delivered the opinion of the Court.
In 1931, there passed by devise from Robert L. Werntz to his niece, Amy W. Ogle, a property in the Third Election District of Anne Arundel County known as “Gardner Farm”. On June 15, 1938, Mrs. Ogle leased the property to the appellant, Raymond W. Taylor, who was in possession under a prior lease from Mr. Werntz. The terms of the new lease included provisions cancelling the former lease, setting a term of five years, with the privilege in the lessee to renew on expiration for another term of five years, and one permitting still another term of five years.
The lease was not acknowledged but was duly recorded in Anne Arundel County. Mrs; Ogle died in 1940, devising the property to her husband, Maurice Ogle, for life, with remainder to her son, Maurice Chapman Ogle. On October 29, 1951 the appellant notified the Messrs. *275 Ogle of his intention to redeem the leased property under the provisions of Section 112 of Article 21 of the Code (1951 Ed.). The appellees challenged the right of the appellant to redeem. The appellant’s bill for redemption in the Circuit Court for Anne Arundel County was dismissed on demurrer.
We will assume, without deciding, that the lease is one for a term of exactly fifteen years, putting to one side, without consideration, the questions as to the effect of the renewal covenant, the lack of acknowledgment, the effect of the recording of an unacknowledged instrument, and the effect of the Curative Act in Section 107 of Article 21 of the Code (1951 Ed.).
The statutory language which controls the case is codified as Section 112 of Article 21 of the Code (1951 Ed.) as follows: “All rents reserved by leases or subleases of land hereafter made in this State for a longer period than fifteen years shall be redeemable at any time after expiration of five years from date of such leases or subleases, at the option of the tenant, after a notice of one month to the landlord, for a sum of money equal to the capitalization of the rent reserved at a rate not exceeding six per centum.” This section is often referred to as the Redemption Act.
The appellees say that the statute means precisely what it appears to mean and that only leases or subleases which are for a period greater than fifteen years are redeemable. The appellant contends that the language “for a longer period than fifteen years” really means for a period of fifteen years or more. He says that mere words, read literally, no matter how plain, exact and apposite, need not a statutory prison make. He seeks to make a skilful escape from the tight semantic shackles of Section 112, by this process of reasoning: (1), The Redemption Act was remedial legislation and should be liberally construed to accomplish the purpose for which it was passed; (2), This Court, in three cases which have dealt with the Redemption Act in a particular situation, has used substantially this language: “The *276 lease was for a period less than fifteen years and is therefore irredeemable.” From this, it is argued that it has been held, by a liberal construction, that a term of fifteen years, or more, is redeemable.
In
Silberstein v. Epstein,
In
Theatrical Corp. v. Trust Co.,
In
Schultz v. Kaplan,
The appellant would have these three quotations change the clear and unambiguous meaning of the Redemption
*277
Act. It is plain from the questions which were actually decided in each of the cases and from the language of the opinion in each case, read as a whole, that the Court in none of the cases intended to, or did, construe the Redemption Act as meaning that a lease is redeemable if it is for the term of fifteen years or less. The reference in the opinions to leases for less than fifteen years is manifestly a reference to the statutory period and is used synonymously with it, albeit this was a loose and inexact use. If the opinions in the cases relied upon are reread in full, this will be seem immediately. In
Silberstein v. Epstein, supra,
In Maryland Theatrical Corp. v. Trust Co., supra, the actual ground of the decision was set forth in 157 Md. on page 618, 146 A. on page 811: “From what we have said, our conclusions are: . . . second, that it is a lease for a longer period than fifteen years and is redeemable. . .”
In
Schultz v. Kaplan, supra,
In
Stewart v. Gorter,
Courts in other States which have had occasion to consider similar statutory or constitutional language have agreed with the above quotations from
Stewart v. Gorier
and the
Sheppard
case. The New York Constitution declared void a lease
of
agricultural lands for a period longer than twelve years. In
Hart v. Hart,
1856, 22 Barb., N. Y., 606, there was a lease for twelve years with a covenant for renewal which would extend it beyond that period. The lease was held valid
for
the full twelve years, although the covenant for renewal was declared void. In
Parish v. Rogers,
We think the case before us is one which undoubtedly calls for the strict application of the doctrine of the famous case of
Bluff v. Father Gray
(A. P. Herbert, Uncommon Law 192), in which Lord Mildew said: “If Parliament does not mean what it says, it must say so.” More direct and more binding authorities on the proposition that where the words of the statute are definite and unambiguous, the meaning of the legislature must be conclusively presumed to be manifested in the words of the Act include
Celanese Corp. v. Davis,
The Chancellor said: “I do not think the language of the statute can be stretched so as to make it apply to a lease which was intended to end at the expiration of fifteen years or a less period of time. . . The line had to be drawn somewhere and the Legislature drew it at fifteen years.” We agree.
Decree affirmed, with costs.
