Severance v. Heyl & Patterson, Inc.

162 A. 171, 308 Pa. 101, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 584
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 17, 1932
DocketAppeal, 53
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 162 A. 171 (Severance v. Heyl & Patterson, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Severance v. Heyl & Patterson, Inc., 162 A. 171, 308 Pa. 101, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 584 (Pa. 1932).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

Judgment was entered in this case on a confession of judgment in an agreement of lease between the plaintiff, F. W. Severance, trustee, lessor, and the defendant, Heyl & Patterson, Inc., the lessee. The articles of agreement were signed in April, 1920. It demised premises located in Pittsburgh, Pa. The term began on the first day of May, 1920, and was for a period of three years.

The consideration was payable quarterly, and was divided into three kinds: (1) $3,340.50 on the first day of each and every quarter beginning with May 1, 1920; (2) the amount of taxes levied after January 1, 1920, and before the end of the term on any machinery or other fixtures placed on the premises by the lessee; and (3) the amount by which the taxes levied on the leased premises for any tax year during the term exceeded the taxes levied on the leased premises for the tax year 1920. In only one instance was it provided that only one-third of such excess of taxes should be payable. This was in the year that the lease terminated, 1923, unless there should be an agreement or agreements to continue the lease or unless there was a holding-over. It was also agreed that these “rents which were measured by the excess taxes” were to be paid as soon as the respective taxes became payable.

*104 It was further agreed between the parties “that any agreement to continue the tenancy without mention of the terms on which the premises are to be held, or a holding over after the expiration of the term with the consent of the lessor, shall be a renewal of this lease, with all the covenants, for the term of one year only from the expiration of the term and so on for every year thereafter, during which such tenancy shall be continued, or holding over take place. Provided that in any such case of holding over, the stated annual rent shall be paid in equal quarter-yearly installments, in advance, beginning May 1st, and said further rent measured by the excess taxes shall be two-thirds of such excess for the tax year current at the beginning of the additional term of one year and one-third of such excess for the tax year current at the end of such additional year; and provided further that unless one of the parties hereto gives the other written notice prior to May 1,1922, that there will be no renewal of this lease, it is agreed that both parties shall be bound to a renewal of this lease for one year from May 1,1923, on the terms above stated, except that this provision which effects a renewal on default of notice shall apply to the one instance only and shall not itself be renewed.”

The lease was in force under these terms on January 21, 1931, and up to and including this date all classes of rents were paid to the plaintiff strictly according to the agreement. On January 21, 1931, the trustee billed the defendant for the excess of city and school taxes for the tax year of 1931 (the excess being over the assessment for 1920) and the tenant paid this.

The plaintiff contends that this payment of the taxes for the eight months from May 1, 1931, was a renewal of the lease for the term of one year beginning May 1, 1931. The defendant contends that the payment of the two-thirds of the taxes (covering the period from May 1st, to December 31, 1931) “was applicable to the first eight months of an additional term beginning May 1, *105 1931, in the event that the tenant elected to hold over for such additional term.”

Notice was given to the landlord by the tenant in March of 1931, of its intention not to renew the lease for the year beginning May 1,1931, and before April 30, 1931, the defendant had vacated the premises. Thereupon the plaintiff entered this judgment, and a petition was filed to open it.

The court below discharged the rule to open judgment and permitted the judgment to stand upon the ground that the payment of the tax for the entire year of 1931, renewed the lease for the entire year. The court below said that the question involved “is whether the rendering of the bill for taxes which were made rent covered the entire year, and the payment of the entire bill without more, is an agreement to continue the tenancy.” And, in answering the question, said: “The rendering of the bill is an offer and the payment by the tenant for the full year is an acceptance. It was so treated for seven years.”

The lease itself provides that it may be renewed “for the term of one year only from the expiration of the term and so on for every year thereafter” by two methods: (1) “An agreement to continue the tenancy,” or (2) “A holding over.” The tenant did not hold over after April 30, 1931, and did not agree to continue the tenancy after that date, unless the payment of excess taxes in January, 1931, be so construed. The court below inferred an agreement to renew the term after April 30, 1931, from the mere fact that the tenant paid in January, 1931, a sum equivalent to the excess of the 1931 city taxes on the 1920 taxes on this property.

We hold that the payment of this excess by the tenant did not as a matter of law amount to an agreement to continue the lease then in force for the term of one year beginning May 1, 1931, as the landlord alleged in his affidavit.

*106 When the renewal of a lease beyond its stated term depends on an act of the tenant, this mast be an act of which he has the choice of performance or of nonperformance. For example, in the case before us, the tenant could (1) enter into an agreement with the landlord to continue the tenancy or he could decline to do so; (2) he could hold over or move out. But as he was in possession of the leased premises in January, 1931, and wished to remain in possession until April 30, 1931, he had no choice about paying in January, 1931, a sum equal to the excess of the city taxes for 1931 over the city taxes for 1920, since the 1931 city taxes were then payable and the lease expressly provided that “further rents, which are measured by taxes, to be paid whenever and as soon as the respective taxes may become payable.” The payment of this excess sum in January, 1931, was a condition of the tenant’s remaining in possession during the then current term; it was in no sense a quid pro quo for a renewal of the lease for another year beginning May 1, 1931. Unless the tenant violated the express term of the lease, he had no choice in January, 1931, as to the payment or nonpayment of the excess city taxes for the year 1931 when the landlord rendered him a bill for the same as he did in the month of January in that year.

The landlord in this proceeding is attempting to import legal significance to the mere payment of “rent” due in January, 1931, which the lease nowhere gives to that act. If the tenant had the right to pay in January only Vi2 or % of the excess taxes of 1931 and had voluntarily paid the entire excess, there might be some logical basis for the inference that the payment of the entire sum by the tenant and its acceptance by the landlord constituted an agreement to renew the lease beyond the then current term, but the tenant had no such right to pay a fractional part of the excess taxes; under the lease on which depended his tenancy up to the end of the then current term, he had to pay all of such excess taxes when *107

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 A. 171, 308 Pa. 101, 1932 Pa. LEXIS 584, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/severance-v-heyl-patterson-inc-pa-1932.