40 Mich. 283 | Mich. | 1879
Gongdon took proceedings before a circuit court commissioner to recover possession of a store which Benfey had held under him by lease. The proceedings were removed to the circuit court by appeal, and the errors relied upon here arise upon exceptions taken on the trial in that court.
One principal objection relied upon by plaintiff in error is that the circuit judge treated the agreement between Congdon and Benfey for a further occupation of the premises by the latter, at a reduced rent after the written lease had terminated, as an agreement for a single year, and declined to submit the question of time to the jury as one of fact. We think the court committed no error in this ruling. There was no material discrepancy in the evidence of the two parties. It appeared from what was testified by each that no time for the continuance of the holding was named. Benfey had a right to hold for a year, because the stipulated rent was an annual rent; and it must be inferred from this that he was to hold for that time. But this was as far as the inference could go. If he claimed a right to hold longer, the burden was upon him to show an agreement which gave it.
It is also claimed by Benfey that when the year was up and he still remained in possession, he was entitled to the statutory notice as a tenant at will or at' sufferance. Comp. L. § 4304. No doubt he would have been entitled to it as a tenant at will had he held over by the express or implied consent of Congdon, but not other
We shall not undertake to determine in this case exactly what is meant by the statute above referred to, in giving to tenants at sufferance a right to the same notice to surrender possession as is given to tenants at will; but we do not think a tenant who wrongfully holds over for a short time becomes immediately entitled to such notice, or that any short delay in commencing proceedings against him can confer the right. The statute evidently intends a case of a holding where the occupant has some equities which would render it unjust that he be required to surrender immediate possession; but he cannot acquire such equities by a mere wrongful holding over, which is neither assented to nor acquiesced in. And that, according to Congdon’s evidence, which the jury appear to have accepted and believed, was the case with Benfey here.
Several questions are made on the exclusion of evidence, but none of the rulings appear to us erroneous, and none involves any question requiring discussion.
The judgment must be affirmed, with costs.