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Scenario 6.0: 1 - "When is a Commitment Not a Commitment?" The buyer entered into a contract to lease 20,240 square feet of office space from Office Leasing Company (OLC). This space consisted of 8,545 square feet in Suite 1100 and 11,695 square feet in Suite 1106. The lease was for five years and provided the buyer with a renewal option as follows: The buyer shall have the right to one renewal option for a five-year term. The renewal option shall become effective provided notice is given in writing to the lessor of the buyer's intent to exercise such option at least 270 days before the end of the original lease term; all other terms and conditions of this lease shall remain the same during any renewal term. Said notice shall be computed commencing with the day after the date of mailing. The buyer also entered into Supplemental Lease Agreement Number 1 (SLA 1) , which stated it was being issued to reflect an expansion of 6,431 square feet in Suite 300. SLA 1 amended the original lease to encompass the additional space, changing the space from 20,240 square feet to approximately 26,671 square feet, and increased the annual rent to $1,098,790.70. SLA 1 also amended the renewal option text to reflect the new annual rent of $1,156,935.80. The lease, as amended by SLA 1, also contained a buyer clause regarding authority to make changes to the lease. As stated in the clause, the buyer's authorized agent may, by written order, make changes within the general scope of this lease to the amount of space, provided the lessor consents to the change. The first lease was set to end on December 31, 2021. On February 28, 2020, the buyer's contract specialist sent an email to OLC stating the buyer "hereby exercises its renewal option ... for a period of five years." The buyer's contract specialist noted that the email was "official notification that the buyer exercises its renewal option right as provided under this lease," and indicated that "this action will be followed up with a supplemental lease agreement in the near future." The email also stated that "per SLA 1, [the buyer] would not like to renew the expansion space portion of the lease." At that time, the buyer was planning to vacate a good portion of its leased inventory and requested that OLC allow the buyer to terminate the Suite 300 portion of the lease effective March 1, 2021. On March 1, 2020, OLC agreed to accept the long renewal of Suites 1100 and 1106 per the renewal option if the buyer agreed to renew the third-floor space for two weeks, from January 1, 2021, to January 15, 2021. If OLC found a new tenant for a term extending beyond January 15, 2021, it would waive any further liability for the third-floor space as of the date of the replacement lease. After discussion, the buyer agreed over the phone to a two-week extension of Suite 300 at no rent. On August 2, 2020, OLC emailed the buyer's contract specialist to ask when the SLA would be prepared. The buyer's contract specialist did not respond. Several weeks later, on August 24, the buyer determined that it no longer needed to rent any of the suites under the lease and requested to be released at lease termination. On September 10, OLC once again emailed the buyer's contract specialist to follow up on the preparation of the SLA. This time, the buyer's contract specialist responded, apologized for the delay, and stated that he would try to get the SLA to OLC in the next couple of weeks. However, on October 26, the buyer's contract specialist informed OLC that the buyer no longer intended to pursue the renewal option, reflecting the buyer's August 24 determination that it no longer required any of the suites under the lease. The following day, on October 27, OLC responded that the buyer had already exercised the renewal option and that it intended to hold the buyer to that agreement. On June 21, 2021, the buyer notified OLC that its renewal option would not be exercised and that the buyer would not be responsible for any rent payments after the lease expiration date of December 31, 2021. Following a final decision from the buyer's authorized agent, which rejected the claims that the buyer had exercised the renewal option, OLC filed a claim. In order to properly exercise an option: o The option must be accepted; o Such acceptance may not change, add to, or qualify the terms of the offer; and o The buyer's acceptance has to be unconditional and in exact accord with the terms of the contract being renewed. Question: Based on these criteria, did the buyer exercise the lease renewal option?
Correct Answer: D
The correct answer is D because, under NCMA CMBOK principles, a valid exercise of an option must be unconditional and strictly in accordance with the terms of the original contract . The scenario explicitly states three key requirements for properly exercising an option: the option must be accepted, the acceptance must not change or qualify the offer, and it must be unconditional and exactly aligned with the contract terms. In this case, although the buyer sent written notice stating intent to exercise the renewal option, the communication introduced modifications to the agreement , specifically indicating that the buyer did not wish to renew the expansion space (Suite 300) and intended to alter the leased space arrangement. This constitutes a conditional acceptance , which legally operates as a counteroffer rather than a valid exercise of the option. According to CMBOK guidance, exercising an option is generally considered a unilateral contractual right , but only when executed precisely as defined in the contract. Any deviation-such as altering scope, quantity, or terms-invalidates the exercise and requires mutual agreement. Option A is incorrect because discussions do not override the requirement for strict compliance. Option B is incorrect because unilateral execution still requires adherence to contract terms. Option C may raise a valid authority issue, but the primary failure here is the change in terms , which is decisive. Therefore, the buyer did not validly exercise the option because the acceptance was conditional and inconsistent with the contract.