Wing, Incorporated v. Arnold
This text of 107 So. 2d 765 (Wing, Incorporated v. Arnold) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court of Appeal of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
WING, Incorporated, Appellant,
v.
Catherine B. ARNOLD, Appellee.
District Court of Appeal of Florida. Third District.
*766 Holcomb & Holcomb, Miami, for appellant.
Herbert E. Kaufman, Miami, for appellee.
CARROLL, CHAS., Chief Judge.
The appellee Catherine B. Arnold, the plaintiff below, filed a suit in equity against Ralph Wing, Marie Wing and Wing Incorporated, for cancellation of a ninety-nine year lease and for other relief.
The complaint alleged that the appellee Arnold, who will be referred to as the lessor, entered into a ninety-nine year lease on May 1, 1952, with the appellants Ralph Wing and Marie Wing, his wife. The Wings then assigned the lease to the appellant Wing Incorporated, referred to hereinbelow as the lessee.
As a basis for the prayer for cancellation the complaint alleged that certain structures on the premises were demolished by lessee and not rebuilt, contending such action was in violation of a provision of the lease requiring such reconstruction.[1]
*767 The complaint alleged an effort of the lessee corporation to exercise an option contained in the lease for purchase of the premises, and the plaintiff prayed for a decree determining that the lessee was not entitled to exercise the option to purchase, or in the alternative, that the attempt to exercise the option was not done in the manner provided for in the lease.[2]
The plaintiff-lessor also charged that the option to purchase, granted to the lessee in the lease, was void as being in violation of the Rule Against Perpetuities.
The defendants answered averring that the buildings which had been torn down were of little use and value; that they were offered to the plaintiff who had not desired to move them elsewhere; that the lessee had paved the lot for use as a parking lot; and that in the intervening years the plaintiff lessor had made no objection. Lessee further averred that the paving improvements had cost more than the value of the structures which were destroyed and that the removal of the structures and paving of the area had resulted in an improvement of the premises.
By counterclaim lessee sought specific performance of the option to purchase, the validity of which had been drawn into dispute by the plaintiff. On lessor's motion to dismiss, the court dismissed the counterclaim, saying: "The notice dated November 21, 1956, sent by the defendant Wing Incorporated, to the plaintiff did not constitute an exercise of the option to purchase contained in the lease, copy of which is attached to the complaint as Exhibit A, and on that ground alone, without passing on any other points the plaintiff is not required to specifically perform the provisions of said option."
The cause came on for trial before the chancellor, who personally heard the testimony and rendered his final decree on December 20, 1957. In his decree the chancellor denied the plaintiff's prayer for cancellation of the lease, ruled that the provisions relating to the option did not violate the Rule Against Perpetuities, made provision for the lessee to exercise the option to purchase in accordance with the terms of the lease, and allowed an attorney's fee for the plaintiff-lessor on the basis of a provision in the lease for payment of such attorney's fees for enforcement of lessor's rights thereunder. In a supplemental order the amount of such attorney's fees was fixed at $4,500.
The original lessees and their assignee appealed from the decree, directing their assignments to the provision thereof relating to attorney's fees.[3] The lessor filed cross-assignments of error directed to the provisions of the decree which denied her prayer for cancellation of the lease, and which recognized the validity and effectiveness of the option to purchase.
As a preliminary to his denial of the lessor's prayer for cancellation and termination of the lease, the chancellor made certain findings and conclusions which we here quote, as follows:
*768 "* * * The testimony shows that the buildings were torn down in August of 1953, and that on or about February of 1955, according to the terms and conditions of said lease, if the defendant failed to rebuild the destroyed premises or buildings in as equally good condition, or in better condition, than the same were prior to said destruction, that the default would have occurred at that time. The testimony fails to show that the plaintiff exercised her right to cancel the lease at that time, or at any time from February of 1955 to the time of filing of this complaint in March of 1957, more than two (2) years after the alleged breach by the defendants. The testimony shows that the defendants have been current in the rent payments under the lease and that the plaintiff has accepted the rent payments from the defendants without exercising her right, if she so desired, to cancel the lease as she is attempting to do in this suit, and declaring a forfeiture of the defendants' security and rights under said lease, and declaring the option to be null and void.
* * * * * *
"It is apparent from the actions of the plaintiff, assuming that the defendant, Wing Incorporated, in failing to rebuild the destroyed premises within the eighteen month period required under the lease agreement constituted a breach of the agreement, the plaintiff having failed to take any action for a period of more than two (2) years, by virtue of her conduct thereby waived or acquiesced in said breach and, therefore, under equitable grounds should be precluded from enforcing a forfeiture against the defendants herein. Equity will aid the defaulting party by relieving against it, if necessary. See Pomeroy's Equity Jurisprudence, Vol. 2, 5th Edition, Sec. 451A. The courts have consistently held that where a lessor remains silent and a lessee conducts himself in good faith relying upon the lessor's failure to exercise a forfeiture because of a breach in a lessee's performance under an agreement and whereby a lessee will be placed in such a situation that he will be greatly damaged if a lessor is permitted to prevail, will not permit a lessor to take advantage by his own conduct or silence to prevail over a lessee defendant, and the lessor shall have been considered to have waived the benefits of said conditions under the lease agreement. This is especially true where a lessor has not been damaged or said damage can be compensated by the payment of money damages."
Where there is a breach of a covenant by a lessee, sufficient to entitle the lessor to cancel the lease, the right of action thus created in the lessor may be waived. Such waiver by the lessor may be express, or through acquiescence; and when present can prompt equity to relieve the lessee from the default. Rader v. Prather, 100 Fla. 591, 130 So. 15. The chancellor's findings and conclusions on this point have adequate support in the record.
Nor was the chancellor in error in refusing to hold that the option to purchase, granted to the lessee in the ninety-nine year lease, was in violation of the Rule Against Perpetuities.[4]
The question thus raised with reference to an option to purchase when contained in a lease, is one which appears to be novel in this state. There is substantial authority that an option in gross, *769 that is, not appurtenant to a leasehold, is subject to the Rule Against Perpetuities.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
107 So. 2d 765, 77 A.L.R. 2d 728, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wing-incorporated-v-arnold-fladistctapp-1958.