Gladwell v. Holcomb

60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 427
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1899
StatusPublished

This text of 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 427 (Gladwell v. Holcomb) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gladwell v. Holcomb, 60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 427 (Ohio 1899).

Opinion

Williams, J.

On the fifteenth day of December, 1889, Horace Holcomb, then the owner of a store room on M onroe street in the city of Toledo, executed a lease of the same to Thomas J. Gladwell for the term of one year commencing on the first [432]*432day of January, 1890; the lessee agreeing to pay as the rent therefor the sum of three hundred and sixty dollars, in monthly installments of thirty dollars each on the first day of each month during the term, and further agreeing to surrender possession of the'premises at the end of the term to the lessor, his heirs, or assigns. The lessee occupied the premises and paid the rent according to the lease during the term, and 'continued to hold over and pay rent at the same rate from year to year thereafter, until and including the year 1896. On the thirty-first day of August, 1896, the lessor having then died intestate, his heirs to whom the estate descended, served the tenant with a written notice to yield possession to them on the first day of January following. The tenant having failed to comply with that notice, and with the further notice required by the statute to leave the premises within three days which was served on him on the second day of January, 1897, the heirs of Holcomb brought their action of forcible detention against him, before a justice of the peace of Lucas county. That action was defended on the grounds, (1) that the tenancy having become one from year to year, after the expiration of the lease, could not be determined by the complainants without a notice to that effect given six months' previous to the end of the year; and, (2) that the tenant, during his occupancy, had a verbal contract with the lessor for a further lease of the premises for the period of ten years. The justice instructed the jury that six months’ notice was not necessary to the determination of the defendant’s tenancy, and, that the verbal agreement, if one was made, was invalid. A verdict was returned against the defendant, on which judgment of restitution was [433]*433rendered in favor of the complainants. The defendant, claiming1 there was error in the instructions of the justice to the jury, sought to have the judgment reversed; but it was affirmed in the court of common pleas, whose judgment was affirmed by the circuit court; and the two questions arising upon the charge are presented for decision by this court.

That Gladwell’s occupancy of the premises by holding over with the assent of his landlord after the expiration of the lease, became a tenancy from year to year, upon the terms, and subject to the conditions of that lease, is settled by the recent case of Raillroad Co. v. West, 57 Ohio St., 161. But what notice, if any, is requisite to the termination of a tenancy of that nature by either party without the consent of the other, has not, as far as we have been able to discover, been considered in any reported decision of this court.

It is not doubted that when the time of the termination of a tenancy is definitely fixed, the landlord, upon the expiration of that time, may maintain an action for possession without any notice to quit except the three days notice required by the statute; nor, generally, that upon the termination of a farming lease of uncertain duration, otherwise than for his own default, the tenant is entitled to emblements. Leases of this latter class, though strictly creating tenancies at will, were early construed by the English courts into tenancies from year to year, when a periodical rent was paid; and out of them, and of leases that by their terms were to continue from year to year, grew the common law rule requiring notice from the party desiring to bring the tenancy to [434]*434an end. That rule rests upon the presumed intention of the parties that such tenancy should be prolonged for an indefinite number of years, and that, so being of uncertain duration, either party should have reasonable notice before the expiration of any year, of the other’s intention to end it. In agricultural tenancies the notice was fixed at six months, in order that the tenant might be enabled to reap, before he should be dispossessed, the crops which he had sown; though Mr. Justice Wilmot, in Timmons v. Rowlinson, 3 Burr, 1603, 1609, is authority for the statement that the notice required “varied according to the custom of different counties.” The rule was afterwards extended, without apparent reason, to like tenancies of tenements, and of other property not used for agricultural purposes. It has in this enlarged application, varying as to the length of the notice required, been adopted in some of the states by statute, and in others by adjudication of their courts; but has not hitherto obtained in this state, where the doctrine of emblements in cases of farming tenancies of indefinite duration has been adhered to. A distinction has been made between those tenancies from year to year from which, as has been seen, the rule requiring notice to quit had its origin, and those arising from a holding over by the tenant after the expiration of a lease for a specified term. In each year of occupancy under the former, there is, it is said, a growing-interest in the ensuing year springing out of the original contract; while in the latter case, a new contract arises each year of the holding over, by implication from the conduct of the parties. This distinction is pointed out in the opinion of Chief Justice Marshall, in Alexander v. Harris, 4 Cranch, [435]*435298, 302, in showing that a plea of a demise for three years is not supported by proof of a lease for one year and a holding over for two years thereafter. It is there said : ‘ ‘The lease stated in the avowry is obviously a different lease from that which was given in evidence. A lease for three years is not a lease for one year. But it is contended that a subsequent possession, without any new express agreement amounts to an extension of the original lease, and for this Bacon’s Abridgment, and a dictum of Judge Buller, in the case of Birch v. Wright, 1 Term Rep., 378, have been cited. But those eases do not prove the point they were supposed to establish. In those cases, the original terms of the lease admit of the extension which was afterward made by consent of parties. The lease was made for one year, and afterwards from year to year, as long as both parties should please. The principle of continuance is introduced into the original contract, and the occupation for three years is evidence that the circumstance had occurred, by force of which the contract should be a lease for three years. But in this ease the original contract contains no principle of continuance. It is for a limited time, and can only be extended by a new contract, either express or implied.” A similar view of the contract arising each year that the tenant holds over beyond the term of his lease? was expressed by this court in Railroad Co. v. West, 57 Ohio St., 161, 168, where, as showing that such a contract does not fall within the statute of frauds, it is said: “The tenant, by holding over, is regarded as consenting or proposing to enter upon a new term for another year at the same rent and upon the conditions of the prior occupancy, and the landlord’s acceptance of the pro[436]*436posed, tenancy is presumed from his receiving the rent, or other acquiescence. The agreement arises by implication of law from the conduct of the parties after the expiration of the former tenancy; and, in this respect, is essentially different from those agreements made by parties while in possession under an existing lease, for a new lease to commence in the future; as was the case of

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Related

Dobbins v. Bradley
7 F. Cas. 782 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of District of Columbia, 1833)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 Ohio St. (N.S.) 427, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gladwell-v-holcomb-ohio-1899.