P. E. Mcsweeney Et Ux. v. Frank C. Dorn

Decision Date06 January 1932
Citation158 A. 88,104 Vt. 110
PartiesP. E. MCSWEENEY ET UX. v. FRANK C. DORN
CourtVermont Supreme Court

October Term, 1931.

Landlord and Tenant---Creation of Relationship---Legal Effect of Tenant Holding over after Expiration of Term---Effect of Abandonment of Premises by Tenant after Creation of Tenancy from Year to Year---Insufficiency of Evidence To Establish Agreement with Landlord which Prevented Holding over and Paying Rent by Tenant from Creating Year to Year Lease---"Surrender"---Assent of Landlord---Question of Fact---Burden of Proof---Trial---Waiver of Exception---Insufficiency of Evidence To Establish Acceptance of Surrender of Term by Landlord as Matter of Law---Necessity of Establishing Landlord's Intent as to Acceptance---Insufficiency of Evidence To Make Jury Question as to Landlord's Acceptance of Surrender of Term.

1. Relation of landlord and tenant may as well be created by implication as by express contract.

2. When tenant for fixed term, with consent or acquiescence of landlord, holds over after expiration of term, tenancy by implication results, beginning as tenancy at will, but ripening into tenancy from year to year, or from month to month, as case may be, according to terms of original lease upon acceptance of rent by landlord, and such result is legal consequence of conduct of parties and not dependent upon intention of tenant.

3. When tenant holding over from term lease thereafter pays rent which is accepted by landlord, rights of parties thereby become so fixed that subsequent abandonment of premises by lessee, alone, will not relieve him from obligation of paying rent for entire term created by implication of law.

4. In ACTION OF CONTRACT for rent, where verdict and judgment were for defendant, evidence construed most favorably to defendant, held not to establish that defendant, holding over from term lease and paying rent which was accepted by landlord, did so under such arrangement with landlord as not to result in tenancy from year to year.

5. To constitute "surrender," in law of landlord and tenant, action by tenant alone is insufficient but there must be what amounts to mutual agreement, express or implied, to put an end to relation of landlord and tenant.

6. In case of residue of existing term, no acts of parties will amount in law to a surrender, unless landlord's assent thereto is clearly inferable therefrom.

7. Question of surrender is ordinarily one of fact, burden of proof thereon being upon party who sets it up.

8. In ACTION OF CONTRACT for rent, failure of plaintiffs to except to court's charge on subject of surrender, held not to waive exception saved when court overruled plaintiffs' motion for directed verdict made at close of evidence.

9. That tenant delivered key of leased apartment to landlord when paying rent, and landlord thereafterwards, by placing placard in window and advertisement in newspaper, attempted to rent to other parties, while admissible on question of acceptance by landlord of surrender of term, held insufficient to show such acceptance as matter of law.

10. Intent of landlord to accept surrender of term by tenant must be established by some unequivocal act or acts.

11. In ACTION OF CONTRACT for rent, evidence held insufficient to entitle defendant to go to jury on question of landlords' acceptance of surrender of term.

ACTION OF CONTRACT for rent. Plea, general denial. Trial by jury at the September Term, 1930, Chittenden County, Sherman, J presiding. Verdict and judgment for the defendant. The plaintiffs excepted. The opinion states the case.

Judgment reversed, and judgment for the plaintiffs to recover the sum of $ 347.20 (the amount of damages agreed upon below), with interest from the date of judgment below.

J. A. McNamara for the plaintiffs.

M. G. Leary for the defendant.

Present: POWERS, C. J., SLACK, MOULTON, THOMPSON, and GRAHAM, JJ.

OPINION
POWERS

The defendant occupied a certain apartment of the plaintiffs under a written lease which expired on October 1, 1927. He continued to occupy it after that date, and on October 8 paid the rent to the 21st of that month at the rate stipulated for in the original lease. On November 8, he gave the plaintiffs written notice that he would vacate the premises on the 20th of that month. This he did after paying the rent to the 21st. The action is brought to recover the rent provided for in the written lease from November 21, 1927, to May 1, 1928--at which time the plaintiffs relet the apartment. The verdict and judgment below were for the defendant, and the plaintiffs allege error. The only exception relied upon in this court is one saved when the court overruled the plaintiffs' motion for a verdict made at the close of the evidence.

The case was tried below on the theory that the only question in it, aside from the matter of damages, was whether the original lease had become extended by the conduct of the parties, and that this was a question of fact. But, so far as this question is concerned, the uncontroverted evidence established such an extension, and the motion for a verdict should have been granted. The relation of landlord and tenant may as well be created by implication as by express contract; and when a tenant for a fixed term, with the consent or acquiescence of the landlord, holds over after the expiration of the term, a tenancy by implication results. This begins as a tenancy at will, but, when the landlord accepts the rent, it may and usually does ripen into a tenancy from year to year, or from month to month, as the case may be, according to the terms of the original lease. This result is a legal consequence of the conduct of the parties, and does not at all depend upon the intention of the tenant. Such is the well-established law of our cases. Amsden v. Atwood, 67 Vt. 289, 293, 31 A. 448; Amsden v. Atwood, 68 Vt. 322, 332, 35 A. 311; Hobbs & Son v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 93 Vt. 392, 395, 108 A. 199.

Applied to the case in hand, the law makes the defendant, who held over, a tenant at will, and, when the plaintiffs accepted the rent as hereinbefore stated, he became a tenant from year to year. His term under the implied lease was one year, and his rent was that specified in the original lease. The rights of the parties became so fixed that the subsequent abandonment of the premises by the defendant, did not, alone, relieve him from the obligation of paying rent for the entire year. So, nothing more appearing, the plaintiffs would be entitled to recover the amount shown by their specification, though the defendant did not occupy the premises after November 20, 1927. Barlow v. Wainwright, 22 Vt. 88, 94, 52 A. D. 79; Johnson v. Desmarais, 94 Vt. 496, 500, 112 A. 199.

But the defendant says that he held over under an arrangement with the plaintiffs that would prevent the implication of a lease. The evidence had no tendency to establish any such arrangement. The defendant testified to certain conversations had with one of the plaintiffs, and points to these as evidence of such arrangement. But none of these were in time to prevent his holding over from resulting in an implied lease. Construed in the light most favorable to the defendant as it must be, the evidence shows that...

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4 cases
  • Commercial Finance Corporation v. Willis H. Gale
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • October 28, 1932
    ... ... 665; Paska v. Saunders, [105 Vt. 8] 103 Vt ... 204, 218, 153 A. 451; McSweeney et ux. v ... Dorn, 104 Vt. 110, 158 A. 88 ...          The ... error, however, for ... ...
  • Miller v. Flegenheimer
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • December 9, 2016
    ...This objective test requires that intent to be bound be "established by some unequivocal act or acts." McSweeney et ux. v. Dorn, 104 Vt. 110, 114, 158 A. 88, 89 (1932). Parties can show that they intend to be bound through their words or through their actions. See Restatement (Second) of Co......
  • F. N. Phillips Co., Inc. v. Gay's Express, Inc
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • May 13, 1941
    ... ... evidence. Commercial Finance Corp. v. Gale, ... 105 Vt. 3, 7, 162 A. 899; McSweeney et ux. v ... Dorn, 104 Vt. 110, 158 A. 88; Paska et al ... v. Saunders et al., 103 Vt. 204, ... ...
  • Christina Maniatty v. the Carroll Co.
    • United States
    • Vermont Supreme Court
    • February 6, 1945
    ... ... 263; Hobbs & Son v. Grand Trunk Ry. Co., 93 ... Vt. 392, 395, 108 A. 199; McSweeney v ... Dorn, 104 Vt. 110, 112, 158 A. 88. In none of these ... [41 A.2d 145] ... cases was the ... ...

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