The plaintiff (the Authority) was awarded damages in this action of contract for the use and occupation by the defendant (Save-Mar) of part of the premises which were taken by eminent domain by the Authority from Subob Realty, Inc. (Subob), the lessor of Save-Mor. The case was heard by a judge without jury upon the report of an auditor whose findings were not final. A consolidated bill of exceptions wherein the Authority excepted to the denial of a request for a ruling as to damages, and Save-Mor to the denial of certain requests as to liability, brings this case to us.
We summarize the findings of the auditor. One Click-man at all material times was the president, treasurer, manager arid common owner of both Subob, the owner and lessor, and Save-Mor, the lessee. Under its lease with *428 Subob, executed in January, 1956, Save-Mor occupied large areas of the first and second floors of a building at 338-340 Central Street, Lowell, at a rental of $675 a month, the fair value of the demised premises. Save-Mor used the premises for the retail sale and the storage of furniture. On June 6,1958, the Authority took the land and building. In due course, Subob obtained a judgment for the taking which the Authority has satisfied. After the taking, and until November 25, 1958, Save-Mor continued to use and occupy the area on the first floor, but did not itself use and occupy the area on the second floor. Save-Mor did, however, permit one Smith, who was a tenant of other areas on the first and second floors, to use for storage purposes that part of the second floor which had been leased to Save-Mor. Access to the latter area was by a ramp which was part of the premises demised to Save-Mor, but which Smith had a right to use to reach his own partitioned area on the second floor. The nature of the building was such that whoever had the use and occupancy of the first floor had control over the use and occupancy of the second floor by way of the ramp leading to it. After the taking, there was discussion, but no agreement, between the Authority and Save-Mor as to the terms and conditions under which Save-Mor could continue to occupy the premises.
The auditor made alternate ultimate findings: A. Unless controlled by the subsidiary facts, Save-Mor was liable to the Authority as a tenant at sufferance of the first and second floors from June 6, 1958, to November 25, 1958, at the rate of $675 a month. B. If Save-Mor was liable for the use of the first floor only, the fair rental value was $450 a month. 0. If the uncertainty of occupation resulting from the taking be a relevant factor in determining the fair rental value, (1) the charge for both floors should be at the rate of $450 a month, and (2) the charge for the first floor only should be at the rate of $300 a month.
Based upon the auditor’s report, accompanied by certain ■exhibits, mainly photographic, which are also before us, the judge found for the Authority and assessed damages in the *429 sum of $2,534.66. The award and the disposition of the requests for rulings show, as the parties concede, that the judge found that Save-Mor was liable for the use and occupation of both floors but at the lower rental of $450 a month because of the uncertainty of occupancy due to the taldng.
The exceptions of Save-Mor raise two questions for-our determination. The first is whether Save-Mor, upon the taldng, became a tenant at sufferance so as to be liable to the Authority for rent under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 186, § 3, which reads: “Tenants at sufferance in possession of land or tenements shall be liable to pay rent therefor for such time as they may occupy or detain the same.” It is clear that the valid
1
taking by the Authority of the whole of Subob’s estate in fee divested Subob of its title and automatically terminated Save-Mor’s lease.
Newman
v.
Commonwealth,
We accordingly rule that under this construction the transfer of title from Subob to the Authority, although not voluntary but rather in the valid exercise of the power of eminent domain, established the requisite privity of estate between Subob and the Authority and that Save-Mor became a tenant at sufferance of the Authority. We note in passing the dictum in
Emmes
v.
Feeley,
It appears, however, that even though a tenancy at sufferance has come into existence, this court as a condition precedent to recovery under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 186, § 3, or its -antecedents, has consistently required that notice in some form be given to the tenant at sufferance that the interest of his landlord has been transferred.
Dixon
v.
Smith,
The second question raised by Save-Mor’s exceptions is whether it is liable for the fair rental value of the area on the second floor as well as of the area on the first floor. The basis of liability for use and occupation consists in the control over the premises which effectively deprives the new owner of the use of the property.
Horton
v.
Cooley,
We consider finally the question raised by the Authority’s exception to the denial of its request for a ruling that uncertainty of occupation is not a legitimate factor in determining fair rental value. There was no error. The liability of a tenant at sufferance is not to be determined arbitrarily by the rent fixed in a lease "with the former owner, but rather is the sum which the trier of fact finds the use and occupation were reasonably worth. See
Emmes
v.
Feeley,
Exceptions overruled.
Notes
We disregard as being' without merit Save-Mor’s bald unsupported allegations that the taking was invalid.
