Shell Oil Co. v. Boyer

381 P.2d 494, 234 Or. 270, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 434
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 381 P.2d 494 (Shell Oil Co. v. Boyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Shell Oil Co. v. Boyer, 381 P.2d 494, 234 Or. 270, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 434 (Or. 1963).

Opinion

GOODWIN, J.

The trial court refused to grant Shell Oil Company specific performance of an option to purchase land held under a service-station lease. Shell appeals.

The only question is whether the lessors pleaded and proved such equities in their behalf that the trial court was justified in refusing to enforce the lease. Ordinarily the granting of specific performance is said to be a matter of sound judicial discretion. Such discretion must be exercised in accordance with established principles of equity. County of Lincoln v. Fischer et al, 216 Or 421, 438, 339 P2d 1084 (1959); Temple Enterprises v. Combs, 164 Or 133, 100 P2d 613, 128 ALR 856 (1940); Restatement, Contracts § 359. Cf. Patecky v. Friend et al, 220 Or 612, 624, 350 P2d 170 (1960); Wagner v. Savage, as Adm’r., 195 Or 128, 244 P2d 161 (1952). See Annotation, Specific Performance of a Contract as a Matter of Right, 65 ALR 7 (1930).

The parties have stipulated to many of the facts. The material facts in dispute are those surrounding) the execution of the lease. The man who represented Shell in the transaction is dead. Shell therefore put on no evidence about the execution of the lease. The lessors, Forest M. Boyer and Violet Boyer, swore they did not understand that they were giving Shell an option to purchase their property and that they would *273 not have signed the lease if they had known that it contained such an option.

The Boyers, in their third amended answer, had pleaded fraud. They also pleaded a supposed gross inadequacy of the option price in relation to current market value. As the trial court found nothing inequitable about the option price, and since a major purpose of an option is to protect the optionee against a price increase in any event, we will not pursue that phase of the case further. Cases on this point are collected in the Annotation, 11 ALR2d 390, 406 (1950).

The trial court then said that while fraud, in the usual sense of the word, was not established, specific performance should be denied on the equitable principle that the extraordinary relief of specific performance may be withheld if, in the court’s discretion, it is inequitable to grant such relief.

The lease was entered into on November 9, 1950, for a ten-year term beginning in December of 1950. The Boyers had purchased the land for $6,500 in 1949. Mr. Boyer was involved in the buying and selling of real estate and referred to himself as a carpenter-contractor. He built the service station on the land at a cost of $18,000.

The Boyers testified that when they signed the lease they noticed the paragraph entitled “Option to Purchase” and the paragraph entitled “Purchase Refusal”. They testified that they asked Shell’s agent the meaning of those paragraphs. Then, they recalled, Shell’s agent evaded their question as to the purchase option, and read to them from the purchase-refusal provision. The agent said this purchase-refusal option was designed only to give Shell a chance to protect itself should the Boyers ever decide to sell the property. The agent assured them, they said, that Shell *274 was not interested in buying service stations and so they had nothing to worry about. They further testified that they allowed the agent to fill in the purchase-option price and then initialed the margin to show their assent solely because Shell’s agent told them he had to fill in all the blanks on the lease or it wouldn’t be legal.

In 1960, Boyer refused to grant Shell a new lease except upon terms that were not acceptable to Shell. Shell thereupon exercised its option under paragraph 18 of the 1950 lease. It is stipulated in the case at bar that Shell has performed every condition precedent to specific performance.

The two options are clear, legible, and understandable. If there is any ambiguity, it has to be found in reading the two options together. The trial court said) the options were ambiguous when read together.

The two sections read in their material parts as follows:

“18. OPTION TO PURCHASE: In consideration of its execution of this lease, Shell shall have and is hereby granted the exclusive right and option while Shell shall have any tenancy or leasehold estate or interest of whatsoever nature or kind in the demised premises, whether under this lease and/or any continuation, extension, renewal or holdover thereof, to purchase all real property, buildings, improvements, equipment and machinery demised hereunder for the sum of Twenty-eight Thousand Dollars ($28,000.00) cash. In the event Shell elects to exercise this option it shall give the Lessor written notice of its said election, designating in such notice an escrow holder for the completion of the purchase, and shall forthwith deposit the purchase price money with such escrow holder * * *. [Italicized amounts are handwritten in ink; initialed “GVB”, “V.M.B.” and “F.M.B.” in margin.]”
*275 “19. PURCHASE REFUSAL: In further consideration of its execution of this lease and in addition to Shell’s other rights and privileges under this lease, Lessor hereby grants to Shell the first refusal right to purchase the real property * * * upon the same terms, and at the same price of any bona fide offer for the purchase or sale thereof received or made by the Lessor * * * which Lessor or the offeree determines to accept. Lessor shall give Shell written notice of Lessor’s receipt or making of any such offer and of Lessor’s determination, subject to Shell’s rights hereunder to sell the property covered by said offer upon the terms therein set forth * *

Since mistake was never pleaded, and since ambiguity between the two options was never directly pleaded, a strict construction of the parol evidence statute, OKS 41.740, would exclude such unpleaded defenses in the case at bar. Shell has not questioned the trial court’s assumption that the issues of mistake and ambiguity were before the court, however, so we shall treat the appeal as if the pleadings were broad enough to include those issues.

The lessors, without conceding that the trial court correctly decided the issue of fraud against them, maintain in this court that there was at least a species of overreaching by Shell’s agent sufficient to move a court of equity to deny relief. We shall accept, for the purposes of this appeal, the proposition that a sufficient showing of inequitable inducement resulting in an innocent mistake will sometimes justify a court in refusing to hold the parties to their bargain. See, e.g., Bayne v. Cinak, 320 Ill 23, 150 NE 344 (1926). The case at bar, however, is not such a case.

The only flaw, if any, in the representations attributed to Shell’s agent lay in an incomplete and in *276 accurate description of the legal effect of the foregoing sections of the lease. If the testimony of the lessors is believed, they relied upon the agent’s interpretation of the legal effect of the two clauses rather than upon their own reading. Ordinarily, the failure to read an instrument, when there is ample opportunity to do so, affords the party no defense to its enforcement.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
381 P.2d 494, 234 Or. 270, 1963 Ore. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shell-oil-co-v-boyer-or-1963.