48 Me. 473 | Me. | 1861
The opinion of the Court was drawn up by
This is an action of trespass quare ' clausum fregit.
■ It appears that the defendant, in 1853, verbally leased to the plaintiff a tract of land for ten years, from the first of May, of that year, at an annual rent of eight dollars. The plaintiff entered and continued in possession, paying rent up to May 1, 1858, when the trespass complained of was committed.
There was evidence tending to show that, in the fall of 1857, the-defendant told the plaintiff that he should not allow him to occupy any longer the premises leased, and to the contrary.
The counsel for the plaintiff requested the Court to instruct the jury “that, in the fall of 1857, the notice required by law, to terminate a tenancy at will, was three months notice, in writing, to quit at the expiration of three months, when the rent was payable yearly,” but the Court declined so to instruct them.
In the fall of 1857, the E. S. of 1841 were in force, and, by c. 95, § 19, all tenancies at will might be determined “by either party, by three months notice, in writing, for that purpose, given to the other party.” The possession of a tenant at will, under that statute, before notice, and for three months after, can in no sense be held to be the possession of the landlord. “ The tenant,” remarks Wilde, J., in French v. Fulton, 23 Pick., 104, “ has not only the possession, but the right of possession, and, in this respect, he stands on the same footing as a tenant for a term certain.” In Dickerson v. Godspeed, 8 Cush., 119, it was held that a tenant at will, whose estate had not been legally determined, might maintain trespass quare clausum fregit against his landlord for entering upon the premises leased. So, in Young v. Young, 36 Maine, 133, Si-iepley, C. J., says, “ an estate at will, existing by the statute of this State, gives to the tenant rights for a period, after a written notice to quit, of equal validity with those acquired under a written lease for a like period.”
The requested instruction should, therefore, have been given, if the landlord had wrongfully entered in 1857, without notice. Had the defendant’s .entry been before the Eevised Statutes of 1858 were in force, the inquiry, as to the then existing law, would have been material. But, in point of fact, it was not till May, 1858, that the alleged trespass was committed.
The requested instruction was not therefore pertinent, and whether given or withheld, could not properly affect the rights of the parties.
The entry, which is the subject matter of complaint in this
By the R. S. of 1858, the provision of c. 95, § 19, of the R. S. of 1841, is repealed, and the section relating to tenancies at will, and requiring notice in writing for their termination is omitted. The existing law therefore is, that tenancies at will are determinable at the will of either party, and without notice, as was the law before the revision of 1841. Ellis v. Paige, 1 Pick., 43; Moore v. Boyd, 24 Maine, 243. The request, therefore, was properly denied. The defendant, at the time he did enter, by reason of the change in the law, was under no obligation to give notice, but might determine the estate at his will, and enter upon such determination.
The R. S., 1858, c. 94, §§ 1 and 2, relate only to the process of forcible entry and detainer, and to the notices required for its maintenance.
The other requests of the plaintiff have been so far substantially given, that we do not perceive that he has any just grounds of complaint.
The motion to set aside the verdict must be overruled. There is no such preponderance of proof on the part of the plaintiff, as to the facts in controversy, as indicates either mistake or misconduct on their, part. There was conflicting evidence, and it was their province to determine its relative credibility. There is no sufficient ground for disturbing the verdict. ‘ Exceptions and motion overruled.