Court Opinion

ID: 5435803
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-08 17:54:10.899765+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:31:49.656772
License: Public Domain

By the Court,
Shafter, J.
This is an action to recover the possession of certain prem : ises, under the thirteenth section of the Act concerning forcible entries and unlawful detainers. The premises in question were leased to the defendant by the plaintiff’s intestate for a term ending October 1st, 1863. The defense was put upon the ground that the respondent surrendered the possession of the premises to the plaintiff a few days after the term expired. The facts as shown by the record are substantially as follows: The defendant left’the premises with his family about the 10th of October, 1863, and took with him everything that belonged to him; and on the same day he delivered the keys of the house to the plaintiff personally at his residence, saying to him, “ there are the keys of the house and I give you the pos*226session.” The plaintiff replied “all right.” It further appears that the house occupied by Walls was within the same general inclosure as the tract in question. In two or three days after the defendant so left the premises he entered upon and took possession of them anew.
This action is brought upon the assumption that the relation of landlord and tenant is now on foot between the parties; but we consider that the relation came to an end on the day the defendant evacuated the premises and surrendered the keys. It may be that the defendant, when he quit the possession, intended to re-enter, but as he quit in fact and within the plaintiff’s knowledge, and in compliance, too, with a notice to quit which the plaintiff had previously given, and as the plaintiff was himself in possession of the premises for two or three days thereafter, the mere intention of the defendant when he left to re-enter at a future day cannot be regarded as a matter of any moment. There was no simulation about the defendant’s surrender. Everything was just as it appeared to be. It was the defendant’s duty to leave and he seems to have performed it. We cannot inquire into the motives by which he was governed nor as to his ulterior designs. If the right of possession is now in the plaintiff, he has, in our opinion, mistaken his remedy.
Judgment affirmed.