Seward v. Weeks

274 N.E.2d 813, 360 Mass. 410, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 732
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 8, 1971
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 274 N.E.2d 813 (Seward v. Weeks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seward v. Weeks, 274 N.E.2d 813, 360 Mass. 410, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 732 (Mass. 1971).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Seward and bis wife, under a written lease (the 1954 lease), leased from Mrs. Weeks and her late husband land in Chilmark (the locus) for one year beginning on November 1, 1954. It was provided "that thereafter this lease shall be automatically renewed for nine . . . additional one year peiiod(s) unless the . . . Lessee [Sewards] shall give to the Lessor [Weeks and his wife] thirty . . . days written notice to the contraiy prior to the expiration of the . . . period or of any renewal peiiod. Upon expiration of the . . . additional renewal period(s) this lease shall continue thereafter from year to year unless eithei *411 Lessee or Lessor shall give the other 120 days notice (written) prior to the commencement of any yearly renewal period/' There was a further provision (for convenience hereafter called “the first refusal article ’) which reads, “In the event of a contemplated sale during the demised term of the said real estate [the locus] . . . the Lessor agrees to give to the Lessee a notice in writing at least sixty . . . days before the contemplated sale of the substance of the terms upon which it is proposed to be made . . . and thereafter within sixty . . . days from the . . . mailing of said notice the Lessee shall have the right to purchase said premises [the locus] upon the terms and conditions proposed, and on failure of the Lessee to exercise such option within the time aforesaid the option hereby granted to the Lessee shall be . . . cancelled” (emphasis supplied). The lease contains a covenant by the lessor for the lessee’s quiet enjoyment of the locus “for the . . . term or any extension thereto.” The lease was recorded in the registry of deeds in 1962. The principal issue before us is the interpretation of the italicized language in the first refusal article.

Weeks and his wife on - March 11, 1968, entered into a written option agreement with Lewis G. King, also a defendant, regarding a sale on December 31, 1968, of the locus and certain other property. About April 18, 1968, the Sewards came to believe that Weeks and his wife “were considering . . . selling . . . [to King] property . . . which included the” locus. The Sewards thereupon notified Weeks and bis wife that the former “wished to know the terms of the arrangement so that they could . . . consider exercising their option to purchase.” They also mailed a copy of their letter to King and notified him that they intended to purchase the locus. 1

On June 18, 1968, Mrs. Weeks, by her attorney, sent Seward a notice to terminate the lease on October 31, 1968. *412 On June 24, 1968, the Sewards, by their attorney, notified the attorney for Mrs. Weeks that they intended to exercise their option to purchase. On Septemper 4,1968, the Sewards brought this bill in equity against Mrs. Weeks and King, among other things, (a) to enjoin Mrs. Weeks 2 from evicting them from the locus and from taking any action to sell or transfer it, and (b) to prevent King from taking any action to purchase the locus. The case was heard on a partial statement of agreed facts, and also on testimony and exhibits. 3 A final decree was entered declaring (1) the first refusal article to have been binding on Mrs. Weeks when she (and her husband) “entered into a contemplated sale of the” locus to King and (2) that Mrs. Weeks violated the first refusal article. It also enjoined Mrs. Weeks from selling the locus to anyone but the Sewards “until and unless the . . . [Sewards] are given a notice” which complies with the first refusal article. King appealed.

Essentially all the facts already outlined are established by exhibits or by the partial statement of agreed facts. Certain further facts, stated in the report of material facts (see fn. 3), are set out in the margin. 4

1. King does not argue that the 1954 lease did not remain in effect as extended until its termination by notice effective on October 31, 1968. Accordingly, we assume, without deciding, that the first refusal article remained in effect see Manaster v. Gopin, 330 Mass. 569, 571-573; Gibbs Realty & Inv. Corp. v. Carvel Stores Realty Corp. *413 351 Mass. 684, 685-686) according to its terms until the termination of the 1954 lease effective on October 31, 1968, and that whatever rights and interests the Sewards had under the first refusal article were entitled to protection until the lease terminated. See Fanger v. Leeder, 327 Mass. 501. The question before us is to determine the correct interpretation of the first refusal article.

2. The entire 1954 lease is before us. The partial statement of agreed facts and the exhibits are sufficiently complete to enable us to decide the case. 5 We are in the same position as the trial judge with respect to interpreting the lease. We treat our scope of review as essentially that upon a case stated. See New England Foundation Co. Inc. v. American Mut. Liab. Ins. Co. 358 Mass. 157, 158-159.

The principal question is the meaning of the provision, quoted earlier, in the first refusal article, viz. “a contemplated sale during the demised term of the” locus. The Sewards contend that, because the testimony is not reported, the trial judge’s interpretation of this language is binding upon us. We think this contention wholly without merit. The interpretation of the written lease is a matter for the court on which we are not bound by the trial judge’s conclusions, particularly as the problem of interpretation is not affected by any findings of fact (see fns. 4, 5) not included in the partial statement of agreed facts. See Quintin Vespa Co. Inc. v. Construction Serv. Co. 343 Mass. 547, 551-552.

King contends that the words "during the demised term” relate to the noun "sale,” just as does the word "contemplated,” with the consequence that the event which gives rise to an option or first refusal is a proposed or “contemplated” sale in which the actual conveyance is to take place during the term of the lease. Because this sale was to take place on December 31, 1968, after the lease had terminated on October 31, 1968, King says it gave rise to *414 (a) no duty on Mrs. Weeks’s part (by reason of the first refusal article) to notify the Sewards of the proposed sale, and (b) no power in the Sewards to exercise the option discussed in the first refusal article. 6

King's interpretation seems to us the ordinary meaning of the words used. It is also consistent with earlier Massachusetts decisions. We read the first refusal article, not as an independent covenant or conditional option, but as an integral part of the 1954 lease and dependent upon it. See Ober v. Brooks, 162 Mass. 102, 103-105. Cf. Brown v. O’Brien, 168 Mass. 484, 487-488.

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Bluebook (online)
274 N.E.2d 813, 360 Mass. 410, 1971 Mass. LEXIS 732, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seward-v-weeks-mass-1971.