Granva Corporation v. Heyder

139 S.E.2d 77, 205 Va. 660, 1964 Va. LEXIS 232
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 30, 1964
DocketRecord 5799
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 139 S.E.2d 77 (Granva Corporation v. Heyder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Granva Corporation v. Heyder, 139 S.E.2d 77, 205 Va. 660, 1964 Va. LEXIS 232 (Va. 1964).

Opinion

F Anson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This suit was filed by Granva Corporation, plaintiff, to compel specific performance of an agreement to lease certain real property to Dietrich Walter Heyder and Jennette Moore Heyder, defendants herein. The bill alleged that during August, 1962, the defendants entered into an oral agreement with plaintiff’s corporate rental agent to lease certain business property owned by the plaintiff in the city of Norfolk, at an agreed monthly rental, for a period of five years and four months, commencing on September 1, 1962; that the oral agreement was reduced to writing and signed by the defendants and the agent, acting on behalf of the plaintiff, on August 16,, 1962; that defendants delivered to the rental agent their check for $325, representing rent for the month of September, 1962; that several days later the defendant stopped payment on the check and advised plaintiff’s agent that they were cancelling the agreement; that the breach of the contract by the defendants was wrongful, and that plaintiff’s remedy at law was inadequate.

The chancellor sustained a demurrer to the bill on the grounds that the written instrument, which by stipulation of the parties was to be considered in ruling on the demurrer, was intended as a final lease agreement rather than a written memorandum of an oral agreement to make a lease; that it would have been a valid lease, executed in compliance with the statute of conveyances, § 55-2, Code of 1950, 1959 Repl. Vol., if an appropriate corporate seal had been affixed to the instrument pursuant to the requirements of § 5 5-119, Code of 1950, 1959 Repl. Vol.; that plaintiff was not entitled to the equitable relief prayed for; and that plaintiff’s remedy, if any, was at law. Thus plaintiff was- granted leave to amend its bill.

Plaintiff’s amended bill asked for a declaratory judgment of the rights and duties of the parties and specific performance of the rental contract. It alleged,, in addition to the allegations contained in the original bill, that the defendants breached their agreement before plaintiff had a reasonable time to prepare and execute a formal deed *662 of lease or to fix an appropriate corporate seal, properly attested, and to perform any other acts necessary to make the written instrument a proper deed of lease, enforceable at law; and that the written agreement should be construed either as a memorandum of an oral agreement to make a lease, or in the alternative a defectively executed lease, which is regarded in equity as a contract to make a lease.

A demurrer to the amended bill was sustained on the grounds that it contained no additional factual alegations which would entitle plaintiff to the equitable relief prayed for, and the court again granted it leave to transfer this cause to the law side of the court by appropriate amendment to its pleadings (§ 8-138, Code of 1950, 1957 Repl. Vol.). Plaintiff having elected not to transfer the cause to the law side of the court, it was dismissed without prejudice to the right of the plaintiff to proceed by motion for judgment at law, and it asked for and obtained this appeal.

Although the plaintiff made seventeen assignments of error, the basic contentions running through all of them are that the chancellor erred in sustaining defendant’s demurrers and not construing the instrument of August 16, 1962, as an agreement to lease, or in the alternative as a defectively executed contract which is enforceable in equity.

The instrument dated August 16, 1962, is a very comprehensive one. It contains practically every conceivable provision found in leases of property, and also covenants between the plaintiff and its agent relating to the management of the property, but it is here necessary only to state some of its provisions.

Paragraph 2, entitled “Premises,” reads as follows:

“Witnesseth, That Landlord does hereby lease and demise unto Tenant the interior of the following property: 7639 Granby Street, Norfolk, Virginia.”

Paragraph 43, entitled “Execution,” provides:

“This lease is not binding on the Landlord, until it is signed by or on behalf of the Landlord.”

The instrument was signed by the defendants under seal, and on behalf of the plaintiff by its duly authorized corporate rental agent, but neither plaintiff’s corporate seal nor the corporate seal of the rental agent was affixed to it.

Plaintiff contends that the agreement of August 16, 1962, is a written memorandum of an oral agreement for a lease, and that equity may decree specific performance of a contract to lease real property.

*663 It is important, and often quite difficult, to determine whether a particular written instrument is intended as a present lease with the right of possession to commence immediately or in the future, or as a present executory contract to execute a lease in the future. The question is to be determined from the intention of the parties as gathered from the entire, instrument and from the surrounding circumstances. If it is shown that the intention was to part with the possession immediately, or if the agreement of the parties leaves nothing incomplete or to be provided for that is essential for a lease, the agreement is to be regarded as a present demise. Smith v. Payne, 153 Va. 746, 757, 151 S. E. 295, 298; 1 Minor on Real Property (Ribble), § 347, pp. 452, 453, 454; 3 Thompson on Real Property,. 1959 Rep., § 1062, p.229.

When a bill alleges that the parties entered into a contract for a lease and the instrument relied on states a present demise, the bill is fatal on demurrer because of ambiguity. 3 Thompson on Real Property, 1959 Rep., supra.

It is perfectly manifest from the provisions of the instrument under consideration that it was intended by the parties as a present demise with possession to commence on a certain date in futuro. The provision “That Landlord does hereby lease and demise unto the tenant” the property at 7639 Granby Street, Norfolk, Virginia,, contains apt words of a present demise. Other provisions of the agreement stipulating the term, rent, and manner of occupation of the premises show that there was nothing left for the parties to agree upon which would be essential to make it other than a present demise. The instrument would have been valid as a lease if the statute of conveyances, Code § 55-2, had been complied with. This statute reads:

“No estate of inheritance or freehold or for a term of more than five years in lands shall be conveyed unless by deed or will * #

The demurrer to the original bill was properly sustained because it alleged a contract to lease but the instrument made a part of the pleadings stated a present demise.

Plaintiff admits in its amended bill that the instrument of August 16, 1962, does not comply with the Code provision for the signature of deeds by a corporation. See § 55-119, Code of 1950, 1959 Repl. Vol.

But it argues that even if the instrument was intended as a present demise which was not executed pursuant to statute and thus is unenforceable at law, then it should be construed as a defectively executed

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
139 S.E.2d 77, 205 Va. 660, 1964 Va. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/granva-corporation-v-heyder-va-1964.