Steffens v. Earl

40 N.J.L. 128
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedFebruary 15, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 40 N.J.L. 128 (Steffens v. Earl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steffens v. Earl, 40 N.J.L. 128 (N.J. 1878).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Reed, J.

The first objection urged against the judgment in this case is relative to the statement in the affidavit of the existence of the tenure. The statement in the affidavit is that “deponent leased'said premises to said Steffens by the month, to commence on the 1st of May last, at the monthly rent of $10.” It is said that this is merely the statement of a conclusion of law, and not a statement of such facts as will disclose to the court the existence of a tenancy, as a legal conclusion. In support of this position, the case of Fowler v. Roe, 1 Dutcher 549, is adduced. In that case, the statement in the affidavit was that the defendant was “ her tenant,” and held over premises “ heretofore leased to him; ” and it was held insufficient, because it was the claimant’s conclusions from facts not disclosed. I do not perceive in what manner this affidavit is invalidated by the rule in that case, which was merely an assertion of the general rule that in pleadings and complaints analogous thereto, upon which judicial action is to be grounded, statements of legal conclusions, without the facts upon which they are predicated, are vicious. How does it appear that this affidavit states a mere legal conclusion, and that there are undisclosed facts ? If A says to B, “ I will let you have that house by the month, for $10 a month,” and B acquiesces and goes into possession, I think a statement that A leased to B by the month, at $10 a month, would sufficiently state the facts of the letting. The legal effect of [132]*132a letting, by these words, is then determinable by the court. To require more than this would be laying down a rule more stringent than that in the case of Brahn v. Jersey City Forge Co., 9 Vroom 74. I think the affidavit is, in this respect, sufficient. It is also urged that the statement in the affidavit that the said term has expired, and the said Steffens holds over,” is also a conclusion of law merely, and so insufficient. But it is not the statement of legal conclusions which invalidates the affidavit, but the absence of a statement of the facts upon which such a conclusion can be grounded. The tenancy in this case is alleged to be terminated by notice. The renting, and the notice as to terms and time, are set out fully. If they support this conclusion, its statement as a conclusion does no harm, and if the facts fail to support it, its statement affords no assistance to the claimant.

What, then, in the first place, is the character of this tenancy, in respect to time ?

. To support the judgment in this case, it must be a monthly letting. The defendant insists that the words employed by the claimant, in the affidavit, import a tenancy at will, or from year to year, and therefore a three months’ notice was requisite to determine the tenure. The question is important from the fact that, acting upon the supposition that the tenancy was monthly, only a month’s notice was attempted by the claimant. Indeed, the distinction between tenancies from year to year and tenancies for a less period, in all the cases, seems to be important only in relation to the notice by which the determination of either kind can be effected. Unless it can be shown that monthly or weekly tenancies are unknown, I do not see how it is possible to hold the tenancy described in the affidavit to be other than a monthly tenancy. That such tenancies have an existence, the cases hereafter cited will establish, and to hold that the contract here shown is a monthly letting is only giving to the words of the affidavit their literal force. Further argument would be wasted upon this point.

If a monthly tenancy, is there a sufficient notice shown ?

The rule relative to notices seems to be as follows: Where [133]*133there is a lease for a certain period, the term determines without notice. Cobb v. Stokes 8 East 358; Right v. Darby, 1 Term R. 159; Decker v. Adams, 7 Halst. 99. In uncertain tenancies, reasonable notice was necessary, which reasonable •notice had, from the time of Henry "VIII., according to Lord Ellepborough, been six months. Doe, d. Strickland, v. Spence, 6 East 120.

This rule was applied to all uncertain tenancies in this state, whether rent was or was not reserved. Den v. Drake, 2 Green 523. The time was changed to three months by act of 1840, (Pamph. L., p. 104,) now, with a little change in the text, the twenty-seventh section of the landlord and tenant act in the revision. Rev., p. 575.

In cases of tenancies for periods running less than a year, the rule enunciated by the text-writers is, that the notice must be regulated by the letting, and must be equivalent to a period. Taylor on Land. and Ten., § 478; Archb. on Land. and Ten. 87. How the rule arose is uncertain. It certainly did not have its origin in any resolution of the courts. Indeed, Baron Parke, in Huffell v. Armistead, 7 C. & P. 56, said that he knew of no decision holding a week’s or month’s notice was necessary to determine a weekly or monthly tenancy. See, also, the remarks of the judges, to the same import, in Towne v. Campbell, 3 C. B. 921.

It seems, however, tó have very early shaped itself into a custom. The habit of giving and requiring reasonable notice, in cases of tenancies, not for a single term, but for recurring periods, which reasonable notice, when the periods were from year to year, was, according to Lord Ellenborough, very early held to be six months, was, probably by a custom equally as old, in tenancies for less periods, established as now stated by the books.

By strict relativenass, the rule of a half year’s notice in tenancies from year to year, would only require a half month’s or a half week’s notice in cases of monthly or weekly tenancies. The briefness of the latter, and the length of the former kind of tenancies, was the probable reason why the rule was not [134]*134uniform. Whatever the reason of the rule, it seems to have been .well grounded in the general understanding of the English people. The cases cited by the books of authority in support of the rule already stated are merely recognition's of what was obviously a custom, and, as such, the cases would seem to have as much weight as authority as if they had expressly ruled the point.

The first is the case of Doe, ex dem. Parry, v. Hazell, 1 Esp. 94. It was a case of ejectment, tried before Chief Justice-Kenyon in 1794. The full report of the case is as follows: The defendant had taken the house by the month, and a-month’s notice to quit had been given. It was agreed that, the notice had reference, in all cases, to the letting, and that a month’s notice was sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to recover.

In Peacock v. Raffun, 6 Esp. 4, tried before Lord Ellen-borough in 1808, the court remarked that a week’s notice to quit was certainly sufficient where the holding was weekly.

In Doe, d. Campbell, v. Scott, 6 Bing. 362, the same rule-was, in 1830, recognized by the Court of Common Pleas. The rule was incorporated in the text of the books of authority upon this subject as the law, and may be considered as settled both in England and in this country, excepting where the-matter of notice has been the subject of statutory regulation. Prindle v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
40 N.J.L. 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steffens-v-earl-nj-1878.