Intrepid, Inc. v. Bennett

176 So. 3d 775, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 451, 2015 WL 5158397
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 3, 2015
DocketNo. 2014-CA-00999-SCT
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 176 So. 3d 775 (Intrepid, Inc. v. Bennett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Intrepid, Inc. v. Bennett, 176 So. 3d 775, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 451, 2015 WL 5158397 (Mich. 2015).

Opinions

DICKINSON, Presiding Justice,

for the Court:

¶ 1. A lease agreement included a five-year renewal provision but failed to specify the rent to be paid during the renewal period. So the circuit judge granted a judgment on the pleadings, finding the renewal provision unenforceable. We affirm.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

¶ 2. Craigside Leasing Corporation leased two tracts of farm land — the 836-acre T.J. Carter Place (“Carter”) and the 1,975-acre Craigside Place (“Craig-side”) — to Intrepid, Inc., for a thirteen-year''term beginning April 1, 1997, and ending December 31, 2009. The annual rent of $81,500 for Carter and $120,000 [777]*777for Craigside was payable in semiannual installments, and the two lease agreements contained identical extension or renewal options:

Lessor hereby gives and grants unto Lessee ... the right and option to lease said lands for two (2) additional five year terms as follows: If not in default under the terms and conditions Of this lease, a five (5) year extension period beginning January 1, 2010, and ending on December 31, 2014, upon the same terms, except that the rental to be paid by Lessee to Lessor shall be re-negotiated and may increase by the amount of increase from April 1,1997, to January 1, 2009, in land rent customary in the area for similar property; and thereafter, if not in default under the terms and conditions of this lease, Lessee shall have the right and option to renew this lease for an additional five (5) year term beginning January 1, 2015, and ending December 31, 2019, upon the same terms and conditions set forth herein, except that the rental to be paid by Lessee to Lessor shall be re-negotiated and may increase by the amount of increase from January 1, 2009, to January 1, 2014, in land rent customary in the area for similar property. ... It is specifically understood and agreed that all options to renew herein granted shall automatically take effect unless Lessee notifies Lessor in writing of his intention not to renew prior to September 1st of the last year of his primary term or of the fifth year of any extended or option term as provided herein.

¶ 3. In October 2008, near the end of the initial lease term, Joseph S. Asa Bennett bought the land from Craigside Leasing subject to the two leases. In early 2009, Bennett and Intrepid began renegotiating the lease for the five-year renewal period as required by the contract. Bennett wanted to increase the annual rent for Carter to $175 per acre, or $146,300, and for Craigside to $145 per acre, or $286,375. Intrepid balked at Bennett’s price and offered to have an arbitrator determine what the rent should be, but Bennett refused.

¶ 4. On March 9 and 16, 2010, Intrepid tendered the same semiannual rent payments it had paid for the last thirteen years for both leases. Bennett rejected Intrepid’s,payments and declared the leases terminated.

¶5. On February 14, 2013, Intrepid sued Bennett for breach of contract, attaching both- lease contracts to its complaint. Bennett filed an answer, and a motion for judgment on the pleadings, arguing that the options were unenforceable as a matter of law because (1) the rent during the renewal terms was unstated and (2) the options provided no reasonable means to determine the rent. Intrepid argued in response that (1) the options had been exercised automatically because it had not notified Bennett that it would not renew, (2) the options contained the minimal rent- for- the new term, and (3) the options provided a reasonable formula to determine ■ the new rent through which a certified real estate appraiser could calculate a reasonable rent based on land in the area.

¶ 6. The circuit court granted Bennett’s motion for judgment on the pleadings, noting in its ruling that:

The [cjourt has reviewed the leases in this ease and finds that the renewal options are nugatory based on the fact that they lack the essential element of price. Furthermore, because the leases leave the renewal rental to be fixed by future agreement between the parties, ■they are unenforceable and void for uncertainty and indefiniteness.

¶ 7. Intrepid then timely appealed, raising a single issue:

[778]*778Whether the [t]rial [c]ourt committed reversible error, as a matter of law, in ruling that language providing for a possible upward modification of rentals in an ongoing agricultural lease was not specific enough to be enforceable where the base amount for the rental was set forth as well as a method whereby any amount to be paid above the base rental could be ascertained by reference to the increase, if any, “in land rent customary in the area for similar property” during the first term of the lease, with the possible increase in rental above the base not to take into consideration the improvements placed on the property at the expense of the lessee?

ANALYSIS

¶ 8. We review a circuit court’s grant of a judgment on the pleadings de novo,1 and questions of law, like the enforceability of a contract made an exhibit to a plaintiffs complaint, may properly be decided through a motion for judgment on the pleadings.2

¶ 9. The law that controls this case is well-settled: “This Court has long recognized that an agreement must be definite and certain in order to be enforceable.”3 We have explained this rule as follows:

[Ujnless an agreement to make a future contract is definite and certain upon all the subjects to be embraced, it is nugatory. To be enforceable, a contract to enter into a future contract must specify all its material and essential terms and leave none to be agreed upon as the result of future negotiations. Where a final contract fails to express some matter, as, for instance, a time of payment, the law may imply the intention of the parties; but where a preliminary contract leaves certain terms to be agreed upon for the purpose of a final contract, there can be no implication of what the parties will agree upon. If any essential term is left open to future consideration, there is no binding contract, and an agreement to reach an agreement imposes no obligation on the parties thereto.4

¶ 10. We further have explained that “while courts may supply reasonable terms which the parties omitted in the contracting process, such as a time for performance, essential terms such as price cannot be left as open-ended questions in contracts which anticipate some future agreement.” 5

¶ 11. Like the price amount in a sales contract, the rental amount in a lease contract is an essential and basic requirement. “In black letter law, a lease is a transfer of an interest in and possession of property for a prescribed period of time in exchange for an agreed consideration called ‘rent.’ ”6 Without a definite agree[779]*779ment as to the amount of rental, there can be no binding lease.contract.

¶ 12. This lease option contains no definite method to determine the rent upon renewal. The option, by its very terms, required that rent “shall be renegotiated,” and its uncertain formula for determining the amount of increase made this task impossible. The option clause was merely an agreement to reach an agreement in the future, which is no agreement at all.7

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176 So. 3d 775, 2015 Miss. LEXIS 451, 2015 WL 5158397, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intrepid-inc-v-bennett-miss-2015.