Tuma v. Britt

CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 7, 2026
DocketDA 25-0739
StatusPublished
AuthorGustafson

This text of Tuma v. Britt (Tuma v. Britt) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tuma v. Britt, (Mo. 2026).

Opinion

07/07/2026

DA 25-0739 Case Number: DA 25-0739

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2026 MT 144

GEORGE TUMA and IRENE TUMA,

Plaintiffs and Appellants,

v.

ADAM BRITT and AMBER BRITT,

Defendants and Appellees.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District, In and For the County of Flathead, Cause No. DV-22-573(C) Honorable Heidi J. Ulbricht, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellants:

Doug Scotti, Frampton Purdy Law Firm, Whitefish, Montana

For Appellees:

Angela M. LeDuc, Erin T. McGarvey, Rocky Mountain Law Partners, P.C., Kalispell, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: June 10, 2026

Decided: July 7, 2026

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Ingrid Gustafson delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 George and Irene Tuma (the Tumas) appeal from the October 16, 2025 Order of the

Eleventh Judicial District Court, Flathead County, granting partial summary judgment in

favor of Adam and Amber Britt (the Britts). The court concluded that the 2018 Assignment

and Second Amendment of Lease (Second Lease Amendment) was ambiguous as to

whether it removed all of Section 5 of the 1992 Lease Agreement and Option to Purchase

(1992 Lease), and, after considering extrinsic evidence of the contracting parties’ intent,

held that the Britts retained a vested right to acquire an undivided tenancy-in-common

interest in the Parent Tract, with exclusive use of the 10.325-acre leasehold. The court

ordered the Tumas to execute a quitclaim deed conveying a 27.5% tenancy-in-common

interest to the Britts. We affirm.

¶2 We restate the issues on appeal as follows:

1. Whether the District Court correctly determined that the Second Lease Amendment is ambiguous.

2. Whether the District Court correctly considered extrinsic evidence of the contracting parties’ intent to conclude that the Britts purchased an undivided tenancy-in-common interest in the Parent Tract.

3. Whether the District Court properly evaluated Don Hostak’s testimony in concluding that the Britts retained the ability to acquire the tenancy-in-common interest.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶3 This dispute concerns a 38.2-acre tract of land on Three Eagle Lane in Bigfork,

Flathead County, Montana, described as Government Lot 3 in Section 22, Township 27

2 North, Range 19 West, M.P.M. The tract (Parent Tract) lies within a designated floodplain

and, under Flathead County regulations, cannot be subdivided.

¶4 In September 1992, Leslie and Bernice Slater, as lessors, entered into a long-term

land lease with Charles DeRego, as lessee, for a portion of the Parent Tract. The 1992

Lease had an 89-year term and was expressly non-residential. Section 5 of the Lease, titled

“Option to Purchase,” contained two paragraphs:

5. Option to Purchase: In consideration of the payments set forth above, Lessor grants to Lessee the option to purchase the premises described above, at any time during the 89 year term of this lease, so long as such purchase may be allowed under applicable subdivision and sanitation laws and other applicable laws. The consideration for such purchase shall be complete payment of all rental payments required during the first twenty (20) years of this lease as set forth under the “Rent” provision above, together with an additional sum of ten dollars ($10.00). During the first twenty (20) years of this lease Lessee may exercise such option to purchase only upon Lessor’s written consent; thereafter, no such consent shall be required. In addition to paying the full $72,000 rent as set forth above (together with any interest required above), in order to exercise such option, Lessee shall pay the additional sum of ten dollars and Lessee shall pay all out-of-pocket costs of effecting such purchase, including, but not limited to, survey fees, legal fees, engineering fees, recording costs, governmental permit fees, etc., required to accomplish the transfer of fee title to Lessee.

In the event any time after the first twenty (20) year term of this lease that Lessee is not able to purchase fee title to the five (5) acres described above because of restrictions against such purchase by Montana or other relevant governmental body laws (including subdivision laws) then Lessee shall have the option to purchase an undivided percentage interest in tenancy in common in the smallest tract which may be subdivided along with the five (5) acres described above. Such undivided percentage interest shall be according to the percentage which five (5) acres bears to the total size of the parcel conveyed in which such five (5) acre parcel sits. In addition to the tenancy in common interest, Lessee shall be entitled to exclusive use of the five (5) acre parcel described above, contained within the conveyed parcel.

3 ¶5 The first paragraph thus granted an option to purchase the leased premises during

the 89-year term, conditioned on subdivision and sanitation approval and full payment of

the first twenty years of rent. The second paragraph provided an alternative: if, after the

first twenty years, subdivision remained unavailable due to governmental restrictions, the

lessee could instead purchase an undivided tenancy-in-common interest in the smallest

tract that could be subdivided with the leased acreage, with exclusive use of the leased

parcel.

¶6 In 2006, the parties executed a First Amendment to the Lease, correcting the leased

acreage to 6.325 acres, reiterating the 89-year term, and providing for automatic renewal

for an additional 89-year term. The First Amendment did not alter Section 5.

¶7 After the deaths of Leslie and Bernice Slater, ownership of the Parent Tract passed

to the Revocable Living Trust of Bernice R. Slater, dated October 17, 2003, with Bernice’s

son-in-law, Don Hostak, serving as successor trustee. By the time the Britts became

involved, the Slater Trust—not the individual Slaters—held title to the Parent Tract and

stood in the shoes of the original lessors under the 1992 Lease. The Britts acquired their

leasehold interest on April 3, 2018, when they purchased from Charles DeRego—the

original lessee—both (1) his rights under the 1992 Lease and its 2006 First Amendment,

and (2) the existing structure on the leased tract, which DeRego owned by separate

warranty deed. The structure—originally used as a church and later converted into a

residence—sat on a permanent foundation and had been continuously occupied since the

early 1990s. The transfer of DeRego’s leasehold interest to the Britts was formalized

through the Second Lease Amendment, jointly negotiated between the Britts and Trustee

4 Hostak and drafted by attorney Brant Beaudry. The Amendment modified several

provisions of the 1992 Lease, including the scope of the lessees’ construction rights, the

nature of their access easement, and the treatment of Section 5’s purchase options.

¶8 The Second Lease Amendment amended several provisions of the 1992 Lease. The

language at the center of this appeal appears in Section 5 of the Amendment: “Paragraph 5.

‘Option to purchase’ is hereby removed.” The Amendment also granted the Britts broad

rights to “build, construct or excavate on any improved or non-improved areas within [the

leased tract] without approval from the Trust” and granted them a 30-foot access and

utilities license that would convert to a permanent easement upon termination of the lease.

¶9 Critically, the Second Lease Amendment further stated: “In the event the parent

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Tuma v. Britt, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tuma-v-britt-mont-2026.