Amsden v. Atwood

67 Vt. 289 | Vt. | 1894

TYLER, J.

It appeared on the trial that the plaintiff was the owner of a water power, with a saw-mill and machinery situated thereon, in Windsor, and that on August 19, 1885, by an indenture, he leased a portion of the same to one Loring Atwood for the term of five years from October 1, 1885, at an annual rent of four hundred dollars, in quarterly payments of one hundred dollars, on the first of January, April, July and October. It was stipulated in the lease that the plaintiff should build a dry-house on the premises, and that the lessee should pay him as rent therefor eight per cent interest on its cost. It was further stipulated that the plaintiff should saw the lessee’s logs for his business — the manufacture of chair stock — at a price thereafter to be agreed upon and indorsed on the lease. It was afterwards agreed that the price should be sixty cents an hour, but it was not indorsed.

The lessee entered into the use and occupation of the premises and continued therein until April 1, 1890, when with his consent a new contract was executed by the plaintiff and the defendant as follows :

“That whereas said John Atwood has taken the place of Loring Atwood in a contract or indenture dated the nineteenth day of August, 1885, execxxted by and between Loring Atwood and the said Amsden, and whereas certain modifications and extensions of said contract or indenture have been mutually agreed upon by and between said Amsden and said John Atwood which it is deemed desirable to put in writing ; therefore be it known that the said Amsden, for a valuable consideration, doth hereby extend the lease set forth in said contract or indenture of August 19 for the term of one year from the first day of November, 1890, with a further extension of a term not exceeding five years from the first day of November, A. D. 1891, at the option of said John Atwood, provided he shall give to said Amsden notice in writing at least three months prior to November 1, 1891, *293of the number of years for which he shall elect to hold and enjoy such extended term ; and the said John Atwood, in consideration of the foregoing, doth hereby covenant and agree to and with the said Rollin Amsden that he will pay in equal quarterly instalments of one hundred nine dollars and forty-four cents on the first days of January, April, July and October, for such extended terms as the rent thereof, except so far as said rent may be reduced under the provisions of said indenture of August 19, 1885, and that he will in all respects fulfil all the contracts and agreements of the said Loring Atwood therein contained. It is further mutually agreed and covenanted that if the said John Atwood does not have logs so as to run his chair works from the first day of April to the first day of November, A. D. 1890, then the rent is to be reduced one-half for such time only between said dates as said shortage of stock may exist.”

It is clear that the original lease with all its covenants was extended by this contract, excepting so far as the covenants were thereby changed. The only changes made were a slight reduction in the quartexdy rent, and a further agreement that the rent should be reduced one-half for such time between April 1 and November 1, 1890, as the defendant was short of logs for his chair works.

The new contract definitely extended the lease to November 1, 1891, with an option in the defendant to have it extended a fui'ther term, not exceeding five years from that date, by giving the plaintiff three months previous notice thereof. As the defendant failed to exercise his option the lease tei'minated by its own limitation on that date, and the defendant remained in possession without right.

The relation of landlord and tenant can exist only by virtue of a contract, express or implied. It xnay be created by implication of law as well as by express contract. Here the express contract had terminated, and the question is whether the defendant remained as a tenant by implication of law, and if so, what was the nature of his tenancy?-

It is clear that after the extended lease terminated the *294plaintiff might have evicted the defendant. He allowed him to remain without objection until November, 1, 1892, and thence until December 26 of that year, when he gave him a written notice that he regarded -him as a tenant by sufferance ; that the rent would be increased to six hundred dollars after January 1, 1893 ; that the charge for sawing logs would be increased, and that as a condition of the defendant’s continuing as his tenant he should not employ men who were personally offensive to the plaintiff.

In Blumenburg v. Myers, 32 Cal. 93, it was decided that a tenancy by implication arose, subject to the covenants and conditions of the original lease, where the tenant held over and the landlord received rent after the expiration of the term. This was on the ground that the receipt of the rent was an acknowledgment of a subsisting tenancy. Numerous cases are cited in the valuable notes to this case in 91 Am. Dec. 560, to the effect that a tenant whose term has expired, and who, instead of quitting the premises as he ought to do, remains in possession, holding over, is a wrong doer, and the landlord may treat him either as a trespasser or as a tenant for another year upon the same terms, at his option; Den v. Adams, 12 N. J. L. 99; Rowan v. Lytle, 11 Wend. 619; Adams v. Duker, 11 N. J. L. 84; that this is so, though the tenant has no intention of holding over for a year or of paying the same rent; Hemphill v. Flinn, 2 Pa. St. 144; Bacon v. Brown, 9 Conn. 362 ; even where before the expiration of his term he notifies the landlord that he does not intend to keep the premises another year, but nevertheless remains in possession ; that his remaining fixes him as a tenant for another year if the landlord chooses to treat him as such.

Wood, on Land and Ten., s. 484, says:

“By holding over after the expiration of the term, the lessee becomes a tenant at sufferance. He does not thereby necessarily become a tenant from year to year, though such *295a holding, accompanied with payment of rent or other recognition by the lessor of a tenancy, may ripen into an estate of that description; the tenant, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, being bound by the terms of the expired lease, so far as they are applicable to such an estate, without any newbargain to that effect between him and the lessor.” * * *

In s. 13 of the same work the author says:

“By the common law, if a tenant who has occupied and paid rent annually holds into a new year, it is evidence of a new demise for a year, or rather from year to year, according to the circumstances, or of a tenancy at will, if the circumstances are such as to rebut a renewal of a former tenancy,” and cites Jackson v. Salmon, 4 Wend: 327 ; Bradley v. Covel, 4 Cow. 349, and Digley v. Atkinson, 4 Camp. 178. In that section it is said that the landlord may treat the tenant holding over as a trespasser, or as a tenant holding over ■on the terms of the original lease. In such case the lease is not the contract under which the tenant holds, but is evidence •of the contract. The tenant holds upon the terms of the expired lease unless notified of new terms before the lease expired.

In 4 Kent’s Com. 112, it is laid down that:

“If the tenant holds over by consent given, either ■expressly or constructively, after the determination of a lease for years, it is held to be evidence of a new ■contract, without any definite period, and is construed to be a tenancy from year to year. The moment the tenant is suffered by the landlord to enter on the possession of a new year, there is a tacit renovation of the contract for another year, subject to the same right of distress.”

This is recognized as a correct statement of the law in Silsby v. Allen, 43 Vt. 172. In that case it was held that an estate at will was cohvertible into a tenancy from year to year by the payment of rent — not by the length of time that the tenant held and paid rent — but by the fact that he entered and held under a stipulation to pay annual rent, and paid accordingly. Hall v. Wadsworth, 28 Vt. 410 ; Barlow v. Wainwright, 22 Vt. 88.

*296In Boudette v. Pierce, 50 Vt. 212, the building leased for a stable was enlarged by the tenant, and without right used by him and his family as a tenement; held, that such use was in violation of and put an end to the contract, if the plaintiff had so elected ; but that the defendant’s continued occupancy for a succession of years and his payment of annual rent converted the tenancy, however it should be designated in its inception, into a tenancy from year to year. Amsden v. Blaisdell, 60 Vt. 386, is not at variance with this doctrine ; on the contrary, it is there recognized that in order to convert a tenancy at will into one from year to year, an occupation for a second year must at least be entered upon. See Stedman v. McIntosh, 42 Am. Dec. 122 and notes; Vrooman v. McKaig, 59 Am. Dec. 85.

It would be a fair test of the soundness of this doctrine to inquire whether the tenant, having held over one full year after the termination of his written lease and entered upon a second year, could then quit the premises at pleasure without further liability to pay rent. That he could not is settled in Barlow v. Wainwright. See notes to this case in 52 Am. Dec. 79. In Haynes v. Aldrich, 133 N. Y. 287, it was decided that from the fact of the tenant’s holding over after the expiration of his term, the law implied an agreement to hold for a year upon -the terms of the prior lease; that the option to so regard it was with the landlord and not with the tenant, and that the latter held over at his peril. In that case the tenant informed his landlord that he did not wish to renew his lease, and that he intended to surrender possession at its termination, but he was prevented from so doing for two days by his inability to procure trucks to move his goods, and by the illness of a boarder. It was held that these facts did not prevent such holding over from operating as a rexiewal of the lease for another year if the landlord elected so to treat it. In the note to that case in 28 Am. St. R. 636, it is said to be the general rule that if a tenant *297for one or more years holds over, at the expiration of his term the landlord may treat him as a trespasser, or as a tenant for another year upon the terms of the prior lease, as far as applicable. Cases from New York, Rhode Island, Indiana and Minnesota, are cited in support of this doctrine.

Therefore, unless the defendant surrendered his right to the premises, and in legal effect admitted his liability for their use to December 26, 1892, it must be held that when the plaintiff brought the suit his claim for rent for any part of the quarter commencing November 1, 1892, had not matured, and that there was error in including in the judgment the items for “use of mill” and “rent and power” which became chargeable after that date.

It appeared that in September, 1891, the plaintiff requested the defendant to exercise his option, and that the latter declined to have the lease extended beyond November 1, 1891, for the reason that it was uncertain whether he could obtain logs for his business the next winter. But after that date he “stayed right along,” as the plaintiff testified, with no new agreement as to his occupancy, and paid his rent as he had done under the written contract. After that year was completed he continued his occupancy, and was in possession of the premises on December 27 when the plaintiff’s writ was served. The defendant claimed that there was a conversation in August, 1892, about his remaining till the next spring, but that it did not amount to an agreement. The plaintiff denied having such conversation.

We. do not think that the defendant’s deciding to vacate the premises, and his act of taking down and removing his machinery after the plaintiff’s notice to him of December 26, can be construed as conferring upon the plaintiff a right of action for rent not then due. There was no surrender of the tenancy by the defendant nor acceptance thereof by the plaintiff. The plaintiff did not repudiate the relation of *298landlord and tenant. He rendered monthly statements of rent to .the defendant through the entire- year 1892, as he had previously done, and thus recognized him as his tenant, though in his notice of December 26 he called him a tenant by sufferance.

If, at the expiration of the extended lease, the plaintiff had done no act recognizing a continued tenancy, the defendant would have been within the definition of those who come in by right and hold over without right. He would have remained merely by the plaintiff’s laches as his tenant at sufferance. The plaintiff elected to recognize him as a tenant for another full year by taking his rent, and allowing him, without objection, to enter upon a second year. This, we think, made the defendant a tenant from year to year. He at least had a right to complete the year upon which he had thus entered.

yudgment reversed and cause remanded.

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