8 Mo. App. 336 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1880
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action is for rent of a building in St. Louis during the month of June, 1878. There was a finding and judgment for plaintiff.
It appears from the pleadings and evidence that plaintiff, by written lease, demised the premises in question to defendant Lewis- and his theu copartners in business, for a term of one year from January 1, 1877, at the yearly rent of $4,500, payable in monthly instalments. On July 21, 1877, the new firm was formed, consisting of defendant Lewis, one of the original lessees, and his present co-defendants, who remained in possession after the expiration of the lease, and until May 15, 1878, when they left the premises and tendered the keys to plaintiff’s agent, who refused to receive them. The lease contained a provision that “ the lessees, and all holding under them, engage to pay the rent reserved, and double rent for every day they, or any one else in their name, shall hold on to the whole or any part of.said tenement after the expiration of the lease.”
At the expiration of the term, defendants applied to Car
Notwithstanding the dissimilarity of the statutes, the English rule has been adopted in Missouri; and it is quite settled with us, by a uniform course of decisions, that a verbal permission to hold over under a written lease creates a tenancy from year to year. Hammon v. Douglas, 50 Mo. 434. It is needless to examine whether the assumption of any such permission in this case is inconsistent with the testimony as to a holding over pending the negotiations for a new lease. If there was such permission, there was a tenancy from year to year. If there was not, and it is held that there was a continuance in possession under an agreement for an indefinite time, pending a treaty for a new lease, and that perhaps this created a tenancy at will, the effect is the same. If there was a tenancy from year to year, as the building was in the city, this, by the statute, is converted into a tenancy from month to month, and a month’s notice is required ; whilst to terminate a tenancy at will a month’s notice is also required. Hammon v. Douglas, supra; Wag. Stats. 879, sect. 13. In either case, to terminate the tenancy, when the rent is payable monthly, the month’s notice which must be. given must either specify the exact day on which the next month expires, or state generally that the tenancy will be terminated in one month from next rent-day. Sanford v. Harvey, 11 Cush. 93. The first notice, for May 15th (a day in the middle of the next month), did not comply with these conditions, was ineffectual, and plaintiff might safely disregard it.
It is, however, contended that the legitimate inference
The serious contention would seem to be, however, that plaintiffs were in under the express provision of the lease for holding over after the expiration of the term at double rent for every day. The conduct of the parties is fatal to this theory. Certainly, the lessor, whilst permitting the parties to remain in possession pending negotiations for a new lease, would not be permitted to hold them for double rent up to the time when the negotiations came to an end. It is manifest that such was not the intention of the parties. Rent was tendered and accepted under the terms of the old lease. In Deaver v. Randall, 5 Mo. App. 297, the lessor, from the first, refused’ to consent to a continuance of the tenancy on any terms ; and the evidence does not show in that case that the rent paid for the month during a portion of which defendant held over, was paid at the single or double rate. The tenant remained in for twenty-nine days after the expiration of the lease, and then left, being, in the absence of any contrary agreement, liable for double rent during those days, according to the written agreement, and for no more. In the present case the tenant did not elect to remain under the terms of the contract for payment of double rent, but by the continued payment of rent after the expiration of the lease, at the monthly rate reserved, in the absence of any contrary agreement, he is presumed to have been in under an implied oral contract on the terms of the original lease, and, under the modification of the common-law rule introduced by our statute, as a tenant from month to month. The act of the tenants sin paying rent according to the old terms was as
That the defendants, the copartners of Lewis, the original lessee, as incoming partners, were bound by the terms of the old lease, seems clear. Jackson v. Salmon, 4 Wend. 327 ; Hilsby v. Mears, 5 Barn. & Cress. 504. But no question as to that was raised either in the trial court or here.
The judgment is affirmed.