Small v. Clark

54 A. 758, 97 Me. 304, 1903 Me. LEXIS 15
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 10, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 54 A. 758 (Small v. Clark) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Small v. Clark, 54 A. 758, 97 Me. 304, 1903 Me. LEXIS 15 (Me. 1903).

Opinion

Sayage, J.

Action of forcible entry and detainer. April 3, 1901, J. I. Watts, then the. owner of the premises in question, leased them to the defendant for the term of four years at a rental of $130 a year. The lease contained the following stipulations, among others; “Be it understood and agreed that-if either party [307]*307should see fit to terminate this lease before it expires he shall pay the other fifty dollars and the said Clark shall have the first refusal when sold”; also, “be it further understood that said house shall not be used for any other purpose than a hotel, and no intoxicating liquors shall be sold on the premises.” The other provisions in the lease are unimportant here. Watts conveyed the premises to the plaintiff July 8, 1901. On July 10, 1901, the plaintiff gave notice to the defendant in writing that his tenancy in the premises would terminate August 10, 1901. This action was commenced August 19 following, was heard before a trial justice, and judgment was rendered for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed to the Supreme Judicial Court, and the case is now before us on report.

The plaintiff seeks to maintain this action, notwithstanding the defendant was occupying the premises under a lease for a term of years, upon two grounds.

I. He contends that the defendant’s right to the premises as tenant or occupant had been forfeited by him, prior to the commencement of the action, by using it or a part of it as a liquor nuisance, contrary to the provisions of K. S., c. 17, § 1. The lease itself stipulated that no intoxicating liquors should be sold on the premises, and that the lessor might enter and expel the lessee if he should violate any of the covenants of the lease. Revised Statutes, ch. 17, § 3, provides that “if any tenant or occupant, under any lawful title, of any building or tenement not owned by him, uses it or any part thereof for any purpose named in section one, he forfeits his right thereto, and the owner may make immediate entry, without process of law, or may avail himself of the remedy provided in chapter ninety-four,” which is forcible entry and detainer.

Waiving the questions whether the plaintiff’s pleadings should not have set forth specifically the statutory ground on which his claim is based, and whether proof of forfeiture under the statute is not a fatal variance from the allegations in the declaration before us, Eveleth v. Gill, post, p. 315, we ai’e of opinion that the plaintiff must fail upon this statutory ground for want- of proof. The only evidence in the case having any tendency to prove that the defendant [308]*308used any part of the premises as a liquor nuisance relates to June 14, 1901, while "Watts was still the ownei', and twenty-five days before the plaintiff purchased the hotel. After that, and while Watts continued to own the premises, the latter did no act to terminate the tenancy, either under the provisions of the lease or under the statute.

The remedy by forcible entry and detainer given by the statute maybe maintained, without notice, if commenced within seven days from the forfeiture of the term. N. S., c. 94, § 1. But the plaintiff does not seek to maintain the action under that clause. The only other provisions in chapter ninety-four which can by any construction of its terms afford a lessor a remedy in cases of this sort is that which relates to tenants at will, and of these we shall speak hereafter.

Assuming that the defendant forfeited the lease as claimed, while Watts was the owner, unless he became ipso facto a mere tenant at will, Watts alone could take advantage of the forfeiture, and his right would not pass to his grantee by conveyance of the premises. Fenn v. Smart, 12 East, 444; Bennett v. Herring, 3 C. B. (N. S.) 370; Trask v. Wheeler, 7 Allen, 109; Rice v. Stone, 1 Allen, 566. The statute says, the tenant “forfeits his right thereto.” The more explicit language of the original act, Stat. 1858, c. 54, § 3, says, “such use shall annul and make void the lease or other title under which said occupant holds, and without any act of the owner shall cause to revert and vest in him the right of possession thereof.” The earlier phrase means no more, we think, than the later one. In either case it is the “owner” who may make immediate entry, — entry immediately upon the forfeiture, that is, when the forfeiture becomes effective; it is the “owner” at the time of the forfeiture, not his subsequent grantee. It is the “owner” who may make immediate entry or may have the alternative remedy of forcible entry and detainer. The statute does not read that the “owner” may make immediate entry or his grantee may resort to forcible entry and detainer. It is the owner at the time of forfeiture all the way through. This appears to be so from the language of the statute. Extraneous considerations support this position. The statute we are discussing was enacted in pari materia with that other which makes the lessors of buildings used [309]*309as liquor nuisances liable under some conditions to indictment, fine and imprisonment. And one purpose of section three undoubtedly was to enable the landlord to dispossess his liquor-dealing tenant immediately upon discovery, and thereby avoid the risk of prosecution himself. Way v. Reed, 6 Allen, 364. And this reason would not apply to a subsequent grantee.

Moreover, although the lease is forfeited or annulled and made void by the act of the tenant, the owner is not compelled to take advantage of it. He is not compelled to act. He is not obliged to make immediate entry. He may never resort to the remedy by forcible entry and detainer. He may waive the forfeiture, and waive the privilege of ousting the tenant. He may be content that the tenant shall remain, and if he is content, no one else can complain. And if he permits the tenant to remain, the tenant’s occupation is lawful. The tenant’s occupation is at no time unlawful, unless and until the “ owner” determines the right of occupation.

At this point it becomes necessary to examine with more particularity into the precise status of the lease after forfeiture. Thus far we have assumed that it remains in force until the owner, during his ownership, takes advantage of the forfeiture, and determines the right of possession. We have said that the owner may waive the forfeiture. But the statute says the right under the lease is forfeited. The old statute said that it is annulled and made void. Is the statute to be construed as making the lease absolutely void and of no effect whatever, whether the owner takes advantage of it or not? If so, it may follow that if the tenant remains after the forfeiture, with consent express or implied of the landlord, he remains as tenant at will, and that forcible entry and detainer will lie, after thirty days’ notice, such as was given in this case. And if the tenancy becomes thus a tenancy at will, by force of the statute forfeiture, and the lease is no longer in effect, then of course the grantee of the landlord, finding a tenant at will in occupation of the premises, may elect to regard the tenancy as terminated by the alienation, and bring forcible entry and detainer without giving the thirty days’ notice, Seavey v. Cloudman, 90 Maine, 536; or he may give the notice and then bring his action. The plaintiff in this case seems to [310]*310have proceeded upon the theory that the defendant was a tenant at will merely, at the time of the alienation, and he gave the statutory notice.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A. 758, 97 Me. 304, 1903 Me. LEXIS 15, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/small-v-clark-me-1903.