Longacre v. Longacre

132 Mo. App. 192 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1908

BROADDUS, P. J.

This action is for unlawful detainer. The facts of the case as found by the court were as MIoavs:

“In this case, the court finds the facts to be that, on or about June 15, 1905, plaintiff Avas the owner of the lands described in his complaint; that he was a widoAver; that defendant, his grandson, was living at Chapel Hill, in Lafayette county, with his wife and children; that on .or about said time said plaintiff and defendant entered into an agreement Avhereby defendant Avas to move onto plaintiff’s farm, with his family, and to occupy said farm thereafter as the tenant of plaintiff; that he was to pay as rental therefor all of the taxes assessed against said land, keep the farm and buildings in good repair, do all fencing necessary, and board and care for plaintiff and provide him with all needed clothing; that plaintiff was then about 78 years of age; and in return therefor defendant- was to have the use of said farm as long as they should agree; that his arrangement continued, and plaintiff and defendant continued to live upon said premises thereunder until about November 24, 1906; that in October, 1906, differences having arisen between the parties, an agreement and contract Avas entered into betAveen plaintiff and defendant, whereby they settled and adjusted all matters and accounts between them, and it was also agreed that defendant should surrender possession of said premises to plaintiff on January 1, 1907. The court further finds that said agreement as to the surrender of said farm was Avholly oral, and that there was not at the time nor at any subsequent time any deed or note in writing of said agreement made, signed by either of the parties thereto, or the agent or agents *196of them or either of them thereto lawfully authorized by writing. The court further finds the defendant did not give any possession at any time after the said agreement of November 24, 1906, but continued to occupy said premises, and still so continues.” The judgment was for the defendant and plaintiff appealed. There being practically no dispute as to the facts the question for our consideration is only one of law.

The tenancy being one at will and no notice to quit having been shown the plaintiff relied on a verbal agreement to quit at a certain time. This was not sufficient. An oral agreement to give possession of land is within the Statute of Frauds. [Boyd v. Paul, 125 Mo. 9.] “The only way to terminate a tenancy from month to month is by giving written notice, and a verbal agreement that such a tenancy terminate at a certain time falls within the prohibition of the statute.” [Smith v. Smith, 62 Mo. App. 596.] “A parol contract for the future delivery of the possession of lands is an interest in the land itself and within the Statute of Frauds.” [Davis Bros. v. Callahan, 66 Mo. App. 168.]

The plaintiff’s theory that the agreement made on the settlement in which the defendant agreed to deliver possession of the premises to the plaintiff on the 1st day of January, 1907, was the creation of a lease for a definite time. But this position is not tenable. It was not a new lease, but an agreement to surrender the existing possession at the time mentioned. We have examined the authorities cited by plaintiff to sustain their theory of his case, but they do not. For instance, it is said that: “If a lessee for twenty years takes a lease for ten years, to begin at a certain fixed period, the term for twenty years is surrendered or determined immediately; for by the lessee’s acceptance of the new-lease, he admits that the lessor is in a situation to lease to him, notwithstanding the existence of the other lease; and by such acceptance, the lessor has power to make *197a new lease during the former.” . [2 Wood’s Landlord and Tenant; sec. 490, p. 1162.] The reference is to contracts in writing therefore not obnoxious to the Statute of Frauds. But the difficulty about plaintiff’s case is that the agreement did not create a new lease; it was merely an agreement to surrender possession held under a tenancy at will. His insistence that there was a new lease created is a mere assumption not justified by the finding of facts by the court.

And it is also contended that the contract is taken out of the Statute of Frauds by a performance on the part of the lessor, in that he paid $100 in consideration for the settlement and for possession on the 1st day of January, 1907. Bnt the court did not find that plaintiff paid said sum on the settlement, and it is denied that he did pay it. But had he paid the amount stated he could have recovered back unless defendant had offered to comply and surrender possession. [McDonald v. Lynch, 59 Mo. 350; Galway v. Shields, 66 Mo. 313; Gwin v. Smurr, 101 Mo. 550.] But the agreement had not been performed and the case is not like that of Tobener v. Miller, 68 Mo. App. 569, where the tenant had verbally agreed to surrender the premises. The court said: “While a-verbal agreement for a surrender could not be enforced, yet when said agreement had been acted upon and performed there arose a surrender by operation of law, and the plaintiff Avas thereafter estopped from claiming any longer under the lease; in other Avords an executed parol agreement to surrender is operative as a surrender.”

The general principle stated in the beginning, that possession is an interest in the land itself and that a verbal agreement to surrender such possession is within the Statute of Frauds and not enforcible, controls.

The cause is affirmed.