Qureshi v. Fiske Capital Management, Inc.

796 N.E.2d 459, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 463, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1029
CourtMassachusetts Appeals Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 2003
DocketNos. 01-P-1721 & 02-P-1163
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 796 N.E.2d 459 (Qureshi v. Fiske Capital Management, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Appeals Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Qureshi v. Fiske Capital Management, Inc., 796 N.E.2d 459, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 463, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1029 (Mass. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

Kass, J.

Joan V. Qureshi launched this litigation with a preemptive strike against Fiske Capital Management, Inc. (Fiske), in Superior Court on August 11, 2000, some eleven months after Fiske, her landlord, had broken off negotiations on a new lease for the premises Qureshi had occupied since 1986 at 20 North Main Street, Sherbom. The premises contained 937 square feet, and Qureshi conducted her practice of dentistry there. Her complaint alleged various breaches of the lease and, particularly, the covenant of quiet enjoyment. Fiske counterclaimed for a declaration that Qureshi’s status was that of a tenant at sufferance and that she was liable to it for use and occupation.

In the wake of a decision by a Superior Court judge that Qureshi occupied the premises as a tenant at sufferance, a judge of the District Court entered a judgment of possession for Fiske in a summary process action (G. L. c. 239) brought by Fiske. Qureshi took an appeal from the summary process judgment to the Appellate Division of the District Court. The Appellate Division decided that the District Court judge had properly regarded the Superior Court judgment about the status of Qureshi as a tenant at sufferance as having preclusive effect. The Appellate Division, accordingly, affirmed the judgment of possession in favor of Fiske. Qureshi has further appealed from both the Appellate Division’s decision and the judgment of the Superior Court that she is a tenant at sufferance. We affirm.

Qureshi first occupied the dental office premises by assignment of a written lease. The five-year term of that lease ended September 31, 1989, but contained an option to extend the lease, provided that the tenant was not in material default. Rent was to be adjusted on the basis of market, and there was machinery to decide market rent through third-party appraisal should the parties not agree. What the rent should be is a subject [465]*465on which the parties have, in fact, always been able to agree. Qureshi timely exercised the option to extend the lease and, indeed, the then owners of the property (Fiske had not yet acquired it) acknowledged exercise of the extension option in an instrument captioned “Amendment to Lease.” That document confirmed the dates of the extension term (starting August 1, 1989, and ending July 31, 1994) and set forth the rent during the extension term (there was an increase each year). The lease amendment also provided for a further extension option of five years, running from August 1, 1994, to July 31, 1999.

By letter dated July 15, 1994, Qureshi gave notice of the exercise of the further extension option. Fiske, which now owned the property where Qureshi was a tenant, acknowledged the extension by letter dated July 18, 1994, in which Fiske spelled out the adjusted rental schedule for each of the five years (again there was an increase every year) from August, 1994, through July, 1999. The Fiske letter spoke in terms of “lease renewal” and granted Qureshi “the option to renew for the following five years under the existing lease terms.”

An option to renew is not the same as an option to extend. An option to extend entitles the optionee to extend the lease on the terms and conditions of the original lease subject, frequently, to a provision for adjusted rents. Exercise of the option to extend automatically continues the old lease without the necessity of executing a new lease. An option to renew contemplates the execution of a new lease, a process which may introduce new terms and conditions on which the parties must agree or there will be no new lease. See HLM Realty Corp. v. Morreale, 394 Mass. 714, 715-716 (1985); Ingram v. Sonitrol Security Sys. of Worcester, Inc., 11 Mass. App. Ct. 754, 756-757 (1981); Anderson v. Lissandri, 19 Mass. App. Ct. 191, 194-195 (1985). See also Schwartz, Lease Drafting in Massachusetts, §§ 5.4.1 — 5.4.5 (Bloom & Glazer rev. ed. 2001). An option to extend is much stronger medicine so far as the tenant is concerned.

The difference between “extend” and “renew” is a legal nicety of which nonlawyers are likely to be unaware. HLM Realty Corp. v. Morreale, supra at 716. Such was apparently the case with George F. Fiske, Jr., who wrote on behalf of [466]*466Fiske, because he speaks of an option to renew but adds “under the existing lease terms,” language which describes an option to extend. Indeed, the parties treated the August 1, 1994, through July 31, 1999, term as an extension of the old lease. They did not make a new one. In determining whether parties intended to extend under the terms of the existing lease or to negotiate a new one, courts look more to all the circumstances of the lease and the conduct of the parties than to the choice of the word “extend” or “renew.” Ibid.

What had been a cordial and uneventful landlord-tenant relation turned chilly in August, 1997, when the well that supplied water to 20 North Main Street ran dry. Under the lease, landlord was to supply water. For seven to nine days, of which five were business days, there was no water to the premises. After Fiske had the well dug deeper, water supply resumed. There were questions, however, about the quality of the water. The governing lease warranted that “the well water now serving the premises is tested and approved by the appropriate authorities” and obtaining those tests took additional time. Qureshi found it necessary to install a bottled water system in January, 1998, at a cost of $2,248. In March of that year she began withholding rent until she recovered that amount.

Qureshi’s occupancy continued. There were conversations between the parties and at least one letter from Qureshi’s lawyer to Fiske. On January 27, 1999, Qureshi wrote to Fiske “to notify you again of my intent to exercise the renewal of my lease to Suite 160.” Although she used “renewal” rather than “extension,” we do not place much weight on her choice of words because she is not a lawyer. There is, however, a sentence in her letter purporting to exercise her option in which she asks to “discuss this matter,” suggesting that there are things about her tenancy that she wishes to negotiate going forward. Fiske, on its part, had not given up on recovering the withheld rent.

Fiske, around July 13, 1999, sent to Qureshi a new lease, captioned “Standard Form Commercial Lease” on a printed form published by the Greater Boston Real Estate Board. Among the nonstandard provisions added in handwriting were a new rent schedule for the next five-year term; a further five-[467]*467year extension option; some undertakings by landlord as to new floor covering and wall repair; an undertaking by landlord not to rent space in the building to anyone else for the practice of general dentistry; and a requirement that tenant pay to landlord the withheld $2,248. Obviously, the parties had talked.

Qureshi sent the new lease to her lawyer, who responded on September 8, 1999, with a letter to Fiske with seventeen proposed alterations, some of which were mechanical (e.g., that the description of the leased premises should state that they consist of 937 square feet) and some of which were material.

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Bluebook (online)
796 N.E.2d 459, 59 Mass. App. Ct. 463, 2003 Mass. App. LEXIS 1029, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/qureshi-v-fiske-capital-management-inc-massappct-2003.