Rainwater v. Hobieka

38 S.E.2d 495, 208 S.C. 433, 166 A.L.R. 1228, 1946 S.C. LEXIS 98
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedMay 20, 1946
Docket15843
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 38 S.E.2d 495 (Rainwater v. Hobieka) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rainwater v. Hobieka, 38 S.E.2d 495, 208 S.C. 433, 166 A.L.R. 1228, 1946 S.C. LEXIS 98 (S.C. 1946).

Opinion

*435 PER CURIAM:

This is an appeal from an order of Honorable L. D. Lide, Resident Judge of the Twelfth Circuit, which will be reported. The Court is satisfied, from a careful study of the questions presented, that Judge Lide correctly disposed of all issues involved in the case. For the reasons assigned by him in his well-considered order, the judgment below is affirmed. We desire to add only a few brief observations.

After the original lease was executed but before the commencement of the term, the tenant discovered that it would be necessary to expend for repairs and remodeling twice as much as originally contemplated and concluded that such an amount could not be reasonably absorbed during the term of five years designated in the lease. This fact was made’ known to the landlord who then agreed to give the tenant an option to extend the lease for a period of an additional five years. On the faith of this renewal covenant, the tenant expended approximately $3,000.00 for repairs and remodeling and approximately $12,000.00 for equipment and fixtures. These fixtures were specially made for the particular building leased and if removed therefrom, would be of little value. All of the foregoing expenditures were made with the knowledge of the landlord. It is clear that the parties intended that the covenant for renewal should be considered as a part of the original lease and that the two instruments should constitute a single agreement. Months before the original term expired, the landlord, without notice to the tenant and without any inquiry as to whether he desired to exercise the option given him to extend the lease, deliberately undertook to lease the premises to another,' thereby strongly indicating that he did not intend to bargain in good faith with the tenant as to the rent to.be paid for the additional term.

We are, therefore, not called upon to determine whether an executory lease which leaves the rent to be fixed by agreement is unenforceable and void for uncertainty and indefiniteness. Here the tenant has so far performed that he will suffer a serious financial loss unless the Court enforces the *436 option given to him for an extension of the lease. The covenant for renewal was to the tenant a very important feature of the agreement. He was induced thereby to spend approximately $15,000.00 in preparing the building for occupancy and the business was carried on in contemplation of the right of renewal of the lease. Under these circumstances, will the landlord be heard to say, “My agreement is too vague and indefinite to enforce” ? As stated in Edwards v. Tobin, . . . Ore., . . , 284, P. 562, 68 A. L. R., 152, referred to in the order of Judge Tide, “Common sense and justice dictate the answer”.

Messrs. Chiee Justice Baker and Associate Justices Fishburne, Stukes, Taylor and Oxner concur.

Order of Judge Tide:

This is an ejectment proceeding under Section 8813, Code 1942, instituted by the plaintiff above named as landlord against the defendant above named as tenant on December 1, 1945, in the court of B. H. Maynard, Esq., one of the magistrates for Florence County. A notice to show cause was duly issued by the magistrate directed to the defendant requiring him to show cause why he should not be ejected from certain premises, stating that his lease therefor had “expired”; the premises in question being situate on the northeast corner of Dargan and Evans Streets in the City of Florence. The case came on to be tried before the magistrate and a jury upon the return day, to wit, December 5, 1945, and the respective parties were represented by competent counsel.

Counsel for the defendant presented to the court and read at the hearing an elaborate return in his behalf of the rule to show cause, attached to which .as a part thereof are the basic documents concerning the relationship between the parties. Thereupon counsel for the plaintiff interposed a demurrer to the return and moved that the same be rejected and held insufficient, and for judgment on the pleadings. After hearing argument of counsel pro and con the magistrate directed a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for the possession of the premises in question. It will be observed that *437 no evidence whatsoever was adduced at the trial and that the judgment of the magistrate was based solely upon the pleadings. From the judgment of the magistrate the defendant duly appealed to this court, and the appeal was heard by me at my chambers at Marion on December 15, 1945. After argument of counsel for the respective parties the matter was taken under advisement.

From the foregoing statement it is clear that we must first review the defendant’s return in order to understand the issues before the court for determination. And it appears from the original lease attached to the return and dated October 24, 1940, that I. S. Rainwater, the landlord, granted and leased unto N. E. Hobeika, the tenant, the property in question, described as “the ground floor of the building situate on the northeast corner of Dargan and Evans Streets, in the City of Florence, formerly occupied by Stanley Drug Company, fronting on Evans Street 60 feet and on Dargan Street 25 feet”. The term of the lease is stated to be five years from December 1, 1940, up to and including November 30, 1945, and the amount of the rent to be paid is set forth in the lease. The lease is in the usual form and is executed by both of the parties, and is duly probated.

Some time after the lease was executed, to wit, on November 22, 1940, Mr. Rainwater, the landlord, executed and delivered to Mr. Hobeika, the tenant, an addendum to the lease of which the following is a copy:

Florence, South Carolina.

Nov. 22nd, 1940.

It is further understood and agreed that the lessor is to have an option for five additional years at the expiration of the within lease at a price agreed upon at that time.

This is to be attached to the original lease and becomes a part of the lease.

I. S. Rainwater

Witnesses: Mrs. Clif M. Shaw, Nellie Odom.

(It will be observed from a casual reading of the foregoing addendum to the lease that there is a manifest clerical or typographical error therein, that the word “lessor” was *438 obviously intended to be “lessee”, and should be so treated. Indeed, counsel for the plaintiff evidently so regarded it, and hence no reference was made to this matter in argument. )

As directed in the addendum the same was attached to the original lease as a part thereof, and the lease including the same was duly recorded in the clerk’s office for Florence County, on November 25, 1940, in Deed Book 82, at page 95.

It appears from the return that the option granted to the tenant by the landlord in and by the addendum

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Bluebook (online)
38 S.E.2d 495, 208 S.C. 433, 166 A.L.R. 1228, 1946 S.C. LEXIS 98, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rainwater-v-hobieka-sc-1946.