—The question of law presented for our determination, is whether a tenant, who was in under a verbal agreement or lease, at an annual rent of $300, payable quarterly, on fixed days, and who had occupied the premises for ten years under this agreement, and had paid the rent quarterly as agreed, but was dispossessed by his landlord’s sale and conveyance of the property, without his knowledge or assent, after the payment for the quarter ending in June and before the termination of the quarter ending in September, is liable in indebitatus assumpsit for the occupation after the commencement of the last quarter, up to the time when the landlord terminated the tenancy by his own voluntary act. Can the rent agreed upon'be apportioned, under these circumstances ?
It was determined in Glien’s case, in early times, 10 Coke, 127, that, where a term expires before the day on which rent is payable, whether by the eviction of the tenant from the land, or because the lease determines before the legal time of payment, no rent shall be paid, for there shall never be an apportionment in respect of part of the time.
This rule has been often recognized. Wood v. Partridge, 11 Mass., 488; Burden v. Thayer, 3 Met., 76.
This question was fully considered in the case of Nicholson v. Munnigle, 6 Allen, 215. It was there held, that *359under a written lease, for years, with rent payable quarterly, but containing no provision for an apportionment, no rent could be recovered in an action upon the lease, for the portion of the quarter during which the premises were occupied,— the owner having sold and conveyed them, and thus terminated the lease, after the last payment of a quarter’s rent and before the thep next quarter day. It was also held, — that no action for use and occupation during that time, could bo maintained, because, where there Avas an express contract, a party could not, after failing to establish any right under that, abandon it and recover under a count for use and occupation. If he could, he would ha\re all the advantage Avhich he forfeited by his act.
We refer to this case for the reasons on Avhich the decision rests, Avithout repeating them hero.
The l’enmining question, viz., — whether, where the lease and contract is verbal, and the tenancy is one at will, a different rule Avould apply, was afterwards considered by the same Court, in the case of Fuller v. Swett, reported in a note to the above case, in the 6th of Allen. That was a case, in all its leading features, like the one at bar. The Court held that there was no distinction between this case and the former one, and held that the plaintiff could not recover for the time after the last quarter day.
We concur in this vierv. It is true that, by the statute, a verbal lease can have no greater force aud effect than a lease at Avill, and may bo terminated by a sale. But where there is a contract, by Avhich one party agi-ees that the other shall occupy, by paying a yearly rent, quarterly on fixed days, and this condition is fulfilled strictly, it would seem just that the law should hold that, if the lessor chooses to terminate the tenancy by a sale, without notice between the quarter days, he should not recover for any part of the time after the last quarter day. The fair inference is that it is a contract for a quarter’s occupancy by the tenant, and that it is an entire contract for that entire time, aud if there is a payment at the quarter day, and a continued possession *360afterwards, — that possession must be regarded as for the whole ensuing quarter. The question here is not as to the • legal right of terminating the lease by sale or otherwise, but whether, having terminated it voluntarily in the middle of a quarter, which, under the agreement, the tenant had a right to occupy, there can be an apportionment of the time in favor of the landlord ? It is clear that he could not recover rent for less than a quarter, if he, at any time during occupancy, had sued the tenant for use for a month after a regular quarter day, on which a quarter’s rent had been paid. Exceptions sustained.
Appleton, C. J., Dickerson, Barrows and Daneorth, JJ., concurred.