45 S.E.2d 199 | Ga. | 1947
Where there is an agreement between landlord and tenant for the rent of premises for a stipulated monthly rental, with no provision fixing the duration of the rental contract, and the tenant pays the rental monthly through the remainder of that calendar year, and retains possession into the succeeding calendar year, paying the monthly rental, which is accepted by the landlord without any additional agreement being made, the tenancy is extended through the second calendar year, and this would be true also as to subsequent years so long as the same course of dealing as to payment and acceptance of rent continued.
The sole question for determination is as follows: Where there is an agreement between landlord and tenant for the rent of premises for a stipulated monthly rental, with no agreement *16 fixing the duration of the rental contract, and the tenant pays the rental monthly through the remainder of that calendar year, and retains possession into the succeeding calendar year, paying the monthly rental, which is accepted by the landlord without any additional agreement being made, is the tenancy during the second calendar year a tenancy at will or a tenancy for the second calendar year?
The question here presented has never been decided by this court. In Byrne v. Bearden,
Having thus cleared the way for a decision upon the question here presented, we find that the Code, § 61-104, provides: "Where no time is specified for the termination of the tenancy, the law construes it to be for the calendar year; but if it is expressly a tenancy at will, either party may terminate it at will." *17 It is clear that, where no time is specified for the termination of the tenancy, the law fixes the termination as December 31st of the year in which the tenancy began; and that after December 31st, if there be no further agreement, either express or implied, with no rent demanded or paid, but the tenant merely remaining in possession, there would be a tenancy at sufferance.Willis v. Harrell, supra. But after December 31st, while the tenant is holding the premises at sufferance, and there is a payment by the tenant and acceptance by the landlord of monthly rental, with no further agreement being made, the tenancy at sufferance ends and a new kind of tenancy begins. Under such circumstances, the payment of monthly rent and its acceptance, with nothing more being agreed upon, would be an implied contract for monthly rent, and would necessarily have the same force and effect as the original contract entered into in the previous year, and its duration would be the same as that fixed by law, to wit, until the following December 31st. The law would be inconsistent were it to say that a contract between landlord and tenant for a monthly rental, with no agreement as to its duration, was a contract through December 31st, of the year in which it was made; and then hold that — while the tenant was in possession at sufferance after December 31st, and paid and the landlord accepted monthly rental, with nothing more being agreed upon — this implied contract in the second year would not be controlled by the same law as to its termination as fixed the termination of the contract made during the first year. The terms and effect of each contract are the same, the only difference being that the contract of the first year was express, and that if the second year and subsequent years was implied from the conduct of the parties. In neither case is there any agreement seeking to fix a termination of the tenancy, and in each case the law would prescribe its duration.
Judgment reversed. All the Justices concur, except Duckworth,P. J., who dissents; and Wyatt, J., who took no part in theconsideration or decision of this case. *18