Defining “Reasonable”
Last Updated on Thursday, 14 July 2011 04:03 Written by Chris Griswold Friday, 1 October 2010 09:12
I drove to Tulsa earlier this week and the leaves are starting to turn. Gotta love Oklahoma. Today I want to shed some light on a legal concept which you probably use every day but might not fully understand or appreciate. It’s the term “reasonable” as it would normally appear within a purchase sale contract, a lease, a loan agreement or whichever document. Read more below.
Defining “Reasonable”
At the end of the day, as with any legal concept, it’s all about how a court will interpret the term. For example, let’s discuss how a court will interpret the phrase found within a lease which reads, “…in Landlord’s reasonable discretion….” How will this interpretation occur?
The court will employ the age-old “reasonable person test.” What is this? This is where the court creates a fictitious, “reasonable landlord” who is basically identical to the actual landlord under the lease (obviously, in reality, there is no such person) and compares this fictitious, reasonable landlord’s discretion against the discretion employed by the actual landlord (which created the dispute in the first place). It’s basically a “Monday morning quarterback” approach to determine whether the actual landlord acted “reasonably” in utilizing their discretion. However, what factors will the court consider in creating this identical, fictitious, “reasonable landlord”?
Among other things, the court will look at the current, economic climate within which the actual landlord was operating (i.e., the post-2008 economic climate), the actual landlord’s financial position, the tenant’s financial position and creditworthiness, and both the actual landlord’s and tenant’s years of experience within the commercial marketplace. The court might also look at the actual landlord’s and tenant’s prior dealings and course of conduct and perhaps even the tenant’s rent payment history under the lease. Basically, the court will try to re-create the same factual environment that the actual landlord found itself within prior to utilizing its discretion. Once the court has re-created this factual environment, the court’s fictitious, reasonable landlord’s discretion will be compared to that of the actual landlord so that, as nearly as possible, the court is comparing “apples to apples.”
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Kris Davis / Industrial Broker / Grubb & Ellis|LevyBeffort / Oklahoma City, Oklahoma