73 Pa. Super. 53 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1919
Opinion by
The plaintiff brought this action of assumpsit to recover the amount alleged to be due under the provisions of a lease for a hotel property and the barroom fixtures therein. The lease was dated March 27, 1911, and contained the following provisions material to the determination of the questions here involved: “To have and to hold the same unto the second party for the term of two years commencing the first day of April, A. D. one thousand nine hundred and eleven, with the privilege to the tenant of five years after the expiration of said term at the same rental and on the same conditions from year to year.” The foregoing was the granting clause of the lease, and the only other clause which tends to throw light upon the question, was near the end of the lease and is as follows : “In case the lessee desires to terminate this lease at the expiration of any year, he shall give thirty days’ written notice to the lessor of his intention so to do before the end of any year.” The defendant went into possession of the premises under this lease and continued to occupy the same until March 31, 1915, when it vacated, having, on December 9, 1914, served a written notice upon the plaintiff of its intention to surrender the premises on and after April 1, 1915, claiming the right to do so under the covenants of the lease. The plaintiff made efforts to secure another tenant for the premises and succeeded in doing so at a reduced rental and subsequently brought this action against the defendant company to recover the loss asserted to have been sustained through their alleged breach of the covenants of the lease. The case was tried
When a tenant who enters for a definite term, under a lease which gives him the option to hold for an additional term, continues in possession of the premises after the expiration of the first term, it is notice to his landlord of his election to exercise his privilege and he becomes bound for the additional term: McBrier v. Marshall, 126 Pa. 390; Harding v. Seeley, 148 Pa. 20; Lipper v. Bouve, Crawford & Co., 6 Pa. Superior Ct. 452. This is upon the principle that one who has a right of entry upon lands will be presumed to have'entered in virtue of that right, and the continuance of possession by the tenant is referable to the right conferred by the covenants of the lease and subject to the conditions thereby imposed. The rights of the parties are, however, always dependent upon the covenants of the lease, and when the option or privilege of the tenant is not for a definite term he is not to be held bound for a definite term, he may be only a tenant from year to year: Gillion v. Finley, 22 W. N. C. 124. This defendant continued in possession after the expiration of the first term designated by the lease; it must, therefore, be presumed to have exercised the privilege to hold over conferred by the granting clause of the lease. What was that privilege? “The privilege to the tenant of five years after the expiration of said term at the same rental and on the same conditions from year to year.” The words in this covenant “at the same rental and on the same conditions,” relate not to the duration of the term, but to the rental and other conditions of the lease, such as the
The defendant admitted at the trial in the court below that it was liable to the plaintiff for certain bills for water, gas and a showcase aggregating $49.14 and for that amount the plaintiff was entitled to judgment.