52 W. Va. 476 | W. Va. | 1903
John Arbenz, Sr., made a written lease, but not under seal, to Exley, Watkins & Company, leasing for a term of five years and tliree months a brick building, including vacant parts of certain lots, in the city of Wheeling, the term commencing 1st January, 1896, and ending 31st March, 1902, for the annual rent of seven hundred dollars, commencing 1st April, 1896, payable in monthly installments. The lessees took possession the first week of January, and occupied thp premises, paying rent monthly. On the 15th September, 1898, a fire totally destroyed said building. The lessees paid rent for that September and also for October, but with the rent for October sent a letter, 31st October, 1898, to Arbenz informing him that they thereby vacated the premises and surrendered them to him. In November, 1898, Arbenz sued out a distress warrant against said lessees for rent from November, 1 1898, to 31st October, 1899, and the same having been levied, a forthcoming bond was given, and in the proceeding upon it in the circuit court of Ohio County a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for five hundred and two dollars and fifty-four cents after deducting for failure to repair an engine, and judgment given thereon, and the defendants took a writ of error. The defendants filed pleas denying grounds of attachment and denying all liability for the rent claimed.
Counsel for defendants contends that the destruction of the building by fire discharged the tenants from further obligation to pay rent. He does not base this position on common law, as it requires the tenant to pay rent notwithstanding it is wholly destroyed by ■ accidental fire, flood or the like, unless there be stipulation otherwise. 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. L. (2d ed.) 306; 2 Rob. Prac. 52; Scott v. Scott, 18 Grat. p. 165; 2 Minor 762.
The lease in the present case is for a term beyond five years, and being not a deed, it falls under section 1, chapter 71, Code, providing that “Ho estate of inheritance or freehold, or for a term of more than five years, in lands, shall be conveyed, unless by deed or will.” It is argued that the lease is void by the statute, and the basis of no demand for rent. The court gave an instruction, which controls the case, to the effect, for present purpose, that the jury should find for the plaintiff $700 rent for the one year claim. If that instruction is right, others in the case are immaterial, as is conceded on both sides, because that being right, others, if erroneous, would not affect the result. The defendants took possession by reason of the lease and paid rent. They were then tenants. The lease did not pass to them the term which it purported to pass, it is true; it passed no distinct term. The statute makes the lease in
In Miller v. Wisner, 45 W. Va. 59, we said that though a contract for service more than one year was void, yet after service there could be action for compensation, and the contract could be used to furnish- measures of recovery. Just so in
Thus far I have written on the theory, conveyed by the words of authority, that a lease not conforming to the statute not only brings into being a tenancy, but one from year to year; but my mind has raised again the question, Is it a tenancy at will or one from year to year ? If at will, the recovery in this case is wrong, because it is one for a year on the theory of a tenacy from year to year, which requires a notice to terminate the tenancy for three months terminating on the terminal day of the current year, which was not given in this case; whereas, if a tenancy at will, no notice is required, and the letter of defendants surrendering the premises would I think be sufficient. An examination upon this question has brought me to the conclusion that mere entry into possession under such a lease creates what technically is a tenancy at will, but payment of rent periodically makes tire tenancy a periodical one, not one merely at will, and further, the authorities say that the law implies a tenancy from year to year, or quarter to quarter, or month to month, as the case is. In England and many of our States are statutes to the effect that one entering under a lease void under the statute of frauds is a tenant at will, and even under those statutes it is held that occupancy and payment of
It is suggested that this is a tenancy from month to month,' and then the letter from the tenants surrendering would close the lease at once or a month thereafter; but the lease covenants for rent of “$700 per annum for each and every year commencing from and after the 1st day of April, 1896, payable in equal
It is hardly necessary to extend this opinion beyond this point in view of instruction 5; but it may be expected that this opinion should refer to that provision in the lease - that the lessor “agrees to put and keep the roof of said building in good order.” I do not understand that failure of Arbenz to repair the roof before the fire gave cause of abandonment and released lessees from rent, because failure to repair does not warrant abandonment, unless the property is therefrom untenantable, which is not claimed, and remaining in possession after breach is a waiver of right to abandon. The lessees kept on in possession and paying rent. 18 Am. & Eng. Ene. L. 231; Gear Land! & Ten. sec. 107. This theory would show instruction 5 to be wrong. But why speak of this when there was no abandonment, or claim or show of it before the fire for want of repair of the roof? I do not see that the question of abandonment is material. But the -claim under this clause was that after the fire it released from rent, as the defendants asked, but were refused, instruction 9, “that the failure of flic plaintiff to restore the roof of the building after the fire freed the defendants from any further obligation to continue to occupy the building or pay rent for the. same.” This is a .claim that Arbenz was bound to rebuild, as there can be .no roof without ;a house. The law does not require a lessor to rebuild a house destroyed by fire without a covenant to do so in terms on a general covenant to repair. 18 'Am. & Eng, Ene. L. 226, (2d ed.); Kline v. McLain, 33 W. Va. 32; Windon v. Stewart, 43 Id. 711. This lease contained nó general covenant to repair or rebuild, but only the limited one to keep the roof in order. As -neither the written lease nor the law required Arbenz to rebuild, of course, this clause as to repair of the roof had no application after the fire. The case of Thompson v. Pendell, 12 Leigh 608, is cited to support the argument that the covenant as to the roof is as strong to relievo the tenant from rent as the covenant in that case. There a mill was leased and destroyed by fire during the term, and the lease said that the
Judgment affirmed.
Affirmed.