Thrift Shop, Inc. v. Alaska Mutual Savings Bank

398 P.2d 657, 1965 Alas. LEXIS 117
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 1965
Docket509
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 398 P.2d 657 (Thrift Shop, Inc. v. Alaska Mutual Savings Bank) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thrift Shop, Inc. v. Alaska Mutual Savings Bank, 398 P.2d 657, 1965 Alas. LEXIS 117 (Ala. 1965).

Opinion

DIMOND, Justice.

This is a dispute over the right tó possession of some business property in'downtown Anchorage. Appellants claimed that appellee liad agreed to lease the property to them, and then had defaulted and leased it to- a third party. Without appellee’s knowledge or consent, appellants took possession'of the premises which they'were seeking to lease .by entering the building where those premises are located during the early morning hours of April 18, 1964. Appellee requested appellants to leave and, when they refused, brought this forcible entry .and detainer action to regain possession. The superior court held in favor of appellee and appellants have appealed.

The trial court’s basic holding was that appellants had no oral or written lease, no claim or color of title, and no right to possession to the premises in dispute. The principal question on this appeal is whether such holding was erroneous.

In January 1964 appellants commenced negotiations with appellee for a lease of the premises. These negotiations resulted in an understanding between the parties that appellants would lease approximately 1200 square feet of floor space from appel-lee. It was contemplated by both parties that they would execute a written lease. Appellee’s president, R. L. Rettig, testified that on March 17 or 18, 1964 the appellants picked up a draft of a lease which he had had prepared and was offering to appellants. Rettig had prepared the lease for execution not only by the appellant corporation, Thrift Shop, Inc., but also by the corporation’s officers, Francis and Hazel Moesch, in their individual capacities. Rettig testified that oil or about March 25 he telephoned Francis Moesch to see about getting the lease signed. Moesch told Rettig that he and his wife objected to signing the lease as individuals. Rettig said he heard nothing further from appellants until after the disastrous March 27th earthquake. On or about March 31 Francis and Hazel Moesch called on Rettig at his office. According to Rettig, they told him they were ready to go ahead with the written lease. .Rettig told them that he did not know whether he could rent to them because the building had been condemned on account of the earthquake, and because Rettig had started discussions with other persons .for a lease of the premises. The next day Hazel Moesch again came to Rettig’s' office; and at that time he told her that he would be unable to rent the property to her.

Francis Moesch testified that appellants had made an oral agreement with Rettig to lease the premises, and that they had made plans, which Rettig knew about, to make alterations in the space to be rented. Moesch also testified that in -reliance on such agreement, appellants had ordered over $14,000 worth of equipment and $10,-000 worth of merchandise to be placed in the store space they were renting from appellee. Finally, Moesch testified that when he and his wife called at Rettig’s office on March 31, he made a tender to Rettig of the rent and offered him the written lease which had been signed by the corporation and by Francis and Hazel Moesch as individuals. He testified that Rettig refused to accept the lease or the rent.

We cannot say that the trial judge erred in holding that there was no binding lease agreement between the parties. A contract to lease would not exist until the parties had manifested their mutual assent to its formation. 1 It is true that words and acts of the parties may constitute sufficient manifestations of assent to make a binding oral contract, even though the parties also *659 had contemplated that their agreement would later be reduced to writing. 2 But such an oral contract would exist only if the parties had definitely agreed on the terms that they planned to incorporate into the writing, and had agreed that the final writing would contain those provisions and no others. If it is apparent that the parties intended that the determination of certain details were to be deferred until the writing was made out, or if an intention was manifested in any way that legal obligations arising between .the parties should be deferred until the writing was made, then the words and acts of the parties would amount to nothing more.than preliminary negotiations and agreements and would not constitute a contract. 3

From the testimony in this case it appears dear that an oral- contract to lease never came into existence. Appellee’s president, R. L. Rettig, was asked: “in these conversations did — did you ever arrive finally at what terms you would .rent to them for ?” He replied: “Yes. We had arrived at the general formula under which the lease would be entered into.” Appellant Francis Moesch was asked whether. during the negotiations he and Rettig finally came to an understanding- of what the terms of the lease were. His answer was: “I told Mr. Rettig to draw the lease up. * * * I told him we’d take the building. * * * I says, ‘we’ll take it’, and he said ‘Fine’, and when I got the lease I says, ‘Well, fine’.”

This testimony in no way establishes that the parties had orally agreed upon all of the essential terms they planned to incorporate into the written lease. Rather, this testimony creates a strong inference that the parties intended that the final and full expression of their mutual assent would be deferred ’ until the written .lease had been prepared and agreed upon. There was'no othér testimony that detracted from '.the validity of such an inference. The evidence would not support a finding that the parties intended there be a binding agreement prior to the execution of the written lease;

Nor would the evidence-support a finding that a contract was formulated when appellants tendered to appellee the signed lease and a check for the rent on March 31. Prior to that date, on March 17 or 18, appellee had offered to rent the premises according to the terms of a written lease which Rettig had had prepared and had presented .to appellants. In order for a contract to have been formed, it was essential that acceptance of this offer be unequivocal and in exact compliance with the requirements of the offer that appellee had made. 4 That was not done here. One of the express requirements of the proposed written lease was-that it be executed, not only by the corporation, Thrift Shop, Inc., but also by Francis and Hazel Moesch as individuals. Appellee was advised by the Moesches on 'March 25 that they objected to signing the lease individually. This action on their part amounted either to a rejection of the offer made by appellee or, if it could be said that the lease was otherwise acceptable, to a counter-offer by the appellants. In either case, whether there was an outright rejection or a counter-offer, the effect was the same — the power to accept the offer that had been made by appellee was terminated. 5 Appellants could not revive the proposal made by appellee by tendering an acceptance of it later on March 31. 6 Their action in this respect did not bring a contract into existence.

*660 Appellants argue that since this was an action to recover possession of property under the forcible entry and detainer statute

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
398 P.2d 657, 1965 Alas. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thrift-shop-inc-v-alaska-mutual-savings-bank-alaska-1965.