Court Opinion

ID: 8023429
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:28:19.614041+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T09:13:47.905568
License: Public Domain

MR. COMMISSIONER AYERS
prepared the opinion for the court.
On July 14, 1904, defendant by a written contract leased from John E. Lewis a tract of land for a sawmill site, in Flathead county, for a term of ten years, at the annual rental of $100, payable semi-annually on the first day of January and July. The lease was recorded July 20, 1910. After the expiration of the term, defendant continued to occupy the lands for the same- purpose, and paid therefor the same amount, and in the same way as provided in the lease, until the calendar year 1916, when he paid an annual rental of $150, which amount was also paid for the calendar years 1917 and 1918, in the same way. However, the last payment was made to the State Land Company, which on April 5, 1917, acquired the lands from John E. Lewis and Olive Lewis, his wife, and on November 17, 1917, it conveyed them to the F. H. Stoltze Land Company, the plaintiff and appellant herein; and on January 15, 1919, it filed its complaint in unlawful detainer in the district court of Flathead county, praying restitution of the lands and damage for unlawfully withholding possession thereof. The defendant’s answer admits all the allegations of the complaint, except that it denies plaintiff’s right to the possession of the lands, and affirmatively pleads his own right to possession thereto so long as he continues to use the same as a sawmill site, asserting such right by reason of verbal agreements with Lewis and a letter dated May 3, 1916, signed by Lewis and his wife. This letter, written nearly two years after the expiration of the lease, provides: “By the terms of the lease, it expires on the 14th of July, 1914, but it was our intention, and still is our intention, that *43you should continue to occupy the premises leased for the same rentals so long as you do continue to use it for sawmill purposes, and pay the rentals as provided for in the lease when they become due, and this is to advise you that so long as you continue to use the premises for the purposes you are now using them, namely, for sawmill purposes and lumberyard, and pay the rentals, your possession will not be disturbed.”
Defendant’s testimony is in substance that his verbal agreements with Lewis were to the same effect as the letter, and that such agreements were made as far back as the day of entering into the written lease, and continued in a conversational way up to the writing of the letter.
At the close of the testimony, both plaintiff and defendant moved for a directed verdict. Neither did anything more. The court granted defendant’s motion, and a verdict was accordingly returned for him. Judgment was entered thereon, a new trial was refused, and these appeals are from that order of refusal and from the judgment.
Where, at the close of all the testimony, as in the instant  case, both parties move for a peremptory instruction directing a verdict, and do nothing more, it is to be assumed that they deem the material facts undisputed, and submit the case to the trial court for determination on the inferences proper to be drawn from such facts. The whole case was thereby submitted on the motions, and the directed verdict will not be disturbed if there was substantial evidence to support it and the law warrants it. (St. Louis etc. R. Co. v. Mulkey, 100 Ark. 71, Ann. Cas. 1913C, 1339, 139 S. W. 643; Wells Fargo & Co. v. Townsend, 134 Ark. 560, 204 S. W. 417; Share v. Coats, 29 S. D. 603, 137 N. W. 402; Van Woert v. Modern Woodmen, 29 N. D. 441, 151 N. W. 224; Beuttell v. Magone, 157 U. S. 154, 39 L. Ed. 654, 15 Sup. Ct. Rep. 566; Empire State Cattle Co. v. Atchison etc. R. Co., 210 U. S. 1, 15 Ann. Cas. 70, 52 L. Ed. 931, 28 Sup. Ct. Rep. 607; Fifty Associates Co. v. Quigley, 56 Mont. 348, 185 Pac. 155; Bank of *44Commerce v. United States F. & G. Co., 58 Mont. 236, 194 Pac. 158; 38 Cyc. 1582.)
That plaintiff’s complaint was sufficient, and that its evi dence made a prima facie case, is admitted by defendant’s failure to attack the complaint or to move for relief at the close of plaintiff’s case. Hence we are concerned only with his defense, the facts of which, by plaintiff’s motion for a directed verdict, are admitted.
The defendant, in order to recover, must base his right upon the letter of May 3, 1916. Counsel, however, urges additional grounds, but a careful study of his brief and the record discloses that they all culminate in the letter. The question then is: Did the letter in any event become a lease, and, if so, for what period?
No particular words, technical or otherwise, or form of  expression in an instrument are necessary to constitute it a lease. Any language by which the possession and enjoyment of land is granted for a specified time at a stipulated rental creates a tenancy, and is in effect a lease. Bearing this rule in mind, and adopting defendant’s theory that the letter of May 3, 1916, and the lease of July 14, 1904, should be read together, we have before us a purported lease for ten years, carrying a clause that the lessee might thereafter continue in possession of the leased premises so long as he continued to pay the specified yearly rental and use the same as a sawmill site.
If, after the letter is read into the lease, it is a lease at all, it must be one for a term of years, namely, until defendant ceases to use the premises for a sawmill site, or it must be a life tenancy or a tenancy at will, or a tenancy from year to year.
On the theory of a tenancy for years, we must observe that  one of. the cardinal principles in the creation of a tenancy for years is that the term must be certain—there must be a certainty as to the commencement and duration of the term. However, that certainty may be fixed by reference *45to the happening of some collateral event capable in itself of certainty at the time of the execution of the lease, for that is certain which can be made certain, but that cannot be said of the purported lease here involved. “So long as you continue to use it for sawmill purposes” leaves the duration of the term in impenetrable obscurity and uncertainty. That is where the parties left it; and that is where we must leave it. Hence it does not create a tenancy for years. (Reed v. Lewis, 74 Ind. 433, 39 Am. Rep. 88; Reeves v. Thompson, 14 Ont. Rep. 499; Gilmore v. Hamilton, 83 Ind. 196; Western Transp. Co. v. Lansing, 49 N. Y. 499; Melhop v. Meinhart, 70 Iowa, 685, 28 N. W. 545; Murray v. Cherrington, 99 Mass. 229; Idalia Realty Co. v. Norman, 232 Mo. 663, 34 L. R. A. (n. s.) 1069, 135 S. W. 47; Underhill on Landlord and Tenant, 260; Tiffany on Landlord and Tenant, 60, 61; 16 R. C. L. 606.)
On the theory of a life tenancy, we are only concerned with  the plaintiff and defendant. If the Lewises were still the owners of the land, we would discuss the theory of a life tenancy from a different angle, and more exhaustively. (See Thompson v. Baxter, 107 Minn. 122, 21 L. R. A. (n. s.) 575, 119 N. W. 797; Underhill on Landlord and Tenant, 373.) If a life tenancy existed in defendant as'against the Lewises, by reading the letter into the lease, it cannot be carried to the plaintiff, and its predecessor, the State Lumber Company, for each was a purchaser of the premises in good faith and without notice, either actual o!r constructive, of the letter. (Sheldon v. Powell, 31 Mont. 249, 254, 107 Am. St. Rep. 429, 78 Pac. 491; Custer Con. Mines Co. v. Helena, 52 Mont. 35, 40, 156 Pac. 1090; sec. 4684, Rev. Codes 1907, now sec. 6935, Rev. Codes 1921; sec. 4685, Rev. Codes 1907, now sec. 6936, Rev. Codes 1921.)
In making this declaration, we are not unmindful of the fact that defendant was in open, notorious and exclusive possession, and that such possession is constructive notice to subsequent purchasers of whatever estate or interest is held by the occupant, equivalent in extent and effect to the notice given *46by the recording of bis title. This rule is negatived in that by personal inquiry of defendant as to the nature and extent of his tenure, plaintiff and its predecessor were, before purchase, advised by him that he was holding over under the lease of July 14, 1904, and paying rent annually. Manifestly his possession, not only as a matter of law, but as a matter of fact, put them on notice, and inquiry was made—the best possible, of the very man in possession and his advice was in no way inconsistent with the public records. In connection with the above rule, that possession is constructive notice, etc., we add that such possession is not notice of facts which reasonable inquiry would not disclose, or of facts which on due inquiry are not in fact disclosed. (Cornell v. Maltby, 165 N. Y. 557, 59 N. E. 291; Bowles v. Belt (Tex. Civ. App.), 159 S. W. 885; First Nat. Bank v. Chafee, 98 Wis. 42, 73 N. W. 318.) Here plaintiff and its predecessor made due and reasonable inquiry, and the fact of the existence of the letter upon which defendant bases his right was not disclosed. The inquiry being made of the defendant himself, they would have the right to presume that he told the truth, and, after consulting the records and finding nothing more than the lease of July 14, 1904, there certainly could be nothing to excite further inquiry, and they would be justified in discontinuing the same and presuming that he was holding over under the lease. A life tenancy does not exist.
The questions of tenancy for a term of years and for life  being disposed of, the remaining questions, to-wit, was it a tenancy at all, and if so, was it at will or from year to year, can be disposed of together. That a tenancy of some kind existed between defendant and the Lewises is manifest by defendant’s occupancy and payment of rent money. That such tenancy found its existence in the lease of July 14, 1904, is admittedly true, for plaintiff contends that defendant is holding over under it, and defendant contends that he is holding under it, as modified by the letter of May 3, 1916. This is not a case where defendant wrongfully entered on the *47lands, nor is it a case where he, in disobedience of the terms of a lease, wrongfully held over. His holding over was at least on the invitation of the owner, and for such holding over the owner accepted rent money. Such invitation was later reduced to writing (letter of May 3, 1916), and, however ineffectual it may be in point of law to create a tenancy for years or for life, yet such holding over and payment of annual rents and acceptance of the same by the owner created a tenancy from year to year. (Idalia Realty Co. v. Norman, supra; Western Transp. Co. v. Lansing, supra; sec. 5230, Rev. Codes 1907, now sec. 7745, Rev. Codes 1921.) The tenancy being from year to year and a proper„ notice of termination thereof having been given defendant, his tenancy terminated January 1, 1919.
Rehearing denied May 1, 1922.
This case having been submitted to the trial court on motions of both plaintiff and defendant for a directed verdict, and that court having erred as a matter of law in sustaining defendant’s motion and entering judgment for him, when it should have sustained plaintiff’s motion and entered judgment for it, we recommend that the judgment be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to set aside the judgment as entered, and to enter a judgment of restitution for p1a.int.ifF
Per Curiam : For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to set aside the judgment as entered and to enter a judgment of restitution for plaintiff.

Beversed.