Hinton Foundry, Machine & Plumbing Co. v. Lilly Lumber Co.

73 W. Va. 477 | W. Va. | 1914

Williams, Judge:

The Hinton Foundry, Machine & Plumbing Company, a corporation, brought this action of unlawful detainer against The Lilly Lumber Company, also a corporation, to recover possession of a lot of ground in the town of Avis, Summers county, which it was occupying as a lumber yard, under a demise from plaintiff. The action originated before a justice of the peace and was appealed to the circuit court where a trial by jury was had and a verdict rendered for defendant at the direction of the court; and plaintiff was awarded this writ of error.

The deed of lease bears date October 16th, 1906, and, after describing the premises demised, continues as follows: “this lease covers all of the said lot except such parts as the said party of the first part shall desire to use for buildings or for storing fuel, coke, iron or other material or products used or produced in connection with its Foundry, Machine & Plumbing business, there is also except any ground which the said party of the first part may desire to use for coal tipping or coal yard, this lease covers all of the said lot except as above excepted and gives the said party of the second part the use and control of it for a lumber yard until such time as shall be required by the party of the first part for building purposes *479or for use in connection with its business. For the said ground the said party of the second part is to pay a rental of $1.00 per year so long as it holds possession and uses said ground, but it is expressly understood and agreed that at any time the said party of the first part shall require or need that portion of the lot conveyed by this lease or any part of it, that the said party of the second part shall surrender peaceable possession of the same on 90 days notice.”

On the 20th day of January, 1910, plaintiff served notice on defendant to vacate the premises by the 20th of the following April. No reason was assigned in the notice for demanding the premises.

Counsel for defendant contends (1) that the demise was for a year with the continued right of possession, by the a'nnual payment of rental, until terminated by ninety days notice of the happening of the events specified in the lease; or, (2) if not an estate with a conditional limitation, then it is a tenancy from year to year determinable only at the end of a year by ninety days notice previously given; and that in either event the notice was not sufficient; first, because it did not state the happening of the event which, it is insisted, was essential to terminate the lease; and second, because possession was demanded in April, when the current year ended 16th October. "We note, however, that the action was not begun before the justice until April 21, 1911, a year and one day after the time when possession was demanded. But we do not regard this point as material. The vital question is, what was the character of the lease? Was it a lease for an uncertain duration determinable only by plaintiff’s need of the ground for buildings, or for such other purposes as are named in the lease; or, does the deed create a tenancy from year to year, or only a tenancy, at will ? It is clear that no definite term is fixed by the terms of the lease; and it is equally certain that defendant is not bound to occupy, or to pay rent, for any certain period. It could surrender the premises at any time. Therefore, as to the lessee, it is certainly, a tenancy at will. The rental value of' the leased premises is proven to be at least $25 per month. It thus appears that the rent stipulated in the lease is only nominal.

The right to use the land “until such time as shall be *480required by the party of the first part for building purposes. or for use in connection with its business, ’ ’ created an estate of uncertain duration. There was no way of determining when that event would happen. It might happen in six-months, and it might not happen for fifty years. This made ,the estate, not one for any certain term however short or long,, but one of uncertain duration; and the law is, that such an, estate is an estate at will. It is an essential element of an .estate for a term, that it have a definite time to end as well as to begin. 24 Cyc. 902; Clayton v. Burtenshaw, 5 B. & C. 41, 108 Eng. Rep. 16; Doe dem. Wood v. Clarke, 7 A. & E. 210; Colclough v. Carpeles, 89 Wis. 239. In Corby v. McSpadden, 63 Mo. App. 648, it was held that: “A lease ‘for a period commencing, etc., and until the party of the first part is prepared to improve the ground with new buildings,’ is for an uncertain term and creates only an estate at will.” And in Lea v. Hernandez, 10 Tex. 137, it was held that a lease, “to hold until the property should be sold, created a tenancy at will only. ’ ’ The following cases are to the same effect: Murray v. Cherrington, 99 Mass. 229; Cheever v. Pearson, 33 Mass. 266.

We do not mean to say that a leasehold may not be determined by a contingency. A lease may contain a conditional limitation which will terminate the estate upon the happening of the contingency. But a lease, other than one at will, must have a definite period of termination, in any event, and it may be determined .sooner by a contingency. Such leases are common. The ordinary leases for oil and gas are of this character, but they are usually made to end at a certain time if oil or gas is not discovered. But if the duration of the estate is to be measured alone by the happening of a contingency, it becomes merely an estate at will.

A tenancy at mil may be terminated at any time by either party. 1 Coke’s First Institutes, 55a. Mr. Minor says; 2 Min. Inst. (2nd ed.) 172, the right to terminate the estate is a mutual one, notwithstanding the instrument of lease may expressly, or exclusively, declare that the estate is to be determined at the will of one party only.

“If one party may terminate an estate at his will, so may the other. Right to terminate is mutual.” Cowan v. Radford *481Iron Co., 83 Va. 547. This principle was reannounced by this court, in haec verba, in Eclipse Oil Co. v. South Penn Oil Co. 47 W. Va. 84.

“When a lease is made to have and to hold at the will of the lessor, the law implies it to be at the will of the lessee also, and vice versa.” Doe v. Richards, 4 Ind. 374; Knight v. Indiana Coal and Iron Co., 47 Ind. 105, 17 Am. Rep. 692.

The reservation of $1.00 a year rent does not prove an intention to create an estate from year to year. While it is true that the reservation of annual rental is a circumstance, proper to be considered when it is doubtful whether an estate at will or one from year to year was intended, and is often sufficient to turn the scale in favor of a lease from year to year, 24 Cyc. 1028; yet, when there is a great disproportion between the rent reserved and. the actual value, it is evidence against an intention to create such estate. Roe v. Prideaux, 10 East 158,

The estate was one at will, and plaintiff had a right to terminate it at any time, on giving ninety days notice. The notice given was sufficient. It was not necessary to assign reasons for demanding possession.

We reverse the judgment, set aside the verdict and remand • the ease for a new trial.

Reversed and Remanded.