Cooke v. Neilson

1 Brightly 463
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 15, 1849
StatusPublished

This text of 1 Brightly 463 (Cooke v. Neilson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cooke v. Neilson, 1 Brightly 463 (Pa. 1849).

Opinion

Sharswood, President.

— The question presentéd upon this case stated is, whether a tenant from year to year in the absence of a special agreement, can remove at the ex[464]*464piration of any of the current years of his tenancy, without previous notice of his intention to his landlord; and whether by his failure to give such notice, he does not become responsible for the rent of the succeeding year; in other words does not continue in the eye of the law to be the tenant?

The case before us is of a tenancy from quarter to quarter. “I have rented of David Cooke the house I now occupy by the quarter.” These are the words of the contract. This phrase, by the quarter, expresses, not a term certain, as one quarter, but the measure of the tenancy: and the tenant is a tenant for so many quarters as he continues to occupy, including the current quarter.

It is clearly established that in a tenancy from year to year, (and the same rule is of course applicable to the tenancy in this case, mutatis mutandis,) the landlord, in order to determine the tenancy, must give notice of his intention ending with the current year, or otherwise the tenant cannot be ejected, but becomes entitled to hold for another year.

The general custom of the tenants of farms in . the country, to quit at a particular season of the year, has laid a strong foundation, in convenience, for this rule: and no difference between urban and rural property in this respect has ever been recognised.

Upon any other principle, the tenant of a farm ejected by the landlord, without notice, on or after the 1st of April, by an ejectment or the summary process provided by our act of assembly, would be destitute of a home and the means of livelihood, until the ensuing 1st of April.

On the other hand the landlord, whose farm is deserted by the tenant on the 1st of April without notice, is left without a tenant, and hi's property is unoccupied and unproductive until the regular time of letting again comes round.

There is, in either case, a public as well as a private loss, against which it is the policy of the law to provide.

[465]*465There is not perhaps to be found in the books, any case in which this precise point has been raised and determined against the tenant, even in England. Yet there the law appears to be considered as perfectly well settled. It is asserted in the English elementary treatises of the best authority as unquestionable; 2 Bl. Com. 145; Comyn on Landl. 265, 474; Woodfall, 145. It is assumed and taken for granted in most of the cases in which the question arose and was decided, as against the landlord; Doe dem. Dagget v. Snowden, 2 W. Bl. 1224; Gulliver dem. Tasker v. Burr, 1 W. Bl. 526; Right v. Darby, 1 T. R. 162; Sparrow v. Hawkes, 2 Esp. 504; Kingsbury v. Collins, 4 Bingh. 202; Izon v. Gorton, 5 Bingh. N. C. 501. In Savage v. Dupins, 3 Taunt. 410, the defendant agreed by parol to rent a house as tenant from year to year for the residue of a term, which was three years and three quarters. He held for three years and one quarter, and then removed. It was ruled, that though perhaps he might have quitted without notice at the end of three years, yet remaining longer, implied a contract to pay rent for the residue of the term. The reason, as sufficiently appears in the report of the case, why he might have left at the end of three years without notice, was that the original lease, out of which the tenancy from year to year was derived, not having another integral year to run, ceased to furnish materials for the longer duration of the tenancy from year to year. We may well therefore apply to this case the maxim, ex-ceptio probat regulam. In Wilson v. Abbott, 3 B. & C. 88, the question which arose was, whether the taking was for one year certain or from year to year, and the only reason why that point was at all material in the case, was that the tenant had failed to give notice. A. let apartments in his dwelling house to B. at a rent payable half-yearly. B. took possession at Michaelmas, 1822, and at Lady-day, 1823, paid half a year’s rent. In June of that year, B. left the apartments without giving any notice to quit, but at [466]*466Michaelmas; 1823, which was the expiration of the first year of his tenancy, he paid half a year’s rent. At Lady-day, 1824, the landlord demanded another half year’s rent, which the tenant refused to pay, and the court of king’s bench held that the tenant was not liable, distinctly upon the ground that in the case of lodgings, which- are not usually let for so long a period even as a year, they could not infer from the facts a contract from year to year. Ijt is plain, therefore, that unless it had been considered a conceded point, that if B. was a tenant from year to year, he was bound to give notice, no question at all would have arisen in the case.

This doctrine is most consonant with the other incidents which have been attributed to tenancies from year to year, and with the history and character of this kind of interest It arose from the old tenancy at will. The inconveniences resulting from a sudden determination of the will by either lessor or lessee, induced the courts to convert all lettings for an indefinite duration, when an annual rent or other return at a certain period was agreed on, into tenancies from year to year, and to require a reasonable notice by either party to the other before the estate could be determined. It was perhaps judicial legislation; and though its date be, as is supposed, 13 Hen, VIII., it is now as much and as inseparably a part of the common law as any doctrine, let it have sprung ever so near its yet undiscovered fountain head. Thus, some degree of certainty in the possession— pot only the' matter of repose, but the sure incentive to the industry and enterprise of the possessor, and the consequent increase of the public wealth and strength — was imparted to an interest which was before vague and uncertain. Accordingly it has always been held that in pleading this estate, it may be averred to be a term for so many years as the lessee has occupied, including the current year, and it was assured to continue to the end of that year, and still longer unless either party before the expiration of the cur-[467]*467vent year, gave notice of his intention to determine the estate; 4 Bacon’s Abr. 180 n.; Legg v. Strudwick, 2 Salk. 414; Birch v. Wright, 1 T. R. 380; Webber v. Shearman, 6 Hill, 20; 8 S. & R. 468. Still, however, it is in legal phrase a tenancy from year to year, quamdiu ambabus partibus placuerit; and, as it was held at a very early period, it partakes of the nature of the old tenancy at will in this very important particular, that-it is of the essence of the estate that it shall be at the will of both the lessor and the lessee; so that if parties should expressly contract for an estate to be held at the will of one of them only, the law will not recognise such an interest, but at once annexes to the estate created by the contract, that mutuality, which, like the power of alienation in an estate in fee, is its inseparable incident; Keilw. 65, pl. 6; ib. 162, pi. 4; 13.Hen. VIII. 16, pi. 1. This principle of mutuality ran through the whole law of tenancies at will in a very remarkable manner. Thus, if the lessor determined his will in the middle of a quarter, he lost the whole rent of that quarter.

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Bluebook (online)
1 Brightly 463, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cooke-v-neilson-pa-1849.