13 Wend. 479 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1835
By the Court,
The question upon this record is, whether the cognizance demurred to is good or not.
The first objection is formal rather than substantial. It is this : The declaration charges the defendant with talcing 10 acres of peas, 10 acres of oats, and 20 cords of fire-wood. The cognizance justifies the taking the said two fields of peas, one field of oats, and the said wood. It will be perceived that the cognizance describes the peas and oats as they are described in the first count of the declaration, and not in terms as in the second count, to which it purports to be an answer. I think, however, it is sufficient upon general demurrer. By striking out part of the description as surplusage, it justifies the taking the said peas, oats, and the said wood.
The second objection to the cognizance raises the important question in the case. It is this: It alleges a demise to the plaintiff for two years, and that he entered under that demise and held for nine years. It then acknowledges a distress for the whole nine years, when, as is alleged by the plaintiff, the holding for the first two years was under the demise, and the seven subsequent years occupancy was as tenant at will, The fact is admitted, that the plaintiff below took a lease for two years as tenant to Heartt and others, and after the expiration of the two years, continued to occupy the same premises for seven years more, without any new express contract; and the question is, whether the landlords can distrain for the
subsists in other respects, as to the rent and time to quit, <fcc.; and that when a tenant holds over, after the expiration ofhis term, without any new agreement, he holds upon the former terms; and in the case before him, though the lease was void as to the seven years, yet it could only be put an end to at the time agreed on to wit, Candlemas. In Clayton v. Blakely, 8 T. R. 3, the defendant held by a parol agreement for twenty-one years, and had been in possession two or three years. It was contended that, under the statute, the holding was as tenant at will. Lord Kenyon said such a holding now operates as a tenancy from year to year. The meaning of the statute was, that such a holding should not operate as a term: but what was then (that is, when the statute was passed)considered as a tenancy at will, has since been properly construed to enure as a tenancy from year to year. These cases have heretofore been approved and adopted by this court. 2 Cowen 663. 8 id. 230. In Abeel v. Radcliff, 15 Johns. R. 505 it was expressly held, by Hr. Justice Spencer, that where a tenant holds over, without any new stipulation between the parties, an implication arises that there is a tacit consent on both sides, that the tenant shall hold from year to year, at the former or first rent. The court were divided in that case, but not on that point. Ch. J. Thompson, who dissented from the decision, says, on this point: “ I have supposed no doubt could exist, that, in the absence of any express agreement, the implication of law would be, that each party assented to a continuance of the tenancy at the same rent.” The same point was decided in Bradley v. Covill, 4 Cowen, 350. The English cases above referred to are reviewed by Mr. Eoberts, in his treatise on the statute of frauds. Roberts on frauds, 241, 2, 3. It is there considered a correct position, that if there be a parol lease from year to year, as long as both parties please, this is a lease for one year certain; and that every year after, it is a springing interest, arising out of the first
The cognizance demurred to is therefore good, and the defendant below was entitled to judgment upon it. Judgment having been given against him in the court below, that judgment must be reversed; and as this cognizance seems to go to the whole cause of action, the judgment in the court below must be reversed entirely, though several issues of fact were there found for the plaintiff below. If the plaintiff in[error
Judgment reversed, and venire de novo.