Cogdill v. Sylva Supply Co.
Cogdill v. Sylva Supply Co.
Opinion of the Court
*513*130Plaintiffs appeal the trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Defendants as to Plaintiffs' action alleging seven claims, including breach of contract. Plaintiffs' claims all stem from their assertion that they possessed a valid and enforceable Right of First Refusal to purchase the property at issue at the time Defendant Sylva Supply Company, Inc., conveyed the property to Defendants Duane Jay and Irene Ball. Plaintiffs and Sylva had entered into a written lease agreement, which was subsequently assigned to Plaintiff Jackson's General Store, Inc., which contained a Right of First Refusal. However, the written lease had expired and, pursuant to this Court's opinion in Ball v. Cogdill , COA17-409,
I. Procedural History and Factual Background
On 19 May 1999, Crystal Cogdill
The Original Lease granted Cogdill a Right of First Refusal to purchase the Property, should Sylva wish to sell the Property. Sylva was required to notify Cogdill by certified mail of the option to purchase the Property at the lowest price and on the same terms and conditions Sylva was willing to accept from other purchasers. If, within fifteen days of receiving Sylva's offer, Cogdill did not mail Sylva notice that she intended to exercise her Right of First Refusal to purchase the Property, Sylva had the right to sell the Property to other purchasers.
On 1 June 1999, a "Memorandum of Lease and Right of First Refusal" memorializing the Original Lease was recorded in the Jackson County Public Registry. On 1 July 1999, Cogdill assigned the Original Lease to Jackson's General Store, Inc. (Jackson's), a business incorporated by Cogdill.
On 7 June 2001, Cogdill and Sylva executed an "Amendment to Lease Agreement" (Lease), which amended the original rental period from five years to seven years and, thus, extended the original rental period end date from 31 May 2004 to 31 May 2006. If Sylva opted to renew the Lease for an additional, seven-year period, the new rental period would run from 1 June 2006 to 31 May 2013. The amendment also modified the amount of rent to be paid. All other terms remained unmodified.
No written notice was given to renew the Lease beyond the expiration of the initial seven-year period, which ended 31 May 2006. However, Plaintiffs continuously remained in tenancy.
On 7 May 2015, without first giving Plaintiffs an option to the buy the Property, Sylva sold the Property to Duane Jay and Irene Ball (the Balls). In June 2016, the Balls instituted a summary ejectment action *514against Plaintiffs. Both the small claims court and district court ruled in favor of Plaintiffs and dismissed the action. The Balls appealed to the Court of Appeals.
While the appeal was pending, Plaintiffs filed the complaint in the present action. In the complaint, Plaintiffs alleged causes of action for breach of contract, fraud, constructive fraud, civil conspiracy, claim to set aside deed, tortious interference with contract, and unfair and *132deceptive acts or practices. These claims were based on Plaintiffs' assertion that they were wrongfully denied the right to exercise their Right of First Refusal to purchase the Property. Plaintiffs also filed a notice of lis pendens .
On 8 September 2017, Defendants moved to dismiss the complaint under Rule 12(b)(6) of the North Carolina Rules of Civil Procedure. On 19 December 2017, this Court issued Ball v. Cogdill ,
On 24 January 2018, Defendants filed an amended motion to dismiss, citing this Court's opinion in Ball as further support for dismissal. On 19 February 2018, Plaintiffs filed a motion for partial summary judgment, also citing this Court's opinion in Ball as support for its motion.
The trial court heard Defendants' original motion to dismiss, but did not consider this Court's opinion in Ball , and entered an order on 12 March 2018 denying the motion. On 16 March 2018, Defendants filed an answer to Plaintiffs' motion for partial summary judgment and raised the doctrine of collateral estoppel as a defense to Plaintiffs' claims.
On 2 April 2018,
II. Jurisdiction
The trial court's 16 April 2018 order granting Defendants' motion for summary judgment was a final judgment. Jurisdiction of this appeal *133is therefore proper under N.C. Gen. Stat. § 7A-27(b)(1) (2018) and
III. Discussion
A. Court of Appeals' opinion in Ball v. Cogdill
We begin this discussion with a summary of this Court's opinion in Ball v. Cogdill , which involved the same background facts and the same parties, except Sylva, as the case presently before us. In Ball , this Court rejected the Balls' argument that the trial court erred by denying their complaint for summary ejectment because the trial court erroneously concluded that Cogdill and Jackson's were under a lease when the Balls attempted to summarily evict them from the Property. This Court noted, and Cogdill and Jackson's conceded, that no written notice had been given to renew the Lease beyond the expiration of the first, seven-year period. Id . at *2, 2017 N.C. App. LEXIS 1074 at *4. This Court explained, however, that the "failure to renew a lease does not automatically result in ejectment of a tenant." Id . The record reflected that Cogdill and Jackson's had "remained in tenancy" after the expiration of the Lease and paid rent every month to the Balls, and the Balls had accepted the *515payment.
B. Present Appeal
The parties agree that, pursuant to Ball , Plaintiffs were under a year-to-year tenancy created by operation of law when Sylva sold the Property to the Balls.
C. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is proper "if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that any party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 56(c) (2018). The standard of review of an appeal from summary judgment is de novo . In re Will of Jones ,
D. Analysis
When a lease for a fixed term of a year, or more, expires, a tenant holds over, and "the lessor elects to treat him as a tenant, a new tenancy relationship is created as of the end of the former term." Kearney v. Hare ,
This Court concluded in Vernon v. Kennedy ,
*135On 21 November 1979, plaintiffs in Vernon brought an action for specific performance of the option to purchase contained in the written lease. This Court explained that upon the expiration of the written lease, a new tenancy relationship had been created by operation of law, and thus, plaintiffs "were at best tenants *516from year to year under the applicable terms of the expired lease."
A similar result was reached in Hannah v. Hannah,
On appeal, this Court looked at the "express language of the original lease [which] brought the purchase agreement into play only if 'at the end of five years,' the landlord should want possession." Id . at 267-68,
In a slightly different factual scenario, the Court in Davis v. McRee ,
In the fall of 1975, defendants indicated their intention to exercise the option to purchase. They arranged to borrow the purchase money, and plaintiffs executed a deed to the property. The parties ultimately disagreed on the sale price, and plaintiffs instituted an action to cancel the deed. In court, plaintiffs argued that the option to purchase had died with the expiration of the term of the original lease and that the new agreement was not effective to revive the option. Id . at 501,
As in Vernon and Hannah , Defendants' obligation to offer Plaintiffs the Right of First Refusal to purchase the Property *517was not applicable to the year-to-year tenancy created by operation of law, and did not remain in effect throughout the period in which Plaintiffs were permitted to hold over after the expiration of the Lease. By written agreement, the Lease expired by its express terms on 31 May 2006, unless timely renewed for a second, seven-year period. Prior to the expiration of the Lease on 31 May 2006, Plaintiffs failed to timely exercise their option to renew the Lease for a second, seven-year period. Additionally, prior to the expiration of the Lease on 31 May 2006, Plaintiffs did not exercise their Right of First Refusal as Defendants did not desire to sell the Property. Moreover, even if timely notice to renew had been given, the Lease provided, at an absolute maximum, for a period of fourteen years and could not remain in force after 31 May 2013.
As in Vernon , upon the expiration of the written Lease, a new tenancy relationship was created by operation of law, and thus, Plaintiffs *137were tenants from year to year under the applicable terms of the expired lease. Ball at *2, 2017 N.C. App. LEXIS 1074 at *5. Although the Right of First Refusal clause itself does not specifically reference the Lease expiration dates, the Lease by its own terms could not be extended beyond 31 May 2013. Thus, an attempt to enforce the Right of First Refusal in 2015 "would come outside the extended term of the lease." Vernon ,
Moreover, unlike in Davis , the parties in this case did not expressly extend the Lease after its expiration and Plaintiffs' attempt to exercise their Right of First Refusal was not made during such extended term, but was made nine years after the Lease's expiration. Furthermore, while the parties' conduct in Davis evidenced an intent to incorporate the purchase option into the express extension of the lease agreement, the parties' conduct in entering into the Lease in this case did not. The terms of the Lease specifically did not provide for incorporation of the Right of First Refusal as the renewal terms were to be determined by the parties at least ninety days before the expiration of the first, seven-year lease period. See Hannah ,
This result is supported by the public policy purposes that statutory and common law holdover tenancies were generally created to *138address, as explained by Vice Chancellor Strine of the Court of Chancery of Delaware:
Historically, in our legal tradition, when tenants continued to occupy property beyond the expiration of a lease, landlords were entitled to treat holdover tenants as trespassers, or to summarily evict them. The doctrine of 'self-help' arose in the interest of landlords and incoming tenants, allowing landlords to promptly recover possession of leased property from tenants who held it improperly. Not surprisingly, widespread use of 'self-help' remedies led to concerns for the endangerment of persons and property, and breaches of the *518peace. Statutory [and common law] holdover tenancies emerged as a means of protecting tenants from self-help by landlords who were legally entitled to treat them as trespassers -- that is, to keep people from being dumped out on the street. [Holdover tenancies] attempt to maintain the status quo of a tenant's occupancy and use of leased property for a short period of time during which a landlord can pursue summary eviction. This approach balances the policy objectives of permitting landlords and incoming tenants to recover possession of property in a timely fashion and permitting outgoing tenants to move out in an orderly manner, thereby 'improving the prospects for preserving the public peace.'
Bateman ,
If a right of first refusal presumptively carried forward into a holdover tenancy, a landlord wishing to nullify that right could easily do so by evicting the holdover tenant and selling the property one day later, both of which would be within its rights as the landlord of a holdover tenant. This creates an incentive for landlords to evict holdover *139tenants as soon as possible [ ], a result at odds with the stability of commercial tenancies. The contrary rule that carries such purchase options forward only if the parties so specify avoids this result, thereby making holdover tenancies more stable.
Smyth ,
Plaintiffs cite no authority for their assertion that the Right of First Refusal provided under the Lease continued in effect when Plaintiffs failed to renew the Lease and continued to inhabit the Property as holdover tenants on a year-to-year basis, beyond Ball's inclusion of this quote from Coulter v. Capitol Fin. Co. :
"Nothing else appearing, when a tenant for a fixed term of one year or more holds over after the expiration of such term, the lessor has an election. He may treat him as a trespasser and bring an action to evict him and to recover reasonable compensation for the use of the property, or he may recognize him as still a tenant, having the same rights and duties as under the original lease , except that the tenancy is one from year to year and is terminable by either party upon giving to the other 30 days' notice directed to the end of any year of such new tenancy."
Ball at *2, 2017 N.C. App. LEXIS 1074 at *4-5 (quoting Coulter ,
To be sure, there is precedent from several states holding that rights of first refusal (or other purchase options) presumptively carry forward into holdover tenancies. See Smyth ,
For the reasons stated above, the Right of First Refusal in the written Lease was not a term applicable to the year-to-year tenancy created by operation of law upon the expiration of the written Lease. Accordingly, Plaintiffs were not entitled to be given the Right of First Refusal to purchase the Property prior to Sylva's sale of the Property to the Balls. Because of our holding, we need not reach Plaintiffs' argument that the Right of First Refusal did not violate the rule against perpetuities. As there was no genuine issue of material fact and Defendants were entitled to judgment as a matter of law, the trial court's order granting summary judgment in favor of Defendants is affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Judge ZACHARY concurs.
Judge TYSON dissents by separate opinion.
Then Crystal Cogdill Jones.
The apparent internal incongruency of this term has no significance in this appeal.
The Balls were the plaintiffs while Cogdill and Jackson's were the defendants in the summary ejectment action. The parties' roles are reversed on this appeal. Sylva was not a party.
The order states that this cause of action was "heard before the undersigned judge presiding over the March 26, 2018 civil session of the Superior Court of Haywood County[.]" However, both parties stipulated that the "Order appealed from was the result of a hearing held during the April 2, 2018 civil session of the Superior Court of Haywood County[.]"
The parties each argue the doctrine of collateral estoppel to support this shared conclusion.
The dissent's analysis relies upon testimonial evidence contained in a transcript from a prior case, concerning a different issue, before this Court. That transcript is not part of this record on appeal. Our "review is solely upon the record on appeal, the verbatim transcript of proceedings ..., and any other items filed pursuant to this Rule 9." N.C. R. App. P. 9(a) (2018).
Dissenting Opinion
The majority's opinion erroneously concludes as a matter of law the tenant's right of first refusal to purchase the property, included in the original lease between Plaintiffs and Defendant Sylva Supply Co. Inc., is not a term or provision that is applicable to or enforceable by Plaintiffs' during their year-to-year tenancy. The trial court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Defendants is error. Whether the Plaintiffs' right of first refusal in this case applies to the year-to-year tenancy or is a wholly independent, stand-alone agreement between the parties, rests upon the intent of the parties and raises genuine issues of material fact. Summary judgment is inappropriate in this circumstance. I vote to reverse the trial court's order and remand for a trial on the merits. I respectfully dissent.
I. Standard of Review
Summary judgment is proper "if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that any party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law." N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1A-1, Rule 56(c) (2017). "[T]he party moving for summary judgment ultimately has the burden of establishing the lack of any triable issue of fact." Pacheco v. Rogers & Breece, Inc. ,
*141A defendant may show entitlement to summary judgment by (1) proving that an essential element of the plaintiff's case is non-existent, or (2) showing through discovery that the plaintiff cannot produce evidence to support an essential element of his or her claim, or (3) showing that the plaintiff cannot surmount an affirmative defense. Summary judgment is not appropriate where matters of credibility and determining the weight of the evidence exist.
Draughon v. Harnett Cty. Bd. of Educ. ,
II. Right of First Refusal
The parties are operating under a year-to-year tenancy, pursuant to this Court's holding in Ball v. Cogdill , --- N.C. App. ----,
The majority's opinion concludes a right of first refusal is not an "applicable" term of the lease as a matter of law to affirm summary judgment. Based upon controlling North Carolina contract law and cases involving option and first refusal contracts, the intent of the parties is a question of fact and summary judgment is inappropriate in this case. On the merits and as a question of law, a review of jurisdictions which have ruled on this issue supports a conclusion that a right of first refusal survives and applies in year-to-year tenancies.
*520A. North Carolina Law
A right of first refusal is a preemptive right, which "creates in its holder only the right to buy land before other parties if the seller decides to convey it." Smith v. Mitchell ,
"[T]he same principles of construction applicable to all contracts apply to option contracts." Lagies v. Myers ,
Ambiguous terms are conditions or provisions that are "fairly and reasonably susceptible to either of the constructions asserted by the parties." Glover v. First Union National Bank ,
The majority's opinion erroneously purports to base the outcome of this case on Vernon v. Kennedy ,
Vernon construed an option to purchase, as opposed to a right of first refusal, whose express and explicit terms stated the right could not be construed to survive expiration of the lease term or be "applicable" to the subsequent year-to-year tenancy:
The option term in paragraph 7 of the lease cannot be construed as "applicable" to the tenancy from year to year for the reason that by its own terms, paragraph 7 is limited to 'the term of this lease or the extended period thereof. ' Since the lease, again by its own terms, could not be extended beyond 30 April 1973, an attempt to exercise the option in 1979 would come outside the extended term of the lease.
Vernon ,
The issue presented in Hannah was similar. A lease of a filling station included the provision: "If at the end of five years , [the tenant] should *143want possession of said filling station, he would purchase all stock and equipment at 20% discount, and not over 2 years bills." Hannah ,
Unlike in Vernon and Hannah , neither the right of first refusal paragraph in Plaintiffs' lease nor the "Memorandum of Lease and Right of First Refusal" ("Memorandum") contain any express limitation restricting the right to a specific term or event. Paragraph XI states that if the landlord desires to sell the property "it shall offer" the option to purchase to the tenant. The majority's opinion asserts the terms of the lease restrict the right of first refusal to the dates of the lease and one additional seven year extension. Without express language limiting the applicability of the right of first refusal upon the expiration of the lease as in Vernon or to a *521specific time as in Hannah , the applicability of the right is, at minimum, ambiguous.
The Memorandum states:
The undersigned hereby declare that they have entered into a Lease and Right of First Refusal Agreement dated May 19, 1999, which contains a right of first refusal conveyed by Sylva Supply Company, Inc. to Crystal Cogdill Jones, upon the property located at 582 West Main Street, Sylva, North Carolina, known as the Sylva Supply Company Building.
The undersigned further state that the written instrument of lease and right of first refusal and any amendments thereto will be kept for safekeeping at the office of Sylva Supply Company, Inc. ...
(Emphasis supplied). This written Memorandum is express in its terms and meets all the requirements of the Statute of Frauds for "the party to be charged."
The majority's opinion purports to distinguish our Supreme Court's holding in Davis v. McRee ,
[T]he ultimate test in construing any written agreement is to ascertain the parties' intentions in light of all the relevant circumstances and not merely in terms of the actual language used.
...
The parties are presumed to know the intent and meaning of their contract better than strangers, and where the parties have placed a particular interpretation on their contract after executing it, the courts ordinarily will not ignore that construction which the parties themselves have given it prior to the differences between them.
Davis ,
Our Supreme Court in Davis looked to the actions of the parties because the Court deemed the language and applicability of the lease extension to be ambiguous. Id. at 502-03,
Here, the terms of the lease and the signed and recorded Memorandum, viewed in the light most favorable to Plaintiffs, are ambiguous, as there is no expressed limitation on or termination of the right of first refusal. We also take judicial notice of subsequent behavior by parties, which also suggests the recorded right of first refusal survived the expiration of the lease, with or without the year-to-year tenancy, and shows ambiguity. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 8C-1, Rule 201 (2017) (a fact that is "capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned" can be judicially noticed "at any stage of the proceeding"); see also West v. Reddick, Inc. ,
As noted in the record when this case was previously before this Court, Sylva Supply Company, Inc., provided Ms. Cogdill with an opportunity to purchase the property during the year-to-year tenancy in 2012, though the transaction did not close. This proffer indicates the owner/landlord's recognition of the continued viability and its intent to continue honoring the tenant's express right of first refusal, either as stated in the lease or the recorded Memorandum. However, the 2015 *522sale of the property that is before us, closed without seller-landlord offering Plaintiffs the first refusal to exercise their right to purchase the property, which injects ambiguity into the intent and actions of the parties.
Further, W. Paul Holt, Jr., the attorney who drafted the original lease, amendment, and recorded Memorandum, and maintained possession of the lease in his office, was also the closing attorney and drafted the 2015 deed for the sale of the property to the Balls. This deed warrants the premises were free from all encumbrances on 7 May 2016. Not only are ambiguous terms construed against the drafter, see Lagies,
The ambiguity present in the language of the contract, in the express language contained in the Memorandum, and in the subsequent actions of the parties presents and shows genuine issues of material fact exist, which precludes disposition of this case by summary judgment. See Pacheco ,
B. Other Jurisdictions
The genuine issues of material facts of the parties' intent existing in this case do not require a determination on whether rights of first refusal are "applicable" terms under a year-to-year lease. The express terms and provisions of the signed and recorded Memorandum preclude summary judgment for Defendants. I also disagree with the majority opinion's analysis of how North Carolina law determines this issue.
The majority's opinion cites a purported "majority" rule, which holds the right of first refusal presumptively does not carry forward, as the rule that is supported by North Carolina case law and general public policy. A closer reading of states which have decided this issue indicates North Carolina does not agree with nor follow their decisions.
*146The majority's opinion cites Smyth v. Berman ,
Kutkowski held that "[w]hen a lease for a specified term is not extended or renewed, and the lessee holds over after the expiration of the lease, unless otherwise agreed , the law implies that the parties' rights and obligations with respect to that holdover tenancy continue as set forth in the expired lease agreement." Id. at 994 (emphasis supplied). This principle "states the common law followed in Hawai'i and most every other jurisdiction surveyed, and sets forth the common understanding and rules applicable to the dealings of landlord and tenant after the termination of their express agreement, but effectuates, as the law must, the parties' right to agree to the contrary." Id. This analysis and conclusion follows the common law of our state. See Kearney ,
The majority's opinion from this "error correcting court" cites Bateman v. 317 Rehoboth Ave., LLC ,
Statutory holdover tenancies emerged as a means of protecting tenants from self-help by landlords who were legally entitled to treat them as trespassers - that is, to keep people from being dumped out on the street. Statutes such as § 5108 attempt to maintain the status quo of a tenant's occupancy and use of leased property for a short period of time during which a landlord *523can pursue summary eviction. This approach balances the policy objectives of permitting landlords and incoming tenants to recover possession of property in a timely fashion and permitting outgoing tenants to move out in an orderly manner, thereby "improving the prospects for preserving the public peace." Holdover tenancies are therefore not *147intended to prolong the existence of legal rights between the landlord and tenant, such as rights of first refusal, that are otherwise unrelated to occupancy and use of property.
Similarly, California courts also declined to presumptively extend the right of first refusal into the holdover period in order to make "holdover tenancies more stable." Smyth ,
Delaware and California's rule, and thus their "public policy" support for this rule, is inapplicable to North Carolina. As stated by our Supreme Court, the "common understanding and rules applicable to the dealings of landlord and tenant after the termination" of a lease agreement in North Carolina is:
Nothing else appearing, when a tenant for a fixed term of one year or more holds over after the expiration of such term, the lessor has an election. He may treat him as a trespasser and bring an action to evict him and to recover reasonable compensation for the use of the property, or he may recognize him as still a tenant, having the same rights and duties as under the original lease, except that the tenancy is one from year to year and is terminable by either party upon giving to the other 30 days' notice directed to the end of any year of such new tenancy.
The parties to the lease may, of course, agree upon a different relationship.
Coulter ,
*148In deciding the applicability of rights of first refusal to holdover tenancies, if the agreement before us is wholly dependent upon the lease, North Carolina should consider persuasive authority from states with similar holdover tenancy structures. Wisconsin enacted a statute which "gives the landlord the election to treat the holdover tenant as a tenant from year to year under the lease and gives both the landlord and the tenant the right to terminate such lease at the end of any year upon 30-days-written notice." Last v. Puehler ,
We consider an option to purchase or right of a first refusal to be an integral part of the lease and one of its terms within the meaning of this section. It is not an uncommon practice to insert an option to purchase or a right of first refusal in a lease. In many cases no lease would be entered into by the tenant without such protection.
The interpretation commanded by the language of this section is both logical and fair. Upon the expiration of the written lease the tenant has the duty to surrender the property. If he holds over, he runs the risk of being considered a holdover tenant with all the burdens of the lease. The pinpointed question in this case is whether he also runs the risk, if it is one, of acquiring all the benefits which the lease might provide. Conversely, the landlord may eject the tenant, make a new agreement mutually satisfactory to him and the tenant, or elect under sec. 234.07, Stats. By such an election the landlord receives the *524benefits of the lease from year to year but likewise incurs its obligations and the tenant is then bound from year to year both as to the advantages and disadvantages to him of the lease. It is logical to believe the legislature intended by the operation of this section to leave the parties as they were under the original lease after the landlord elected to come under the section. We cannot construe the statute to mean that by the election of the landlord a common law tenancy is created free and clear from some terms of the lease but not from others.
This analysis and logic presumes a right of first refusal or other option to purchase carries forward into a holdover tenancy unless a *149contrary intent appears. Unlike in both Vernon and Hannah , the lease in this case contained no language indicating the right of first refusal did not carry into the year-to-year tenancy. The applicable law to these facts should be applied under this analysis.
III. Conclusion
The Defendants failed to meet their burden to be awarded summary judgment, as factual questions of intent of the parties remain. I disagree with the majority opinion's holding and with its application of policies from states with disparate holdover tenancy rules. Also, the recorded Memorandum contains an express right of first refusal agreement between the parties, which is not tied to nor dependent upon the lease.
Genuine issues of material facts exist of the parties intent and actions. I vote to reverse summary judgment and remand to the trial court for a hearing on the merits. I respectfully dissent.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.