Cody v. Quarterman

12 Ga. 386
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedJanuary 15, 1853
DocketNo. 63
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 12 Ga. 386 (Cody v. Quarterman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cody v. Quarterman, 12 Ga. 386 (Ga. 1853).

Opinion

By the Court.

Nisbet, J.

delivering the opinion.

[1.] The plaintiff below, in this action of ejectment, exhibited no muniments of title, but relied for recovery on his character of landlord to the defendant. That is, having as he claimed, proven that the -defendant came into possession derivatively under his lessee, he also claimed that the relation of landlord and tenant was established, and that he was entitled to recover upon the legal proposition, that a tenant is estopped from denying the title of his.landlord. Both parties agree as to the soundness of that proposition. Nor do we question but that he is entitled to recover upon the admission of title in him, which grows out of the relation of landlord and tenant, if according to the law applicable to the facts of the case, that relation did exist. The question made by the rule for a new trial, upon which the cause turns, is therefore this, to wit, was the relation of landlord and tenant made out by the proofs, in the judgment of the law upon those proofs ? The plaintiff in error in the rule and in the argument, insists that it was not, upon several grounds. The presiding Judge refusing the rule, denied these grounds. In his charge to the Jury, he instructed them that if they found that the tenancy existed remotely or directly in the defendant under the plaintiff, he (the plaintiff,) was entitled to recover. To find the facts, was of course the province of the Jury, and they were properly submitted to the Jury; but it was the duty of the Court to instruct as to the legal effect of the facts to be found. He gave no instruction as to the legal effect of the facts, and was therefore understood by them to rule that if the facts relied upon by the plaintiff below to establish the relation of landlord and tenant were found by them, then in Law, the relation was also made out.

The rule for the new trial, in its main ground denies that the facts, if true, created a tenancy in law in the defendant, under the plaintiff, and therefore claims that the verdict was contrary to law. The refusal to grant the rule, then, made up the issue [398]*398between the presiding Judge and the plaintiff in error. We are to inquire, therefore, whether in the judgment of the law, upon the testimony which we find in the record, the relation of landlord and tenant was established. To determine this question, it is necessary to state first what was proven.

[2.] It was proven that the testator of the plaintiff, Michael T. Dawsey, a number of years before this suit was instituted, but the precise time not stated, by a verdal contract, leased the premises m dispute, to a man by the name of McGee, for five years, in consideration of the erection of a house upon them, who went into possession under the lease. He built the house, and died. How long he was in possession before his death, is not shown. The widow of McGee, at the death of her husband, was in possession, and continued in possession for eight months, when she intermermarried with Moira, who thus acquiring possession, sold what the witness called the unexpired lease, to Bandy. Bandy went into possession after his purchase from Moira, and conveyed the land to McIntyre, who died, and whose executor, Murchison, put the defendant Cody, into possession. There is other testimony to which I may advert; but the above statement contains the evidence upon which the plaintiff below relies, to establish the relation of landlord and tenant between the testator of the plaintiff, Dawsey, and the defendant. The counsel for the plaintiff in the action say, that having proven a lease from Dawsey to McGee, and traced the possession through McGee’s wife and Moira to Bandy, before the expiration of the lease, and from Bandy through McIntyre, to the defendant, the defendant was derivatively the tenant of Dawsey, and Dawsey his landlord. That is their case. That possession is traced by the evidence from McGee, through his wife, Moira, Bandy, and McIntyre to the defendant, is true; but that the possession thus traced, when the law is applied to its various stages, can be construed into a continuous tenancy under Dawsey, is what we are not able to affirm. As the tenancy of the defendant under Dawsey, in our judgment depends altogether upon the character of the lease, as it is called, from him to McGee, it is of primary importance to determine the character of that lease. The [399]*399real question is determinable alone upon the nature of that lease, and the rules of law which are applicable. to its being, and its determination. It was a verbal lease, and for the definite period of five years. By the Statute of Frauds,all leasfes, estates, interests of freehold, or terms of years, or any uncertain interest of, in, to or out of any messuages, manors; lands, tenements, or hereditaments, made or created by livery and seizin only, or by parol, and not put-in writing and signed by the parties so making or creating the same, or their agents, thereunto lawfully authorized by writing, shall have the force and effect of leases or estates at will only, and shall not, either in Law or Equity, be deemed or taken to have any other or greater force or effect; any consideration for making any such parol leases or estates, or any former law or usage to the contrary notwithstanding.” Prince’s Dig. 914. By this section, all leases of land by parol are void ; and as this lease between Dawsey and McGee, was by parol, as a contract of lease of lands, it is void. The 2d section of the Statute of Frauds, excepts from the operation of the 1st section, <c all leases not exceeding the term of three years from the making thereof, whereupon the rent reserved to the-landlord during such term, shall amount unto two-third parts at the least, -of the full -improved value of the thing demised.” Prince, 914. This lease does not come within the exception of the 2d section. First, because there is no evidence of the reservation of rent to the amount of two-third parts of the improved value of the premises. It is true, that the building of a house was the consideration proven for the lease, and it may be possible that this improvement was equivalent to two-thirds of the improved value of the land, yet there was no evidence to that effect. But secondly, this lease cannot be within the exception, because it was not a lease for a term not exceeding three years, it being proven that it was a lease for more than three, to wit, five years. Being void as a lease, what was it ? I answer, a tenancy at will; for the Statute declares, that a parol lease shall have the force and effect of a lease or estate at will only7. The construction which the Courts have put upon the estate at will thus created under the Statute, is that it is not in all respects [400]*400such a tenancy at will, as may be created by contract between the parties. Driven to legislate, by the extreme hardships of the case, the Courts of Great Britain, before the era of American Independence, construed estates at will, becoming such under the Statute, to have the effect of tenancies from year to year, in order to protect the tenant from the consequences of a sudden determination of the estate by the landlord.

[3.] The decisions have gene the length of holding, that the tenant is entitled to notice to quit, and to emoluments; and that the landlord shall not loso his rent, by a determination of the estate within the year, on the part of the tenant.

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Bluebook (online)
12 Ga. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cody-v-quarterman-ga-1853.