Dillon v. Miller

180 S.W.2d 832, 207 Ark. 401, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 675
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedJune 5, 1944
Docket4-7405
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 S.W.2d 832 (Dillon v. Miller) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dillon v. Miller, 180 S.W.2d 832, 207 Ark. 401, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 675 (Ark. 1944).

Opinion

Knox, J.

In an action of unlawful detainer the landlord was adjudged to have right of possession and tenants appeal. Tenancy was from month to month, each successive term thereof beginning on the first and ending on the last day of the calendar month.

On June 29, 1943', the landlord caused notice to be served on the tenants demanding that they quit and deliver up possession of the premises “on or before August 1, 1943.” The sole question at issue in the trial court, and presented by this appeal, is whether such notice was sufficient to terminate the tenancy. The tenants contend such notice was insufficient for two reasons, to-wit: (a) notice must require that tenancy terminates at end of one of the recurring periods of holding, and notice here did not require tenant to yield possession until first day of new ténn; and (b) words “on or before August 1, 1943, ’ ’ do not meet requirement that notice must fix with reasonable exactness the time when lease is to be terminated.

In the absence of an agreement between them providing otherwise, either the landlord or the tenant may terminate a monthly tenancy by, and only by, giving the other party thirty days written notice of his election to so terminate it, “the notice ending with a monthly period.” King v. Solmson, 188 Ark. 237, 65 S. W. 2d 19; Peel v. Lane, 148 Ark. 79, 229 S. W. 20; Reece v. Leslie, 105 Ark. 127, 150 S. W. 579; Stewart v. Murrell, 65 Ark. 471, 47 S. W. 130; Fizzell v. Duffer, 58 Ark. 612, 25 S. W. 1111.

Our own cases declare that the notice shall be one “ending with a monthly period” and it appears to be the general rule in all jurisdictions that the notice must require that the tenancy terminate at the end of one of the recurring periods of the holding. An exhaustive annotation of the cases dealing with the sufficiency of the notice to terminate such a tenancy is found at 86 A. L. E. 1346, et seq, reported in connection with the case of Oesterreicher v. Robertson, 187 Minn. 497, 245 N. W. 825, 86 A. L. R. 1344.

Designation of a day corresponding to the last and not the first day of the term has been held to be a material defect in at least two jurisdictions, to-wit: Ehode Island and District of Columbia. Waters v. Young, 11 E. I. 1, 23 Am. Rep. 409; Merritt v. Thompson, 53 App. D. C. 233, 289 Fed. 631. In each of these cases the court held that if a definite day is mentioned in the notice it must correspond with the day of commencement and not the day of the conclusion of the tenancy, and that a notice which demands that tenant yield possession on the last day of the old, instead of the first day of what would be the new, term is insufficient.

Other eases referred to in the annotation disclose that in some jurisdictions courts have declared that a day corresponding with the commencement and not the conclusion of the term should rightly be designated, while courts in other jurisdictions take exactly the opposite view. All, or nearly all, of the courts have declared, however, that where either day is designated the notice 'will not be held to be insufficient, because the day named is different from the one which the court considers to be the proper one to be designated. There appears to be little uniformity in the reasons assigned for this liberal practice.

In the case of Steffins v. Earl, 40 N. J. L. 128, 29 Am. Rep. 214, where the tenancy commenced on the 1st day of May, a notice given June 29th to quit on the 1st day of August was held sufficient and not invalid for failure to designate the 31st day of July. The court said: “By strict computation, the term set out by the present affidavit probably terminated on the last midnight of July. I think it would be carrying the rule that a notice to quit must be made with reference to the end of the term, to an illogical and unreasonable length, to hold that a notice given for the day commencing at that midnight is not a good notice. The law is ignorant of fractions of a day. The notice covers all and any period of .the twenty-four hours from midnight to midnight. The very moment the tenancy expires the tenant is. confronted with a direction to quit. On what process of reasoning can it be said that a new term has commenced before notice is given?”

The case of Steffins v. Earl, supra, is one of the leading American cases dealing with the question of termination of a tenancy by notice, and this court quoted and adopted a considerable portion of the language thereof in our early case of Stewart v. Murrell, supra. The exact question here before us was not, however, an issue in the Stewart-Murrell case. .

In the case of Lehy v. Lubman, 67 Mo. App. 191, it is said: “Strictly speaking, the day o,f the ending of a monthly term, and the beginning of another term, would be at that moment at midnight when one day ends and another begins. So it has been held that the proper month’s notice is for the term to end on the corresponding day of its beginning. Thus, if a tenancy began on the first day of the month, a notice to quit on the first day of the month would be sufficient. ... As before stated, we construe the notice in this case to be a notice to give up possession on the end of the day of June 30¡ —that is, at the time when the monthly term expired. It is, in effect, the same thing as if it had been notice to quit on the day corresponding to the beginning of the term; and since the ending of a term and the beginning of a succeeding term must be at the same'moment of time, when one day ends and another begins, we think it practical and consistent with reason to hold that a notice to quit at the end of the last day of the term, or at the beginning of the first day of what would be a succeeding term, to be one and the same thing.”

■ Convinced as we are that the conclusions announced in -each of the foregoing quotations are sound, and based upon logical reasoning, we adopt tlie views therein expressed, and hold that whenever it has appeared, or shall appear, necessary or desirable to set forth in a notice terminating a tenancy, the exact day upon which possession will be yielded, or is required, the day so designated may properly correspond with either the first day or the last day of the rental period, and where either such day is so designated therein it shall be deemed to be “a notice ending with a” rental “period.”

Appellants argue, however, that even if the first day of what would be a new term can properly be designated, still the notice here is insufficient because it failed to fix with reasonable exactness the time designated for termination, in that it did not demand possession on a day certain, but “on or before” a day certain, and counsel for appellants say that the tenants “were thereby informed that the tenancy had been or would be terminated on August first or some day prior thereto.”

In reply counsel for appellee say that “the question here presented is analogous to similar questions that arose under the uniform negotiable instrument statute, which requires all negotiable paper to be payable either on demand or at a fixed or determinable future date.” Decisions of this and other courts are cited in which it was held that, notwithstanding the provisions of the statute above mentioned, notes which were payable “on or before” a certain date were negotiable.

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Bluebook (online)
180 S.W.2d 832, 207 Ark. 401, 1944 Ark. LEXIS 675, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dillon-v-miller-ark-1944.