67 Mass. 571 | Mass. | 1854
This is a proceeding under that branch of the Rev. Sts. c. 104, which regulates the rights of landlord and tenant, and gives the landlord a summary process before a magistrate, to recover possession, in certain cases. The question is, whether it will lie in this case. The provision is, that “ when the lessee of any lands or tenements shall hold possession of the demised premises without right, after the determination of the lease, either by its own limitation, or by a notice to quit,” the landlord may obtain possession by this process.
The plaintiff was lessor, the defendant was lessee, the defendant was holding the premises, contrary to his agreement with the plaintiff; so far the case is within the statute. But the ground of defence is, that the lease had not terminated by its own limitation, but by a condition, and so,within the authority of Fifty Associates v. Howland, 11 Met. 101, the plaintiff was not entitled to have this process; and also, that the defendant, having entered under the agreement in question, became tenant at will, and that without notice to quit, either three months generally, or fourteen days, if for rent in arrears, the plaintiff could not maintain this process. Gleason v. Gleason, 8 Cush. 32. These points require examination.
The statute provides, that all estates and interests in land, created without writing, shall have the force and effect of estates at will only. Rev. Sts. c. 59, § 29. Still, parol leases are not void; they regulate the terms of payment of rent, and length of time for giving notice to quit, and are to some extent efficacious. If there be a parol lease for a year, by force of the statute, it can have no greater force than that of a tenancy at will, and therefore either party may terminate it, in the mode prescribed by law, within the time limited by it. But if neither party exercises that power, and it is allowed by both parties to extend through the year, it then expires by its own limitation, as if it had been a demise by specialty. It follows, that in the ordinary cases, especially in cities, of letting tenements by parol, for a fixed time, the lessor has no need to give his tenant notice to quit; if he does not quit at the expiration of the time thus
It appears to us, that this is the point of view, in which to consider the agreement in question, to pay quarterly in advance. For the first quarter, the condition was complied with, the lessee entered, and the lease became absolute for the quarter. Before it expired, another quarter’s rent was advanced, the condition precedent complied with, and the right to the term for that quarter became vested. But at the expiration of the first quar*
The case shows, that by the parol agreement the lessee was to pay in advance; it further adds, on condition that if he failed to do so, be should leave the premises. This was very proper, as an expression of the understanding of the parties of what would be the result; but this condition is not the ground on which the legal right of the plaintiff to this process depends; that legal right, resulting from the terms of the statute as applicable to the parol agreement, would have been complete and available to sustain this process, without that condition.
Exceptions overruled.
Thomas, J. did not sit in this case.