Thomas J. Peck & Sons, Inc. v. Lee Rock Products, Inc.

Decision Date30 October 1973
Docket NumberNo. 13167,13167
Citation30 Utah 2d 187,515 P.2d 446
CourtUtah Supreme Court
Partiesd 187 THOMAS J. PECK & SONS, INC., a Utah corporation, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. LEE ROCK PRODUCTS, INC., a Utah corporation, Defendant and Respondent.

Heber Grant Ivins, American Fork, Dallas H. Young, Jr., Provo, for plaintiff and appellant.

Jackson B. Howard of Howard, Lewis & Petersen, Provo, for defendant and respondent.

CROCKETT, Justice:

Peck, owner and lessor of a gravel pit north of Lehi, sued defendant Lee, lessee, to have the lease declared invalid and unenforceable, to restrain removal of gravel, and for damages. The district court first granted a temporary injunction against Lee, then recalled the order. On plaintiff's claim that irreparable damage was occurring, and that a final adjudication as to the status of the lease was desirable before trying the issues as to damages, this court granted an intermediate appeal. 1

Lee Products, which was engaged in the sand and gravel business, had had its lease on another gravel pit owned by Provo City expire in the summer of 1971. Lee's attorney prepared a proposed lease on Peck's property: that he would install his equipment in the pit and pay five cents per ton for the materials removed. Peck says (and other evidence so indicates) that this was a very low price, and that he would not agree to such a lease unless he had an option to buy Lee's equipment after it was installed.

Pursuant to this proposal Mrs. Peck typed up the following

Added Option

Upon mutual agreement between Clinton L. Lee and Thomas J. Peck, Thomas J. Peck shall have the option to buy the equipment and business from Clinton L. Lee for the price to be mutually agreed upon by both parties at any such time after business is in complete operation. The price shall be determined by two competent appraisers and agreed upon by both concerned parties--Lee and Peck.

The payment is to be mutually agreed upon by both parties.

After this addition, the parties signed the agreement on August 19, 1971. Lee proceeded to install his equipment and get it into operation, with some help and cooperation from Peck. Incidentally, some of the gravel was sold to Peck at a charge of fifty cents per ton. The following spring, on March 17, 1972, Peck's attorney wrote a letter to Lee proposing to exercise the option to buy Lee's equipment. Lee's counsel responded by letter of March 28, rejecting Peck's proposal on the ground that the 'Added Option' was not binding because it constituted only an agreement to agree. The impasse thus created resulted in this lawsuit.

The basic controversy in this case is posed thus: The plaintiff's position is that the entire lease, including the 'Added Option' constitute one integrated agreement, which he would not otherwise have entered into; and that the option should be enforced; and alternatively, if the option is not enforceable, it is an integral part of the entire contract, and the whole contract is therefore unenforceable, and that the defendant is on plaintiff's property without right as a trespasser.

Whereas, the defendant's position is that the 'Added Option' is but an agreement to agree and therefore unenforceable. But he urges that it should be regarded as something separate and severable from the primary lease, and that the latter is a valid agreement under which he can remove gravel at five cents per ton.

On the basis of the evidence presented by the parties on the dispute just stated the trial court made 'interlocutory' Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, upon which he entered the following Interlocutory Judgment and Decree:

1. The purported Lease Agreement with Added Option dated August 19, 1971, constitute one integrated indivisible instrument, which, because the Added Option is unenforceable, causes the entire instrument to be unenforceable as such and is a voidable, but not void, instrument.

2. The defendant is a tenant of the plaintiff by estoppel and the paintiff is estopped from denying that the defendant is a lessee of the said property, the terms and conditions of said lease being those expressed in the Lease Agreement, with the exception that the term of the said lease is from year to year.

3. The Court has, by previous order, reserved for trial the issue of the defendant's damages by reason of the wrongful issuance of the injunction, and the Court reserves for trial the issues of the indebtedness, if any, of one party to the other for the purchase of materials between the said parties.

In attempting to overturn the trial court's ruling that the lease and the 'Added Option' were intended to be one integrated transaction the defendant argues for application of the principle that if the two agreements can be segregated and carried out separately, that should be done. The soundness of that doctrine in appropriate fact situations is not doubted. 2 But the trial court appears to have been concerned with other basic principles of contract law, which have more specific application to the instant fact situation. The most fundamental of these is that the meaning and effect to be given a contract depends upon the intent of the parties; 3 and that this is to be ascertained by looking at the entire contract, and all of its parts in their relationship to each other; and this principle applies to whether they intended separate aspects of their contract to be severable, 4 and that if this results in uncertainty, he may and should look to extraneous evidence concerning the background and surrounding circumstances in order to make that determination. 5

In following that course, the court accepted the version of the transaction as presented by the plaintiff: That the lease as proposed by defendant was unacceptable, and that the 'Added Option' was agreed to as a part of one entire 'single package' transaction, and without which the lease would not have been executed. We must assume that the trial court believed the evidence as presented by the plaintiff; and this constitutes substantial evidence to support the view he thus adopted. Moreover, on the vital point of intent, there is this further observation which tends to support the trial court's ruling. Lee is faced with a dilemma: Either he thought the option as proposed by Peck was valid, and he was acting in good faith in agreeing to it as an essential part of a total contract, or he thought otherwise. If the former, then the trial court correctly so held. On the other hand, if Lee did not so intend, then he must have known the 'Added Option' was but an illusory, unenforceable promise. If this were true, then he acted in bad faith to induce Peck into signing a contract which he knew Peck would not otherwise agree to. On the basis of what has been said above we are not convinced that the interests of justice would be served by overturning the determination made by the trial court.

The plaintiff, gratified by the ruling of the trial court on the above discussed issue as to the contract, nevertheless takes his turn in attacking the findings and judgment. He argues that inasmuch as the lease is invalid, it follows that the defendant is but a trespasser, and that the trial court committed...

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    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • 17 Diciembre 1992
    ...Brown v. Board of Educ. of the Morgan County Sch. Dist., 560 P.2d 1129, 1131 (Utah 1977); Thomas J. Peck & Sons, Inc. v. Lee Rock Prods., Inc., 30 Utah 2d 187, 191, 515 P.2d 446, 448 (1973); Continental Bank & Trust Co. v. Bybee, 6 Utah 2d 98, 101, 306 P.2d 773, 775 (1957); Sprouse v. Jager......
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    ...surrounding the execution of the agreement is also important. Brown, 560 P.2d at 1131; Thomas J. Peck & Sons, Inc. v. Lee Rock Prods., Inc., 30 Utah 2d 187, 515 P.2d 446, 448 (1973). If, after considering extrinsic evidence relevant to the intentions of the parties on the severability issue......
  • Timm v. Dewsnup, 910157
    • United States
    • Utah Supreme Court
    • 27 Abril 1993
    ...of justice so requires, and the adverse party is given a fair opportunity to meet it. Thomas J. Peck & Sons, Inc. v. Lee Rock Prods., Inc., 30 Utah 2d 187, 193, 515 P.2d 446, 449-50 (1973) (citations omitted), quoted in Lewis, 627 P.2d at Mrs. Dewsnup contends that this court has never uphe......
  • Management Services Corp. v. Development Associates
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    ...(Continental Bank and Trust Company v. Bybee, 6 Utah 2d 98, 101, 306 P.2d 773 (1957). See also, Thomas J. Peck & Sons, Inc. v. Lee Rock Products, Inc., 30 Utah 2d 187, 515 P.2d 446 (1973)). One factor in determining the parties' intent with regard to severability is the manner in which the ......
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