This is an action to recover rent for use and occupation of certain real estate which began under a lease and continued by virtue of a provision in the lease for option of renewing the same for a term of three years from the expiration of the lease term. The occupancy and the non-payment of the rental sued for are both admitted by the defendant, but he claims that he should be allowed an offset for outside repairs done by him in accordance with an oral agreement which he says was entered into between himself and the plaintiff.
The lease under which this tenancy began was executed December 30, 1908. The defendant had occupied the same premises under prior leases, and he says that in November or December prior to the execution of the last lease he talked with plaintiff regarding a new lease, and that he said to her, “We have always agreed upon this point, that you pay for the work done on the outside, and I pay for the work done on the inside, and talcing care of the grounds. Is there any reason why we should not renew the lease?” To this he says the plaintiff replied “No, and I will have Mr. D — attend to it and forward me the lease.” On the other hand the plaintiff deposes, “I have never given any authority to Mr. Middleton or his representatives during this 1908 lease to make any repairs although I paid several small bills which Mr. Middleton sent me for repairs.”
Subject to objection on the part of the plaintiff the defendant was allowed to testify as above under the claim that the oral agreement thus made was “a distinct, collateral agreement not inconsistent with the terms of the written stipulations of the parties and constituting in part the consideration of the written agreement.” This claim the defendant stoutly maintains, and urges that his authority for it *435is to be found in Neal v. Flint, 88 Maine, 72, wherein our Court has said; “The general rule is that parol evidence cannot be received to contradict or vary the terms of a written contract, and that when an agreement is reduced to writing it must be' considered as expressing the ultimate intention of the parties to it, and therefore, in the absence of fraud, parol evidence is not admitted to alter or modify the terms or legal effect of it. The parties having reduced their contract to writing, their rights must be governed by and depend upon its terms as therein expressed, irrespective of parol evidence of what was intended, or what took place previous to or at the time of making the contract. But there are exceptions to this general rule which permit .parol evidence of engagements collateral to, or independent of, the provisions expressed in the written agreement and not within its terms, although made at the same time and affecting the rights of the parties in relation to the subject matter of the writing. In such it is deemed only partially reduced to writing, and the collateral undertaking or stipulation exists in parol.”
The defendant urges that his claim falls within the rule of such exceptions.
It may be proper to call attention to the fact that the opinion in Neal v. Flint, supra, was given by a divided Court. It may also be proper to add that in Burnham v. Austin, 105 Maine, 196, our Court has said, “we are not inclined to extend the doctrine of independent, collateral agreements, as expressed in Neal v. Flint, 88 Maine, 72, beyond its legitimate sphere.”
While not repudiating this doctrine as to independent, collateral agreements, we are of opinion that the defendant’s claim is not safely within that doctrine.
The lease contains the stipulation that “the lessor agrees hereby that the lessee shall have the option of renewing this lease for a term of three years from the expiration of the term hereby granted upon the same terms and conditions as contained herein.” While the lease of 1908, the one in question, was not renewed in writing, at its expiration, yet the lessee continued to occupy after its expiration in the same way as before, and under this subsequent occupancy the rental accrued for which this suit is brought. When a tenant remains after the termination of the lease his so remaining is an election to continue the tenancy, Holley v. Young, 66 Maine, 520, and since the lease in this case stipulates that the renewal of the *436term is to be “upon the same terms and conditions” as those contained in the lease, it follows that the lease also prescribes the ‘ ‘terms and conditions” of the subsequent occupancy.
The lease expressly provides that the lessee shall deliver the premises to the lessor, at the end of the term, ‘ ‘in as good order and condition (reasonable use and wearing thereof, or inevitable accident excepted) as the same arc, or may be put into by the said lessor.” Such a contract as the defendant claims cannot be said to be collateral to or independent of the lease, which contains the express provision just quoted from the lease, much less can it be said to be0“not in conflict with the written agreement.” It is.to be noted also that the lease carefully provides for repairs in case of partial or total loss of the property by fire. This is strong evidence to disprove the doctrine that the ‘ ‘original contract was verbal and entire and a part only of it was reduced to writing,” Neal v. Flint, supra. Could it be safely assumed that when parties so carefully provided for certain important elements of the contract they omitted the equally important element now claimed by the defendant.. To support such a claim as that made by the defendant the evidence should be of sufficient weight to produce a strong impression of its verity, to say the least.
It. is the opinion of the Court that the verdict for the plaintiff was properly ordered.
Exceptions overruled.