delivered the Opinion of the Court.
We granted certiorari to review the decision of the court of appeals in
Tanktech, Inc. v. First Interstate Bank,
In May, 1987, Tanktech entered into a three-year lease agreement with D & E Investment Company (“D & E”) in which Tanktech agreed to lease commercial space in a building owned by D & E. The lease was a standard commercial lease, but also contained a separately negotiated addendum. 1 Two years prior to the above transaction, First Interstate obtained a security interest in the D & E property in the form of a deed of trust to secure a promissory note for money lent to D & E. Subsequently, D & E filed for bankruptcy. The bankruptcy court granted First Interstate relief from the automatic stay to foreclose its security interest in the property. First Interstate commenced foreclosure proceedings and obtained title to the property by a public trustee deed. After obtaining title to the property, First Interstate did not enter into a new lease agreement with Tanktech, but allowed Tanktech to remain on the property in exchange for monthly payments in the same amount that Tank-tech paid under its prior lease with D & E. In 1989, a ruptured water pipe caused a flood which damaged Tanktech’s personal property.
Tanktech filed suit alleging that (1) First Interstate breached the lease contract because it failed to comply with provisions in the lease requiring the lessor to maintain the building’s plumbing in good order and to restore the premises damaged as a result of any casualty, and (2) First Interstate was negligent because it breached its duty of reasonable care in maintaining the structural, mechanical, electrical and plumbing systems in good order and repair. The trial court granted First Interstate’s motion for a directed verdict on the contract claims, finding that the foreclosure extinguished the D & E-Tanktech lease and that there was no evidence from which a reasonable juror could find either an implied-in-law or an implied-in-fact contract between Tanktech and First Interstate. The trial court submitted the negligence claim to the jury which returned a verdict in favor of First Interstate.
The court of appeals, applying the landlord/tenant holdover doctrine, found there was enough evidence of an implied lease between Tanktech and First Interstate to submit the issue to the jury. Thus, it reversed the trial court’s order granting a directed verdict in favor of First Interstate and remanded with directions.
II
We granted certiorari to consider two issues. First, whether the court of appeals ruling nullified the clear legislative intent of section 38-39-110, 16A C.R.S. (1982), 2 and second, whether the court of appeals incorrectly adopted as the majority rule in Colorado the proposition that “[a]n implied lease based on the terms of an earlier pre-foreclosure lease may be created if ... the property owner/landlord accepts monthly payments from the tenant and does not renounce the prior agreement.”
A
First Interstate argues that the court of appeals holding that an implied lease may exist under the landlord/tenant holdover doctrine nullifies the legislative intent of section 38-39-110, because the decision can be interpreted to give effect to the terms of a lease which should have been extinguished under the statute. 3
[u]pon the issuance and delivery of such deed ... title shall vest in the grantee and such title shall be free and clear of all liens and encumbrances recorded or filed subsequent to the recording or filing of the lien on which the sale referred to in this section was based.
§ 38-39-110.
The phrase “free and clear” under section 38-39-110, means that title to property “is not incumbered by any liens.”
Black's Law Dictionary
663 (6th ed. 1990); see
also Sant v. Stephens,
While the plain intent of section 38-39-110 is to extinguish all subordinate liens upon foreclosure,
see Fleet Real Estate Funding Corp. v. Koch,
It is unclear whether the court of appeals considered the D & E-Tanktech lease extinguished. A number of statements in the court of appeals opinion lend credence to First Interstate’s argument that the court of appeals did not view the prior lease as automatically extinguished upon foreclosure. For instance, the court of appeals stated that an implied lease may exist based on the terms of the prior lease if Tanktech paid and First Interstate accepted rent and First Interstate failed to renounce the prior lease. Additionally, the court remanded the case for a jury determination of whether First Interstate was aware of the prior lease.
Tanktech, Inc. v. First Interstate Bank,
Accordingly, because it is unclear whether the court of appeals decision extended and gave effect to the pre-foreclosure D & E-Tanktech lease, or merely found a new lease, we reverse the court of appeals to the extent that it held the pre-foreclosure lease was extended.
Whether the landlord/tenant doctrine of holdover tenancy applies to a situation in which a subordinate lease has been extinguished through proper foreclosure proceedings is an issue of first impression for this court.
The operation of the holdover tenancy doctrine in Colorado is well established. A holdover tenant is one who continues in possession of the premises beyond the term of the lease.
Fibreglas Fabricators, Inc. v. Kylberg,
Relying on these general principles, Tanktech argues that the law should imply a lease based upon the terms and conditions of the D & E-Tanktech lease because: (1) First Interstate allowed Tanktech to remain in possession of the premises; (2) Tanktech paid First Interstate the same amount of rent that it paid D & E under the prior lease; and (3) First Interstate failed to repudiate the prior lease. The court of appeals agreed with this argument and remanded the case for a jury determination of whether there was an implied lease. 6
In addition to being successive in time and occupying the same premises as the original lease, all of the Colorado holdover cases involve situations where the landlord and tenant were original parties to the lease.
See, e.g., Ochsner v. Langendorf
Additionally, in holding that an implied lease may exist based upon the terms of the pre-foreclosure lease, the court of appeals overlooks the distinction between a lease that is extinguished through foreclosure and one that simply expires at the end of the lease period. As discussed above, the holdover doctrine applies when a tenant remains on the premises at the
expiration
of a lease term.
See Wells v. Blystad,
Here, First Interstate took title to the property free and clear as if the pre-fore-closure D & E-Tanktech lease never existed; therefore, a court could not imply a contract based upon terms that were legally absent.
See McFarland Real Estate Co. v. Joseph Gerardi Hotel Co.,
Finally, there is ample support for the position we are adopting in other jurisdictions that have considered this issue. In
Dover Mobile Estates v. Fiber Form Products, Inc.,
Accordingly, we find that upon the foreclosure of a mortgage or deed of trust all subordinate leases are extinguished and that the landlord/tenant holdover doctrine cannot be used to give effect to the terms of an extinguished lease.
Ill
Finally, to complete our discussion we must determine what relationship existed between Tanktech and First Interstate subsequent to the foreclosure.
After the foreclosure, but prior to the flood, a representative of First Interstate met with the president of Tanktech to discuss Tanktech’s remaining on the premises. The trial court found that at this meeting First Interstate’s representative agreed to allow Tanktech to continue in possession as a month-to-month tenant in exchange for payments in the same amount that Tanktech paid under the extinguished lease. The trial court also found the parties did not enter a new lease at this time. We defer to findings of fact by the trial court unless clearly erroneous and not supported by the record.
People v. Thomas,
A month-to-month tenancy is a periodic tenancy in which the landlord-tenant relationship continues each month until one of the parties gives notice to terminate the tenancy. See Restatement (Second) of Property § 1.5 (1977); 2 Richard R. Powell, The Law of Real Property H 223 (Patrick J. Rohan ed., rev. vol. 1993). The parties may expressly create a month-to-month tenancy. Additionally, if the parties enter into a lease of no stated duration, a periodic tenancy is presumed for a period equivalent to that for which rent is paid. See Restatement (Second) of Property § 1.5 cmt. d (1977).
We find that by allowing Tanktech to remain on the premises and by accepting monthly payments, First Interstate entered into a month-to-month tenancy with Tank-tech, as opposed to a holdover tenancy as Tanktech argues.
See Dover Mobile Estates v. Fiber Form Products, Inc.,
IV
We conclude that the D & E-Tanktech lease was extinguished upon foreclosure of First Interstate’s security interest and to the extent the court of appeals decision would give effect to the terms of the extinguished lease, it is overruled. Additionally, the landlord/tenant holdover doctrine is not applicable to bind a foreclosure-sale purchaser to the terms of a lease to which it was not a party — though nothing would preclude the parties from entering a new lease with identical terms.
Accordingly, the decision of the court of appeals is reversed and remanded with directions to reinstate the trial court’s order granting a directed verdict in favor of First Interstate.
Notes
. The addendum provided, inter alia, that the lessor: (1) is responsible for the cost of upkeep and repair of the plumbing system as well as all mechanical, electric, and structural portions of the building, and (2) is responsible for the cost of restoring the premises if any damage to the premises due to fire or other casualty occurred.
. This statute was repealed and reenacted subsequent to the commencement of this lawsuit as § 38-38-501, 16A C.R.S. (1993 Supp.).
.After the events in this litigation took place, the Colorado legislature enacted the “omitted party" statute which details how a junior lessor, among others, might survive foreclosure. See § 38-38-506(3), 16A C.R.S. (1993 Supp.). As this statute does not apply to the facts in this case, it will not be discussed.
. This statute has been reenacted as § 38 — 38— 305, 16A C.R.S. (1993 Supp.).
. Though Tanktech concedes a junior lease is extinguished upon foreclosure of a senior interest, we granted certiorari to clarify this issue.
. The court of appeals decision does not distinguish between an implied-in-fact and an implied-in-law contract. Presumably, it was referring to an implied-in-law contract which is imposed by a court for reasons of justice, 1 Samuel Williston,
A Treatise on the Law of Contracts
§ 1:6 (Richard A. Lord ed., 4th ed. 1990), whereas an implied-in-fact contract requires a meeting of the minds.
A.R.A. Mfg. Co. v. Cohen,
. The court of appeals found it was not clear whether First Interstate was aware of the lease between D & E and Tanktech prior to the flood and remanded the case for a jury determination of this issue.
Tanktech, Inc. v. First Interstate Bank,
. Tanktech tries to distinguish the Missouri cases on two grounds, both of which are unpersuasive. First, it argues that by statute, Missouri law prohibits more than a month-to-month, tenancy unless the tenancy is in writing; thus, a holdover tenancy could never arise because it is implied from the parties’ conduct and not upon a written agreement. This argument is incorrect. The statute Tanktech cites deals only with the termination of a tenancy at will, sufferance, or month-to-month, it does not pre-elude a holdover tenancy from arising. In fact, Missouri recognizes a holdover doctrine similar to that of Colorado.
See Kilbourne v. Forester,
. For this reason, it is unnecessary for us to direct the court of appeals to remand the case to the trial court to determine the effect of the "new” month-to-month tenancy.
