delivered the opinion of the court.
In view of the contentions of defendant hereafter noticed it becomes of importance first of all to determine whether plaintiff was entitled to maintain this action, and if so, under which clause of the second section of the Forcible Entry and Detainer Act.
The proof showed without contradiction an agreement between plaintiff and John Merki, Sr., that the latter should occupy the house to be erected upon the lot purchased by plaintiff until the death of John Merki, Sr., and that thereupon the property should revert to the plaintiff. As one of the witnesses puts it, “The old gentleman said ‘when I die it goes - back to you (the plaintiff); you take possession; that is all there is to it.’ ” This agreement created between them the relation of landlord and tenant, and plaintiff had the right to proceed against defendant and recover possession of the premises under the fourth clause of section 2 of said act which provides that forcible entry and detainer shall lie “ when any lessee of the lands or tenements, or any person holding under him, holds possession without right after the determination of the lease or tenancy by its own limitation, condition or terms, or by notice to quit or otherwise.” To establish the relation of landlord and tenant it is not necessary that the words “lease,” or “let” or “rent” be used; any language plainly meaning or implying that the one shall hold from or under the other is sufficient. Thus in Feely v. Thewlis,
There was testimony offered and some of it admitted tending to show that Merki, Sr., purchased the lot and built the house thereon with his own money, placed it in the hands of agents to sell, paid the taxes and claimed and treated it as his own. It is now argued that the court erred in directing a verdict and in not receiving all this testimony because it showed or had a tendency to show, first, that the father took and held possession, not as lessee of his son, but in his own right; second, that the father was the equitable owner of the property and that the defendant as his widow had an estate of homestead therein; and third, that the deed to the lot was not delivered to plaintiff. To all these contentions excepting the last, there is one conclusive answer: John Merki, Sr., by reason of his being plaintiff’s tenant, was estopped from denying the title of the plaintiff, and so was the defendant after her husband’s death. Whatever right of possession she had grew out of his and terminated when he died. Stafford v. Woods,
It is only where the question whether a deed has been delivered is a doubtful or debatable one, that testimony such as the foregoing is proper. Of that character are Union Mutual Ins. Co. v. Campbell,
An ejectment suit for the premises in question was pending between the parties at the time of bringing this one and it is said that the former is a bar to the prosecution of the latter. Ho authorities are cited in support of the contention, and we think it is without merit. The ejectment suit determines the title; the detainer suit, the right of possession.
It is also claimed that the plaintiff during the lifetime of his father executed a deed to him for the premises, conveying the same in fee, and thereby giving the defendant an estate of homestead. ' We have carefully examined all the proof in that behalf and are satisfied that it does not show a conveyance of that or any other kind.
We do not pass upon plaintiff in error’s first point relating to the alleged absence from the record of the detainer complaint because it was conceded at the oral argument that the point was not well taken. •
The judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
