David Meyers, Inc. v. Anderson

739 P.2d 102, 48 Wash. App. 381
CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedJuly 6, 1987
Docket17110-1-I
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 739 P.2d 102 (David Meyers, Inc. v. Anderson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
David Meyers, Inc. v. Anderson, 739 P.2d 102, 48 Wash. App. 381 (Wash. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

*382 Andersen, J. *

Facts of Case

Two real estate brokerage firms 1 appeal a summary judgment dismissing their action to recover a real estate brokerage commission and for tortious third party interference with a contractual relationship. We reverse and remand.

The owners 2 of the Butterworth Building located at 1921 First Avenue in Seattle gave the right of first refusal to purchase their building to a lessee 3 occupying three floors of their building under a 5-year lease. The lease provided in this regard as follows:

Sale of Butterworth Building. If during the lease term hereof, Lessor receives an offer for the purchase of the Butterworth Building which it wishes to accept, it shall not do so without first giving Lessee written notice thereof stating the name of the purchaser and the purchase terms and conditions. Lessee shall have ten (10) days from the receipt of such notice within which to determine whether it wishes to purchase the building at the same terms and conditions and, if it does, to advise Lessor in writing thereof. If Lessee so elects to purchase the building and so timely advises Lessor thereof, the sale shall be closed within the time period provided in the third party's offer at an escrow agent satisfactory to Lessor, with Lessee paying all closing costs. If Lessee does not so timely elect to purchase, Lessor shall be free to sell the Building to the third party offeror on terms no less favorable than those contained in the notice to Lessee.

(Italics ours.)

*383 Beginning in March 1982, there were ongoing discussions between the building owners and the lessee on the possibility of the lessee buying the building. Then in June 1982, the owners entered into a written 90-day listing agreement with one of the brokers herein 4 whereby the owners agreed to pay the broker a 5 percent commission if the broker procured a purchaser for the building. A month later, on July 19,1982, and apparently without reference to any sales activities by the broker, the lessee made a written offer to the owners to buy the building for $450,000. The owners did not accept this offer.

Then in October 1982, the original broker along with a cobroker 5 submitted a $600,000 offer for the building on behalf of Michael M. Fleming. This offer was by means of a signed earnest money agreement which also provided that the cobrokers would divide a 5 percent commission if and when a sale to Fleming closed. The owners signed their acceptance of this earnest money agreement on October 15, 1982. Shortly thereafter, however, the owners sold the building not to Fleming who had been procured by the brokers, but to the lessee, and not for the $600,000 offered by Fleming, but for a real sales price of $570,000. Thereupon the brokers brought this action.

One ultimate issue is determinative of this appeal.

Issue

Did the lessee properly exercise its right of first refusal to purchase the building on the "same terms and conditions" as the third party offer where the lessee's offer to purchase did not include the brokerage commission that would have been payable under the terms of the third party offer?

Decision

Conclusion. Lessee's failure to include the amount of the brokerage commission in its offer to the owners precluded *384 its offer from constituting a proper exercise of its right of first refusal. To be effective, the exercise of the right of first refusal must ordinarily be the same in all material respects as the terms and conditions contained in a third party offer to purchase.

To determine the brokers' rights in this matter, we look to the terms of the earnest money agreement signed by the third party, Mr. Fleming (which was also signed on behalf of the brokers), and accepted in writing by the owners on October 15, 1982. This is because the Fleming agreement specifically provides that it "supercedes all agreements, both written and verbal, made prior to the date hereof" and "constitutes a complete agreement". 6

All parties to the Fleming earnest money agreement were aware of the lessee's right of first refusal. The agreement recognized this and by its terms provided that the offer therein was subject to the lessee's refusal. The agreement also provided:

In the event [the lessee] exercise [s] their first right of refusal and agree to purchase the property under the terms and conditions recited herein, then this offer shall become null and void and Purchaser [Fleming] and Sellers [owners] shall have no further obligation to each other.

The validity of lease clauses giving lessees a first option privilege or purchase preference is well recognized in this state. 7 "A lease provision for a first option to purchase, or right of pre-emption or first refusal, imports a preferential right of the lessee to purchase the leased premises at the same price and on the same terms as contained in an offer from a third person acceptable to the lessor; . . ." (Italics *385 ours.) 8 To be effective, a lessee's exercise of its right of first refusal cannot vary in any material respect from the third party's offer. 9

Here, the lessee's lease gave it the right to elect to purchase the building on "the same terms and conditions" as those contained in the Fleming earnest money agreement. That earnest money agreement recognized this right and provided that if the lessee purchased the property "under the terms and conditions" of the earnest money agreement, the earnest money agreement would be null, void and not binding on the parties thereto. Had the lessee actually matched the $600,000 purchase price in the Fleming earnest money agreement, that would have been the end of the matter, and the brokers who procured the Fleming offer would not have been entitled to any commission. The lessee did not match that price, however. The lessee actually paid only $570,000, which the owners accepted.

As the record conclusively demonstrates, the owners and lessee simply got together, reduced the purchase price by the amount of the brokers' fee ($30,000), and consummated the sale of the building to the lessee. The owners then refused to pay the brokers' fee. This they claimed the right to do. We disagree. Although there is some authority to the contrary, 10 the view taken by the clear majority of jurisdictions is that recently summarized in 2 M. Friedman, Leases § 15.6, at 816 (2d ed. 1983):

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
739 P.2d 102, 48 Wash. App. 381, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/david-meyers-inc-v-anderson-washctapp-1987.