Sutherland v. Drolet

143 N.W. 663, 154 Wis. 619, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 275
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 143 N.W. 663 (Sutherland v. Drolet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sutherland v. Drolet, 143 N.W. 663, 154 Wis. 619, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 275 (Wis. 1913).

Opinion

WiNsnow, O. J.

The arrangement by wbicb the defendant was to occupy the premises as tenant until they were sold was undoubtedly void so far as fixing the term of the tenancy is concerned, because it was not in writing. Under sec. 2302, Stats., no estate or interest in lands can be created save by operation of law or deed or conveyance in writing, except a leasehold for a term not exceeding one year. the oral agreement cannot in any proper sense be called a lease for “a term not exceeding one year,” for its term may last for many years, and in the present case actually did last for more than two years. To come within the exception it must affirmatively appear that the term of the lease does not exceed one year.

There is no analogy in this regard between this section and sub. 1 of sec. 2307, Stats., which declares void, unless in writing, “every agreement which by its terms is not to be performed within one year.” Under this latter provision it has been frequently held that in order to come within its condemnation the contract must show by its terms that it is not to be performed within a year. Conway v. Mitchell, 97 Wis. 290, 72 N. W. 752, and cases cited. Tbe radical difference between the requirements of tbe two sections is very apparent and need not be further dwelt on.

In England and in some of the American states it is provided by statute that an oral lease, void under the statute of frauds, creates a tenancy at will. 1 Tiffany, Landl. & T. § 25 g. (1). Such would seem to be the logical result in the absence of any statute, because in such case the possession, when taken, is permissive and lawful and is without understanding as to its duration'. These are the distinguishing characteristics of an estate at will. It seems unnecessary, [622]*622however, to consider that question. In this state there is no such statute, and it has been directly held that where a tenant went into possession of premises under a parol lease for two years and held for more than one year, paying rent as provided by the lease, he became by such holding and payment of rent a tenant from year to year at the rental stipulated in the lease, although the lease itself was void under the statute. Koplitz v. Gustavus, 48 Wis. 48, 3 N. W. 754. In that case it was said that no inference could be drawn from the facts in evidence other than the inference that a yearly tenancy was intended to be created by the parties, and that the facts were incompatible with the idea that the tenancy intended was one from month to month. It is very clear that had the facts in that case shown that the intention of the parties was to create a holding from month to month, the tenancy would have been held to be one of that nature.

The substance of the holding in that case unquestionably is that when a tenant enters premises under a void parol lease like the present and pays rent regularly thereafter, his tenancy becomes a “periodic tenancy,” i. e. either a tenancy Trom “year to year,” “month to month,” or “week to week,” according as the evidence shows that the rent was paid and received with reference to and in contemplation of a yearly, monthly, or weekly holding.

While the term “periodic tenancy” has acquired an independent place in the text-books, it is in fact (in cases where it arises merely as an inference from the conduct of the parties) nothing more than the name of a -modified form of an estate at will, namely, one which, either by force of judicial decision or statute or both, cannot be terminated by either party without the giving of a notice of a certain duration. The evolution of the “periodic tenancy” by judicial decision is well described by Mr. Justice Mitchell in Hunter v. Frost, 47 Minn. 1, 49 N. W. 327, as follows:

“It was determined very anciently by the common law, upon principles of justice and policy, that estates at will [623]*623were equally at the will of both parties, and neither of themi was permitted to exercise his will in a wanton manner, andi contrary to equity and good faith, but that they could only be terminated by notice for a longer or shorter period, de-. pending usually upon the nature of the original demise. ' At first there was no other rule but that the notice should be a reasonable one. Because of the uncertainty of this rule, the courts early adopted, as far as possible, some fixed period as being reasonable. In those tenancies which, from the nature of the original demise, they construed to be tenancies from year to year, the courts adopted six months as a reasonable notice, holding that such tenancies could only be determined by a notice of at least six months, terminating at the expiration of the first or any succeeding year. And in those case» which did not come within the class of tenancies from year to year, because by implication for some definite period less than a year, the rule was generally adopted that the time of notice should be governed by the length of time specified as the interval between the times of payment of rent, and should be equal to one of these intervals, and must end at the expiration thereof. The result was that at common law estates at will, in the strict sense, became almost extinguished at a very early date, under the operation of judicial decisions. Indeed, it would have been difficult to conceive of an instance of such a tenancy, except where created by the express contract of the parties to that effect. But they still' remained substantially tenancies at will, except that such will could not be determined by either party without due notice to-quit.”

If the periodic tenancies arising as, an inference from the1 conduct of the parties, such as the one before us, be not estates at will, then there can be practically no estates at will, except in cases where the parties agree that the holding shall he at will, and it is matter of common knowledge that the number of such agreements is negligible. It is quite inconceivable that sec. 2183 of- the Statutes of Wisconsin cover» only tenancies at will created by agreement of the parties. That section now reads as follows:

“Whenever there is a tenancy at will or by sufferance, created in any manner, the same may be terminated by the [624]*624landlord’s giving one month’s notice in writing to the tenant ■requiring him to remove from the demised premises or by the tenant’s giving one month’s notice in writing that he shall'remove from said premises and by surrendering to the •landlord the possession thereof within the time limited in such notice; but when the rent reserved in a lease at will is payable at periods of less than one month such notice shall be sufficient if it be equal to .the interval between the times of payment; and in all cases of neglect or refusal to pay the rent due on a lease at will fourteen days’ notice to remove, given by the landlord, shall be sufficient to determine the lease.”

We are fully satisfied both historically and logically that the term “tenancy at will” in this section includes the so-called “periodic tenancies,” except those tenancies from year to year which have been put in a class by themselves by sec. 2187, Stats. Haines v. Beach, 90 Mich. 563, 51 N. W. 644; Prendergast v. Searle, 74 Minn. 333, 77 N. W. 231; Rosenblat v. Perkins, 18 Oreg. 156, 22 Pac. 598.

The facts in the present case show conclusively that both parties intended the holding to be from month to month and hence that there arose that form of a tenancy at will called a periodic tenancy, which, under the provisions of sec.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
143 N.W. 663, 154 Wis. 619, 1913 Wisc. LEXIS 275, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutherland-v-drolet-wis-1913.