Anderson v. Ries

24 N.W.2d 717, 222 Minn. 408, 167 A.L.R. 1033, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 554
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedNovember 1, 1946
DocketNo. 34,292.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 24 N.W.2d 717 (Anderson v. Ries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anderson v. Ries, 24 N.W.2d 717, 222 Minn. 408, 167 A.L.R. 1033, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 554 (Mich. 1946).

Opinion

PIsterson, Justice.

Defendant appeals from the judgment for the restitution of an apartment recovered by plaintiffs in an action for unlawful de- *409 tainer. The issues concern plaintiffs’ right to possession and the necessity for their giving defendant statutory notice to quit.

The facts established by the verdict are that plaintiffs were in possession of the apartment as tenants at will of the owner on a month-to-month basis at a monthly rental of $55 payable on the first day of the month; that on February 8, 1944, they orally subleased the apartment to defendant; that the arrangements for the sublease were made at the owner’s home, where plaintiff Irene Anderson, defendant, and the owner and his wife met for the purpose; that plaintiffs, acting through plaintiff Irene Anderson, with the owner’s consent, subleased the apartment to defendant during such time as plaintiff Robert O. Anderson should be in the armed forces of the United States, in which he was then serving, and upon the condition and agreement that defendant would vacate and surrender the premises to plaintiffs when plaintiff Robert O. Anderson returned to St. Paul from such service. Defendant took immediate possession of the apartment under the sublease and has occupied the premises thereunder continuously ever since. He reimbursed plaintiffs for the rent from the date of the sublease to the end of February 1944. In accordance with the arrangements for the sublease, he paid subsequent rents to the caretaker of the building, who was the owner’s agent in charge thereof. While the owner consented to the sublease, he did not agree either that plaintiffs’ tenancy should continue until plaintiff Robert O. Anderson should return to St. Paul from the armed forces or that defendant should have the right to occupy the premises until that time. Both before and after the sublease, the owner listed plaintiffs as his tenants under a registration with OPA.

On January 30, 1946, plaintiff Robert O. Anderson advised defendant by letter that he would want possession of the apartment “soon.” On March 5,1946, he returned to St. Paul from the armed forces. On March 7,1946, plaintiffs served upon defendant a notice to vacate, stating that the plaintiff Robert O. Anderson had returned to St. Paul from the armed forces and that possession of the premises was demanded on or before March 18. At the same *410 time, a copy of such notice to vacate was mailed to the OPA as required by its regulations. No notice to quit under Minn. St. 1945, § 504.06, was served.

Here, as below, defendant contends that plaintiffs were not entitled to maintain this action for unlawful detainer, upon the grounds: (1) They did not sustain to defendant the relation of landlord, and tenant; and (2) they did not serve upon defendant a statutory notice to quit. In support of the first contention, it is argued that the sublease constituted an exercise by plaintiffs of their right to terminate the tenancy at will, which terminated whatever right to possession they may have had, and that it operated as an assignment to defendant of the whole of plaintiffs’ rights as tenants at will, with the consequence that they had no rights to possession or otherwise as against defendant. In support of the second ground, defendant urges that if he was a tenant of plaintiffs he was a tenant from month to month and, as such, entitled to the statutory notice to quit. Plaintiffs’ contentions are that the sublease was good as between the parties regardless of what effect it may have had on the legal relationship between them and the owner as their lessor, and that no notice to quit was necessary, because defendant’s tenancy under the sublease was terminated automatically by the return of plaintiff Robert O. Anderson from the armed forces as the happening of a condition subsequent, or a conditional limitation, which had such legal effect.

A sublease by a tenant at will is good as between the parties where the sublessee enters under the sublease and enjoys the premises. Holbrook v. Young, 108 Mass. 83; Meier v. Thiemann, 15 Mo. App. 307 (reversed on other grounds, 90 Mo. 433, 2 S. W. 435); 35 C. J., Landlord and Tenant, § 337, note 95; 32 Am. Jur., Landlord and Tenant, § 396; 1 Washburn, Real Property (6 ed.) § 765; Woodfall, Law of Landlord and Tenant (24 ed.) p. 27. True, the cases abound with expressions to the effect that a tenant at will cannot transfer his interest to a third party. 3 It is said *411 that a tenant at will has no interest or estate capable of being transferred or out of which he can create any estate in another. As pointed out in Public Service Co. v. Voudomas, 84 N. H. 387, 390, 151 A. 81, 83, 70 A. L. R. 480, where the pertinent cases are reviewed, such expressions are used generally in cases involving the rights of the owner against a sublessor or sublessee and not in cases involving rights as between a sublessor and sublessee. Expressions of the sort mentioned are characterized in the Voudomas case as “unguarded language.”

The rationale of these cases is that the relation between the owner of the land and a tenant at will is a purely personal one, terminable at the will of either party; that a sublease by a tenant at will determines the will and consequently terminates his tenancy, and that by putting the sublessee in possession he becomes a disseisor of the owner. The rule that a sublease by a tenant at will accompanied by delivery of possession of the premises to the sublessee terminates the tenancy at will is based upon common-law rules of seisin and is traced in the cases directly to Coke upon Littleton, p. 57.a., which reads:

“[i] If tenant at will granteth over his estate to another, and the grantee entereth, he is a disseisor, (3) and the lessor may have an action of trespasse against the grantee; for albeit the grant was void, yet it amounteth to a determination of his will.”

Thus, we are reminded again, as we were in Ambrozich v. City of Eveleth, 200 Minn. 473, 483, 274 N. W. 635, 640, 112 A. L. R. 269, 276, that many of the settled rules of the law of landlord and tenant are of ancient origin, and, as we there said, quoting from Mr. Justice Holmes in Gardiner v. William S. Butler & Co. Inc. 245 U. S. 603, 605, 38 S. Ct. 214, 62 L. ed. 505, 506: “* * * the law as to leases is not a matter of logic in vacuo; it is a matter of history that has not forgotten Lord Coke.”

While the text of Coke upon Littleton seems to mean, if read literally, that a sublease by a tenant at will accompanied by possession taken by the sublessee ipso facto constitutes a disseisin of the *412 owner and a termination of the tenancy at will, the rule in fact was otherwise. There was disseisin only at the option or by election of the owner, and not even prima facie, as the cases subsequently decided and Butler & Hargrave’s Notes to the text (§ 71, p. 57.a.) clearly show. The doctrine of disseisin by election, as it came to be called, was expounded at length by Lord Mansfield in Taylor v. Horde (Atkyns case), 1 Burr. 60, 97 Reprint 190.

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Bluebook (online)
24 N.W.2d 717, 222 Minn. 408, 167 A.L.R. 1033, 1946 Minn. LEXIS 554, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anderson-v-ries-minn-1946.