Peterson v. McNeely

189 A. 765, 125 Pa. Super. 55, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 17, 1936
DocketAppeal, 218
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 189 A. 765 (Peterson v. McNeely) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. McNeely, 189 A. 765, 125 Pa. Super. 55, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7 (Pa. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Opinion by

Parker, J.,

The question involved .on this appeal is whether one tenant in common, who takes possession of the common property under a written lease from his cotenants for a fixed term and before the end of the term gives written notice to his lessors that after the conclusion of the term he will not occupy the premises under the lease but as a tenant in common and remains on the premises, thereby renews the lease.

A brother and three sisters were the owners as tenants in common of a valuable residence property in Mellon, Montgomery County. The brother and two sisters, by waiting, leased their three-fourths interest in the premises to their sister, Jane P. McNeely, the defendant, for the term of one year beginning November 1, 1929, for which the lessee agreed to pay as rental $3,000 per year in quarterly instalments and the taxes assessed against the property and to keep the premises in repair. The lessee continued to occupy the premises from year to year for some time. In 1931, one of the sisters, a lessor, died and willed her share in the property to her son, Edwin Vernon Dougherty, and her daughter, Eleanor D. D. McCullough. As *57 a result the nephew and niece each became owners as tenants in common of one-eighth of the property and each of these two became entitled to one-sixth of the rental stipulated in the lease. Rentals were paid until November 1, 1932. Mrs. McNeely continued to occupy the premises after that date and until after November, 1934. On March 22, 1935, Mrs. McCullough brought this action on behalf of all the lessors to recover $9,000 or three years’ rental with interest.

It is well settled that one lessor has a right to institute an action in the names of all the lessors: Marys v. Anderson, 24 Pa. 272, 276; Swint v. McCalmont Oil Co., 184 Pa. 202, 206, 38 A. 1021; Magee v. Morton B. & L. Assn., 103 Pa. Superior Ct. 331, 158 A. 647; Eichelberger v. Eichelberger, 4 Clark 73. Shortly after suit was instituted, all of the plaintiffs, with the exception of Mrs. McCullough, filed a disclaimer of record, thus leaving for adjudication only the claim of Mrs. McCullough for one-sixth of the rental. There is no doubt that each owner had the right to waive his right to so much of the rent as represented his portion of it: Bernstein v. Colletris, 99 Pa. Superior Ct. 484, 489. Mrs. McNeely, the defendant, alleged in her answer that she had terminated the lease by written notice to Mrs. McCullough as well as notice to the other owners and that she thereafter occupied the premises as a tenant in common and not as lessee. At the conclusion of the trial, the judge directed a verdict for the plaintiffs for the entire rental claimed. Later, on consideration of motions for a new trial and for judgment n.o.v., the motions were refused but it was directed that the judgment should be subject to '“the limitation that execution may be issued for only one-sixth of such judgment, with interest, the proceeds of such execution to be paid to the plaintiff Eleanor D. D. McCullough, and, upon satisfaction of such execution, the judgment to be marked satisfied in full.”

*58 The learned judge of the court below states the proposition involved as follows: “Did the letters of the defendant to Mrs. McCullough and the other lessors, stating that after November, 1932, she would no longer occupy the premises as a lessee under the lease but as a cotenant, change the occupancy of the premises by the defendant from that of a tenant under the lease to the occupancy of a tenant in common?” There are further facts with relation to the termination of the lease, none of which is in dispute, that have a bearing on that question.

The lease provided that if the lessee should continue in possession of the premises after the expiration of the term, the agreement should “become immediately operative for another like term.” The general rule is well settled that when a lessee holds over, a new lease is implied on the same terms and conditions as the old lease: County v. Bridenhart, 16 Pa. 458, 460. Consequently, this provision for renewal of the lease was but declaratory of the law. ' Prior to November 1, 1932, the lessee, Mrs. McNeely, advised Mrs. McCullough in writing that she would not thereafter'continue the then existing contract for the payment of rent. A similar notice was given to the other lessors. This resulted in negotiations among all the owners looking to an arrangement for the occupancy of the premises until they could be sold. Advertisements offering the property for sale were placed on the property and a written agreement was prepared and signed by all the owners with the exception of Mrs. McCullough providing for the occupancy of the premises by the defendant, until a purchaser could be found, in consideration of the payment of the taxes and upkeep of the property. Mrs. McCullough having refused to execute the contract it was abandoned, but Mrs. McNeely continued in the premises as a tenant in common with the approval of all the owners except Mrs. McCullough. *59 The written notice and the negotiations between the parties furnish the basis for an inescapable inference that all the owners, including Mrs. McCullough, understood that Mrs. McNeely was claiming to occupy the premises after November 1, 1932, not as a tenant under the lease but by virtue of her rights and duties as tenant in common.

The court below in entering the judgment and the appellee in her argument relied largely on the case of Graham v. Dempsey, 169 Pa. 460, 32 A. 408. The opinion in that case covers a few lines and is as follows: “A tenant cannot escape liability for the rent of another term by giving notice that he is going out at the end of his year, and then not going. That actions speak louder than words is sound law as well as proverbial wisdom.” In our opinion that case is not decisive of the question here presented for no question of cotenants was involved. In addition, the lessee here did'not say she was going out at the end of the year and then not go. What ‘she said was with relation to a situation quite different. Being the owner as tenant in common of the undivided one-fourth of the premises, she advised her cotenants that at the termination of the lease she would occupy the premises not as a lessee but as a cotenant. Instead of advising that she would leave and then not leaving, her advice was that she would, after November 1, 1932, occupy the premises in a different capacity than she formerly had.

Now it must be conceded that even when the lease was in force Mrs. McNeely occupied three-fourths of the premises as a tenant of her co-owners and the remaining one-fourth as an owner. Each tenant in common is entitled to the use, benefit and possession of the property and may exercise acts of ownership in regard thereto, subject to the limitation that he is bound so to exercise his rights in the property as not to interfere with the rights of his cotenants: 62 C. J. *60 421. Each tenant has an equal right to the possession of the whole (Kline v. Jacobs, 68 Pa. 57, 58) but not to the exclusion of his cotenants. Now there is not a suggestion in the record that Mrs. McCullough was denied the same right to the property after November 1, 1932, as Mrs. McNeely exercised.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
189 A. 765, 125 Pa. Super. 55, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-mcneely-pasuperct-1936.