134 A. 344 | N.H. | 1926
Although the plaintiff was merely a tenant at will (Weeks v. Sly,
The defendant concedes that this is so, but contends that the damages are inconsequential because the tenancy expired thirty days after the plaintiff received the notice, irrespective of the date therein specified.
The cases which adopt this view (35 C.J. 1132) are based upon statutes which do not provide that the notice shall state the particular day on which the tenant must quit possession. But that is a specific requirement of the statute here involved. P.S., c. 246, s. 2 (P. L., c. 357, s. 2).
Under this and similar statutes a notice which does not correctly name the date on which the tenancy is to terminate will not operate to terminate it at any other time. "For that purpose a new notice must be given." Gilbert v. Gerrity,
"No one is obliged to regard a notice which fixes a day for the termination of a lease different from that on which a lease can be by law made to terminate. Such a notice, being one that neither *389 party had a right to give, is treated as a nullity." Sanford v. Harvey, supra.
In Currier v. Perley,
In view of the language above quoted and the subsequent reenactments of the statute, the law on the subject cannot be in doubt.
In Pickard v. Perley,
No exception was taken to the charge. On the issue of damages the court instructed the jury as follows: "There has been considerable evidence introduced here regarding the expense of Mr. O'Dowd for repairs, fuel, supplies, etc., during his occupancy of the premises. He is not entitled to recover in this action any of these expenses or for any of such property. . . . The only purpose of all this evidence regarding expense and supplies is to enable you to judge as to the condition of his business and of the probable value of the possession of the premises to him at the time Mr. Heller took possession. What were his business prospects at that time? Were the premises in such shape that business would be directed his way, and was he so equipped that he could handle with profit all the business that came?"
The general exception to the admission of the evidence referred to is overruled. This evidence was clearly admissible for the purpose stated, and it will not be presumed that the jury considered it for any other purpose. Lawrence v. Towle,
The same is true of the plaintiff's testimony that the defendant assured him that he might occupy the premises during the winter. The defendant excepted to the admission of this evidence on the ground that it raised an issue of damages not included in the declaration. *390 But the evidence was offered simply "as showing and explaining the conduct of Mr. O'Dowd in preparing for the winter." With its use thus limited, it was properly received.
The value to the plaintiff of the right to occupy the premises to January 11 was one of the questions in controversy. Obviously, all facts bearing on the condition of the premises and the amount of business ordinarily transacted during that period of the year were relevant. Testimony that a bowling league had made arrangements to use the plaintiff's bowling alleys furnished a definite basis for computing the plaintiff's loss and was therefore unobjectionable. Salinger v. Salinger,
One of the questions submitted to the jury was whether or not the tenancy was terminated by agreement. Evidence that the plaintiff, after receiving the notice to quit, "pleaded" with the defendant and told him that he and his wife had been sick, and the fact that the plaintiff on November 15 sent the defendant a check for rent for the ensuing month were circumstances which the jury might rightfully consider on this issue. The defendant claimed that the plaintiff voluntarily surrendered possession at the time of the alleged trespass. The plaintiff's statement that he was "practically all in" and that "it was cold in there" tended to explain his conduct on that occasion. Whether the evidence should have been excluded as also tending to excite undue prejudice against the defendant was a question for the trial court. State v. Braley,
The directions which the plaintiff gave by telephone to his assistant, who was present with the defendant in the poolroom, plainly indicated that the plaintiff was insisting on his legal rights. No valid reason for the exclusion of this evidence has been suggested.
It was within the discretion of the presiding justice to permit counsel to ask a leading question. Hunt v. Haven,
In his plea in recoupment the defendant claimed "that the plaintiff agreed when he entered to keep the alleys, tables, equipment, and premises in a suitable and proper condition of repair." Since the defendant relied upon the terms of the original parol letting to prove this agreement, the plaintiff, in order to establish his defence under the plea, was entitled to testify to his understanding of those terms, even though this involved a statement that he had rented *391
the premises for three years. "It is no objection to evidence that it proves an inoperative agreement, when it is offered or admitted not to prove that agreement, but to prove something else." Norris v. Morrill,
The date on which the notice to quit was posted and the date on which it was received were issues in the case. These dates were found to be October 16 and October 17, respectively. The defendant's son first testified that he mailed the notice on October 15, and later that he mailed it on the night of October 14. The plaintiff's wife testified that she took it from the postoffice October 17, and that on October 16 there was no mail in their box. Although this evidence alone warranted a finding that the notice was not posted on or before October 15 (Wilson v. Insurance Company,
The defendant relies on three exceptions to the argument of plaintiff's counsel. The statements objected to appear to be fully justified by the evidence. But even if they were not, no question of law would be presented, since "exceptions should be taken to the allowance of argument rather than to the argument itself." Willette v. Whitney, ante, 209; Tuttle v. Dodge,
The defendant also excepted to the refusal of the court to grant a so-called request for instructions. Rule 52,
The check in question was retained by the defendant for some months. It was offered in evidence merely as tending to prove that the tenancy was not terminated by agreement. Even assuming that the defendant had made a definite written request to charge that the mailing of the check was not a legal tender, the refusal of that request would raise no question of law. A general verdict *392
was not rendered. No issue involving the validity of the tender was tried, and the court was not bound to instruct the jury upon an abstract proposition. Hersey v. Hutchins,
In accordance with the stipulation made during oral argument, the order is
Judgment for the plaintiff for $1000.
All concurred.