Biber v. Dillingham
This text of 98 S.E. 798 (Biber v. Dillingham) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
The opinion of the Court was delivered by
Proceeding before a magistrate, under section 3509 of the Code of Daws, by a landlord to eject a tenant. The magis *504 trate decided the case for the landlord; the Circuit Court reversed that judgment; and the appeal here is from the judgment of the Circuit Court.
The appellant suggests at the outset that the Circuit order does not evidence that which the Court decided; that the Court in fact did not decide that notice was not given, but only that sufficient notice was not given. But the words of the order constitute the only evidence of what the Court decided, and the words we have quoted are plain. Besides that, insufficient notice in a case like this is not notice at all.
It is true that ordinarily a notice is not to be strictly construed; it'being sufficient if the intention of the party to exercise the option is fairly communicated. 16 R. C. L,. sec. 629.
The plaintiff had two witnesses, Scruggs, a son of the former landlord, and Biber, the husband of the then present landlord.
It is true the landlord told the tenant she wanted possession of the house, and what was said amounted to a demand for the present possession of the house. But that was not pursuant to the contract which the landlord sets up; by it the landlord was not entitled to possession until 30 days after notice. It was the landlord’s duty under the contract to notify the tenant that at least 30 days after such notification the contract would terminate. That procedure would have left no room for the tenant to parley; and, until that procedure (provided by the parties) was practiced, the tenancy continued in force.
It is true, also, that Biber testified: “I heard Scruggs give him notice on that occasion, a very heated argument.”
But the witness immediately said: “Scruggs told him he had sold the house, and wanted to know when Dillingham would give up. * * * Dillingham would not tell just when he would give up the house; said he would give it up, but would not say when. Mr. Scruggs said that was very unsatisfactory. In talking Dillingham, as I understood, said he had 30 days, and Charlie (Scruggs) had to give him 30 days.”
It is manifest from the testimony of both the witnesses— and that quoted is the heart of it — that the demand and the parley was a notice, to quit then, and for a then possession. The witness did not expressly or by implication define what was the substance of the notice to quit, whether now or 30 days hence. The testimony does not warrant the conclusion that, proceeding under the contract, the landlord noticei 1 the tenant to quit 30 days after such notice.
*507 That amounts to saying that the tenant knew his right to have 30 days’ notice, but, while conscious of it, he elected not to reply upon it.
The testimony shows the contrary; Biber expressly testified that the tenant declared to him that “Charlie (Scruggs) had to give him 30 days’ notice.”
The judgment is affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
98 S.E. 798, 111 S.C. 502, 1919 S.C. LEXIS 64, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biber-v-dillingham-sc-1919.