff continued to pay monthly rental of $45 through December 9, 1934, the last payment being made on November 6th. Plaintiff attempted to make a payment of $45 on or about December 10th, but it was refused. Subsequent to the *739 expiration of the term on May 9, 1934, further correspondence took place between those in charge of plaintiff’s business and Madison & Burke and defendant Mathew Tobriner, who represented his father, defendant Dr. Oscar Tobriner. The court'found that notwithstanding plaintiff had not exercised the option to renew before expiration of the term, defendants offered to accept a rental of $54 monthly in October, 1934, but plaintiff’s agents said that plaintiff was unwilling to pay a monthly rental in excess of $50, to which defendants would not agree.

The option provision clearly gave the lessor the right to demand a 20 per cent increase, that is, a monthly rental of $54, as a condition to renewal of the lease. (Wright v. Kaynor, 150 Mich. 7 [113 N. W. 779]; Heyward v. Willmart h, 87 App. Div. 125 [84 N. Y. Supp. 75] ; Sun Print. & Pub. Association v. Remington P. & P. Co., 201 App. Div. 3 [193 N. Y. Supp. 698]; in the Court of Appeals, 235 N. Y. 338 [139 N. E. 470]; Bettens v. Hoover, 12 Cal. App. 313 [107 Pac. 329].) If plaintiff informed defendants that he was willing to renew the lease only if defendants would continue the rental at $45, and defendants replied that they would renew the lease only if plaintiff would agree to pay $54 monthly, and plaintiff did not so agree, then plaintiff did not exercise the option.

The letters of February 19th and 22d, written by Mr. Nolen, authorized agent and employee of plaintiff, when considered together, are somewhat ambiguous. In both letters Nolen states that plaintiff will exercise the option, but the letter of February 22d is qualified by this statement: “We assume the monthly rental will remain the same, as conditions do not warrant any change, as I think you will agree. ’ ’ By this statement did Nolen mean that the plaintiff exercised the option in any event and would pay $54 a month if defendants demanded that sum, but merely expressed the hope that the rent would not be increased? Or did he mean that plaintiff exercised the option only on condition that defendants would consent to a monthly rental of $45 for the renewal? The testimony of defendant Mathew Tobriner, an attorney at law, indicates that he placed the latter construction on plaintiff’s letters as their contents were communicated by Morrison to him.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.2d 741, 7 Cal. 2d 735, 109 A.L.R. 191, 1936 Cal. LEXIS 703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colyear-v-tobriner-cal-1936.