Court Opinion

ID: 6140552
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 14:38:10.772683+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:54:37.413914
License: Public Domain

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.
This judgment will have to be reversed. The testimony of both the plaintiff and the defendant was to the effect that the premises were hired for a year, the rent being payable monthly in advance. There was no conflict between them as to the fact that the letting and renting was for a year, and it is evident from the ruling of the justice that he' regarded the receipt for the. month of March as conclusive upon the plaintiff, because it contains the words, “ it is expressly understood that the letting is for one month only, and to expire on the first day of *207April next." If this receipt had been-signed by the plaintiff, it might have been conclusive as against him, so as to preclude him from showing by parol that1 the hiring was for a year. But the defendant himself admitted that he had hired for a year, and even if he had not, the receipt would not stop the plaintiff from showing that that was the fact. The receipt was signed in the plaintiff’s name by his son, who was not shown to have any authority to vary the terms of the lease. The receipt was a printed form and the words referred to were a part of the printed form. It was the ordinary form of a receipt for premises let by the month. All that was in writing being the date, the name of the tenant, the number of the house, the street, the amount of the monthly rent, and the landlord’s name, to which the son affixed his initials. For all that appears, the son may have known nothing about the period for which the premises were hired, or may have supposed that the letting was by the month only. He was authorized only to collect the rent. He swore expressly that he had no authority to give such a receipt, and as an agent for collecting rent he had no authority, in giving a receipt for it, to sign a receipt for the plaintiff in this printed form with such a stipulation in it. It was a mistake on his part, and in no way binding upon the plaintiff. The judge, under the plaintiff’s exception, excluded the plaintiff from giving' any testimony except as to what took place after the receipt was given, showing very clearly that he regarded the printed stipulation in the receipt as binding the plaintiff, and conclusive upon him.
There was conflict as to whether the landlord let the premises before the first of May, or rather as to whether the new tenant went into possession with his assent or authority before the time; but it is evident that the justice did not put his decision Upon the ground of a surrender. If he had, his judgment might have been conclusive. We cannot say that he believed the testimony of the new tenant and disbelieved that of the landlord. For all that we know, he may never have considered the question of surrender at all, as he regarded the receipt as settling what the terms of the tenancy *208were, and placed his decision and judgment upon a ground that was clearly erroneous. The judgment is, therefore, reversed.
Robinson and Larremore, JJ., concurred.
Judgment reversed.