The action is ejectment, and the plaintiff seeks to recover the possession of a cottage, and the damages for its detention. On the 29th day of April, 1895, the plaintiff was the owner of the cottage and the land on which it stood; and on that day the parties entered into an agreement in writing, under seal, whereby the plaintiff agreed to convey the cottage, the land on which it stood, a hotel and certain personal property, to the defendant. The defendant agreed to convey certain real estate to the plaintiff, and, among other things, thereby agreed that he would allow the plaintiff to occupy the cottage, free of rent, for the period of three years. The deed conveying the property was delivered pursuant to the plaintiff’s agreement; and the defendant occupied the cottage during the season thereafter by permission of the plaintiff, the following season without permission, and refused to vacate the same on demand.
The plaintiff, by giving the defendant permission to occupy the cottage the first season, and the defendant, by occupying under such permission, have given a construction to the written agreement and the plaintiff’s deed. The parties having acted under such construction, and the defendant having gone into possession under a license from the plaintiff, which has terminated by its own limitation, in
Under these circumstances, the agreement and deed may, and should, be read together. When so read, it is obvious, that, under them, the defendant’s right of occupancy of the cottage was suspended for the term of three years from the date of the written agreement; and that, during that term, the plaintiff was entitled to the exclusive possession and control. When we read the written agreement and deed together, and treat them as one transaction, as the parties have done, the case stands no different from what it would if the deed contained a clause reserving to the plaintiff the possession and control of the cottage for the term of three
Judgment affirmed.