127 N.Y. 175 | NY | 1891
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *177 [EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *180 There are two questions involved in the consideration of this appeal. The one is whether the defendant was bound to give the plaintiff notice of its intention to quit the premises before it could successfully maintain a defense to the claim for rent set forth in the complaint in this action and if it was so bound, whether the undisputed facts established upon the trial of the action, do not constitute such notice.
If such notice was not required, or if required and was sufficiently given, the direction of the trial court to the jury to render a verdict for the defendant was proper.
From the examination I have given the record in this case, I entertain a clear conviction that the defendant was not bound to give the plaintiff such notice, and if it was bound to, sufficient notice was given.
The plaintiff's contention is to the effect that the tenancy of the defendant to the plaintiff, formerly existing, had not been legally terminated prior to May 1, 1886, and that the defendant continued liable to pay the plaintiff the rent of the premises from that date to the 1st day of November, 1886. It is undisputed that the occupation of the premises by defendant ceased upon the 1st day of August, 1885, and I am of the opinion that the legal tenancy ceased on the first day of May following that date.
The defendant had prior to May, 1875, occupied the premises with the consent of the plaintiff for some years, and paid the plaintiff as annual rent for the same, the sum of seven hundred dollars in half yearly payments, upon the first days of May and November in each year.
In the month of April, 1875, the plaintiff gave the defendant notice that from May 1, 1875, the rent of the premises occupied by defendant would be twelve hundred dollars a year. Thereupon the common council of the defendant passed a resolution authorizing its mayor to lease the premises of the plaintiff for the period of three years from May 1, 1875, at a rent of twelve hundred dollars a year. There was no specification either in the requirement of the plaintiff or in the resolution of defendant when or in what installments the rent *181 should be payable. But that is not at all important, for the defendant paid the increased rent half yearly as it had paid the former rent.
No written lease was executed between the parties, and as a parol lease for a period beyond one year is void, the relation that resulted between the parties was a lease for a year if the tenant occupied the premises during that period; and if the tenant continued in the occupancy of the premises beyond the year, he thereby became a tenant from year to year at the same rate of rent. (Reeder v. Sayre,
The language of the court in Reeder v. Sayre (supra) is: "The agreement, though by parol, and void as to the term and the interest in lands sought to be created, regulates the relations of the parties to it in other respects upon which the tenancy exists, and may be resorted to to determine their rights and duties in all things consistent with and not inapplicable to a yearly tenancy, such as the amount of rent to be paid, the time of year when the tenant could be compelled by the landlord to quit, and any covenants adapted to a letting for a year. (Doe v. Bell, 8 T.R. 579; 8 Cow. supra;Arden v. Sullivan, 14 Q.B. [Ad. El.N.R.] 832; Doe v.Amey, 12 Ad. El. 476; Berrey v. Lindley, 3 M. G. 498; Edwards v. Clemons, 24 Wend. 480.)"
And the court through Justice BRADLEY in the above cited case, Talamo v. Spitzmiller, says: "While there may appear to have been some confusion in the cases in this state upon the subject, this doctrine has been more recently recognized. (Reeder v. Sayre,
In the cases last cited the tenants had been in possession more than a year when the question arose, but having gone into occupancy under an invalid lease, their yearly tenancy was held dependent upon a new contract, which might be implied from the payment and acceptance of rent, and when once created could be terminated by neither party without the consent of the other, only at the end of the year." *182
The plaintiff contends that until the tenancy was terminated by a notice from the defendant that he intended at some definite future period to quit the premises, the tenancy and defendant's liability to pay the rent continued. Now what are the relations between landlord and tenant in a tenancy for a year or from year to year in respect to the amount of rent and the duration of the term or of the cessation of tenant's liability to pay rent? The rate of rent is that specified in the lease for a year or in the void lease. When the term expires in a valid lease, at a fixed and defined period, or when the term is for one year by reason of the lease being void under the statute of frauds and occupation for that period, no notice to quit is necessary. When the parties have agreed in the lease or the law has fixed the period of the termination of the tenancy, it would be a work of simple supererogation to give such notice. Hence where the duration of the term is fixed, there is no rule nor any reason for a rule, requiring any notice to quit to be given. (§ 107, McAdam, Landlord and Tenant, and cases cited.)
In tenancies for a term fixed by the lease or by law for the want of a valid lease as to the term, the rights of the parties are determinate. The landlord in such lease has the right of an election. He may, if the tenant does not vacate the premises at the end of the term, treat him as a wrong doer and bring ejectment or take summary proceedings under the statute to remove him from the premises and he is not required before doing so to serve the tenant with any notice to quit (Park v.Castle, 19 How. Pr. 29 and the cases there cited), or the landlord may waive his right to the immediate possession and the wrong of the tenant in remaining beyond the expiration of the term and recover of him the rent for another year, for the tenant by remaining over has, by implication, become a tenant for another year from the expiration of his term. (§ 21, McAdam L.
T., citing Schuyler v. Smith,
In Ludington v. Garlock (29 N.Y.S.R. 600) it was held in a case of a lease from month to month and the tenant held over, that the tenant who vacated the premises at the end of a subsequent month and gave the agent of the landlord notice of that fact and left the keys with him, that the tenant was no longer liable for the rent of the premises. That case is analogous to this in all respects, except that was a tenancy from month to month and this is a tenancy from year to year. In that case the tenant paid during the time of the occupancy and quit at the end of the month. In the case at bar the defendant did not quit the possession at the end of the year as it had the right to do and was, therefore, compelled to pay for nine months after it quit the premises, because it did not quit the premises at the end of the year, but occupied them three months beyond the end of a year.
It is quite apparent from the cases above cited that the necessity or occasion for the service of a notice to quit upon the part of the landlord or tenant, has no application to a tenancy which terminates at a fixed period. It is only in cases where the end of the term is not fixed, as in tenancies at will or at sufferance, that the landlord is required by law before *184 bringing ejectment or summary proceedings to recover possession from a tenant to give notice to quit. (2 R.S. 5, § 28; 1 id. 745, § 7.) Those statutes are evidently based upon that theory. (Park v. Castle, supra.)
I find no case, and upon principle I should not expect to find a case, holding that it was not the right of the tenant to leave the premises at the end of the term or requiring him to give the landlord in such case a notice of his intention to quit the premises.
We have before seen in Park v. Castle (supra), and the other cases cited, that in such case the landlord is not bound to give the tenant notice to leave even for the purpose of instituting summary proceedings to recover possession of the premises.
If such is the case in respect of the landlord, why should it not be so as to the tenant? Their rights and duties are correlative or reciprocal.
My conclusion is that the defendant in this case had the right to quit the premises at the end of any year from the first day of May without giving the plaintiff any notice of his intention to do so.
The only object of such notice must be to inform the landlord that the relation of landlord and tenant was to cease and thereafter the landlord would be at liberty to repossess the premises and to lease them to another. If the law requires any notice it has prescribed no form for it. (
Any notice, therefore, which in a reasonable manner conveyed information to the landlord that the tenant would cease to be such, would suffice for that purpose.
Assuming, without deciding, that the landlord was entitled to six months or any other period of notice of an intention to terminate the tenancy at the end of the then current year, viz., May 1, 1886, would not the tender of the premises, the quitting of the possession on the 1st day of August, 1885, the hiring and actual occupation of other premises and without any re-entry and a flat refusal to pay rent subsequent to that *185 date, and the interposition of a verified answer in an action to recover such rent by the defendant, that he had been evicted from the premises by the conduct and permission of the landlord, answer the purposes and objects of such notice? He must be a very dull landlord indeed that could not derive from such facts some degree of knowledge, or at least a very suggestive hint that the defendant intended to terminate its tenancy and at the earliest practicable moment.
The conclusion we have reached renders any special reference to the effect of the judgments recovered by plaintiff against the defendant for the rent of the year ending May 1, 1886, unnecessary. Those judgments simply accord with the result we have reached aside from their consideration and that is, that the defendant was liable for the rent of the year ending May 1, 1886, at which time the lease terminated and the defendant had the right to quit the premises.
It certainly cannot, in the view we have taken, be reasonably contended that the judgments not only determined the liability of defendant to pay the rent for the year specified in the complaint, but also for subsequent years in an indefinite future.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except PARKER, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed.