Court Opinion

ID: 3319988
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 17:37:35.891837+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:40:21.140212
License: Public Domain

The only error imputed to the justice is that he overruled the demurrer to the complaint. Save as a question of pleading is incidentally raised by the plaintiff in error, the demurrer presents but two questions, and those are questions whose answers are to be found in the construction to be given to the provisions of the lease.
The complaint alleges that the lease expired and terminated by lapse of time on February 1st, 1906. The correctness of this material averment depends, as the parties agree, upon the interpretation to be given to that portion of the language of the lease which prescribes the period for which the lessee was privileged to occupy the premises by the extension of the original one-year term, which terminated February 1st, 1902. He asserts that his privilege was one which entitled him to extend his tenancy over a period of five years from and after that date, thus making it one of six years in the whole. The lessors, on the other hand, assert that the lease gave to the lessees no rights in the exercise of which a tenancy extending beyond February 1st, 1906, could be created.
We think that the lessors' interpretation of the instrument is the correct one. Its language does not readily yield to any other construction, and to construe it as though it read "five years more," or "five years additional," is to ignore the natural meaning of the language actually employed by the parties to express their intent, and to give to that language a strained and forced interpretation. If the parties intended that the lessees should have an option or options covering a period of five years following the one-year term, apt and simple language to express that intent was at their command, and it is scarcely conceivable that they would not have used it. See Whittemore v. Smith,50 Conn. 376.
The provision which appears later in the lease, to the effect that any holding over shall be taken to be a renewal for a period of one year "with the aforesaid privilege," is relied upon as fortifying the lessee's contention. Whatever might be the effect of this provision upon the rights *Page 103 
of the parties under certain conditions not now presented, we are unable to discover in it anything which militates against the lessors' present claim as to the nature and extent of "the aforesaid privilege" referred to.
The complaint does not allege the giving of a notice to quit as provided by statute. The plaintiff in error contends that without such notice the summary process could not be successfully maintained. The defendants in error answer that the lessees have in the lease waived all right to such notice. Referring to that instrument, we find the provision that "all right of notice to quit possession is expressly waived by said lessees." This provision, however, is found in a paragraph which deals solely with terminations from other causes than lapse of time, and stipulates for such terminations, and it is connected with the body of that paragraph by the conjunction "and." Notwithstanding the argument drawn from this fact, we think that it is apparent that the intention of the parties was that the waiver provision in question should be as comprehensive as its language naturally implies, and include "all" right of notice, and not a right of notice under certain conditions expressed in the paragraph in which it chances to appear.Zimmerman v. Mechanics Savings Bank, 75 Conn. 645, 648,54 A. 1120; Stapleberg v. Stapleberg, 77 Conn. 31, 35,58 A. 233; 9 Cyc. 585.
The plaintiff in error in his brief advances the proposition that the defendants in error were not entitled to the benefit of a waiver, since one was not otherwise alleged than as it appeared in the recited lease. This objection is purely technical and relates only to the form of the complaint. Any adverse ruling thereon, whether correct or incorrect, did not touch the merits of the case, and could not have harmed the plaintiff in error, whose substantial rights, as he presented them upon the demurrer, were adjudicated and correctly adjudicated.
   There is no error.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.