62 Mo. App. 596 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1895
This is an action to recover rent. The undisputed evidence shows that the defendants were the occupying tenants of two certain store rooms in the city of Sweet Springs, under a written lease, terminating February 15,1892. That the plaintiffs and defendants, shortly before the termination of said lease, entered into a verbal modification thereof, by which it was agreed that the defendants should continue in the occupation of said store rooms until the first day of March following. The evidence tended to further show that it was also provided in said parol modification, that, if plaintiffs did not procure a tenant to succeed defendants by the said first day of March, defendants should remain in the occupancy of plaintiffs’ store rooms until the shelving was put in their new store building, then about finished, and the sidewalk and a street crossing was put down in front thereof; unless the plaintiffs should, in tho meantime, find a tenant for their store rooms, in which event the defendants were to give immediate possession to plaintiffs. It
This suit was brought to recover the rent for the four months next after the defendants quit. There was a trial, and judgment for plaintiffs. Defendants have appealed.
Under the statute of frauds and perjuries, all leases of lands, tenements or hereditaments by parol, and not put in writing and signed by the parties thereto, shall have the effect of leases or estates at will only, and shall not, either in law or equity, be deemed or taken to have any other or greater force. R. S., sec. 5182.
Section 6371, Revised Statutes, provides that any tenancy at will, or for less than a year, may be terminated by giving one month’s notice in writing. And, in the same section, it is further provided that all agreements for renting or occupation of stores, shops, houses, tenements or other buildings in cities, towns or villages, not made in writing, signed by the parties thereto, shall he held and taken to he tenancies from month to month, and all such tenancies may be terminated by either party thereto by giving the other party one month’s notice in writing of his intention to terminate the tenancy. The statute, without exception, makes every verbal agreement for the renting of real property not in a city, town or village, a tenancy at will, but if in a city, town or village, a tenancy from month to month; but whether the tenancy be the one Or the other, one month’s notice in writing is required to terminate the same.
The fact that the renting by defendants was for two weeks certain and until the happening of one or the other of the contingencies specified in the agreement, did
It results that the only way the defendants could terminate their tenancy was by giving the plaintiff the •one month’s written notice, required by the statute. There is no pretense that they did this. But it is insisted that the plaintiffs verbally agreed to dispense with the written notice; but to uphold an agreement of that kind would be to disregard a plain, statutory prohibition. Under the statute, where there is a tenancy from month to month, the only way that the tenant can terminate it is by giving the written notice required by the statute. An agreement by the landlord, not in writing, to waive, or dispense with, the statutory notice would be as ineffectual as a verbal agreement for the renting for a term longer than a year, or for as long as it might suit the tenant. Such agreement would fall within the prohibitions of the statute.
Nor can such an agreement be made the basis of an •estoppel. The purpose of the enactment of section
There are no facts disclosed which constitute a waiver of the notice. It does not appear that plaintiffs received the store rooms, or used and occupied them, or put another tenant in possession, or that, subsequent to the abandonment, there were acts and declarations of the plaintiffs showing an acquiescence in such abandonment. Nor can a surrender by operation of law be implied from the facts which the evidence conduces to prove. Huling v. Roll, 43 Mo. App. 234; Buck v. Lewis, 46 Mo. App. 227.
It follows that the theory of the plaintiffs’ instructions, which are in harmony with the views we have-expressed, were proper and they should have been given; and that those of the defendants, which are to the contrary, are erroneous, and should have been refused. The parol agreement, relied on by defendants, could not. have the legal effect to absolve them from their statutory duty to give plaintiffs written notice of their intention to terminate the tenancy, and, therefore, the court erred in the admission of the evidence tending to prove-the same.
The judgment must be reversed, and the cause remanded.