Opinion by
John D. Carroll — Commissioner,Affirming.
In 1901 title appellees sold and conveyed to appellant by deed duly acknowledged all the timber and trees on a tract of land described in the conveyance— the deed providing that the grantee sbonld have all tbe rights of way and privileges over and upon the land usually extended to lumbermen including the right to erect tramways, cabins, buildings, and machinery necessary for the manufacture and removal of timber; and provided that the timber was to be removed within three years form May 1, 1901, and that all refuse, timber, barns, houses, cabins, sheds, erected on the premises by the second party (appellant) and remaining in the premises should revert and become the property of the present owners (appellees). On the 16th day of May, 1904, appellees procured a warrant of forcible detainer against the appellant, to recover the possession of the leased premises,-and the only question to be determined on this appeal is whether or not a warrant of forcible detainer is the proper remedy in á case like this. Code, § 452, defies a forcible entry as “the refusal of a tenant to *554give possession to his landlord after.the expiration of his term”; and it has been held that to maintain the writ of forcible detainer the relationship of landlord and tenant must exist, and that the reservation of rent in some form, and allegiance to the title are the distinguishing characteristics of a contract by which the relation of landlord and tenant exist. Goldsberry v. Bishop, 2, Duv. 143; Cuyler v. Estis, 61 S. W., 673, 23 Ky. Law Rep. 1063.
The first question to be determined is, did the relation of landlord and tenant exist in any degree between these parties by virtue of the contract or conveyance referred to. A tenant has been defined to be one who occupies the lands or premises of another in subordination to that other’s title, and with his assent express of implied. Wood on Landlord & Tenant, § 1, Taylor on Landlord & Tenant, § 14. No particular form of words is necessary to create the relation, nor does the length of the term or the amount of the compensation paid affect the question. Under the contract in this case, the appellant had the right to occupy the land for three years in consideration of a stipulated sum and the privilege of erecting buildings, putting machinery on the land, and making roads and tramways to enable him to enjoy the premises for the purpose for which they were granted. He was not given the right to use the land except in the manner pointed out in the contract, nor is the use of the soil essential to create the relation of landlord and tenant. If a. tenant has the right to enter upon the premises granted for a specified purpose, and to this extent may enjoy them, and he does this in subordination to the title of the owner and with his assent, and, as a consideration, pays money or other thing of value, or even without the payment of any consideration, the relation of landlord and tenant is created. The reservation of rent is not essential to create the relation,, although it is a usual incident of tenancy.
*555It is insisted that this contract was a license, and not a lease, and it is often difficult to determine the difference between the two; but we think the difficulty in this case is removed by the terms of the contract itself. A license is defined to be: “An authority to do some act or a series of acts on the land of another without passing an estate in the land. It amounts to noth-' ing more than an excuse for the act which would otherwise be a trespass. Being a personal privilege, it can be enjoyed only by the licensee. It is not assignable, so that an undertenant can claim the benefit of the license to the licensee.” Taylor on Landlord & Tenant, § 237; Wood on Landlord & Tenant, § 227; 18 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 1127; Haywood v. Fulmer (Ind. Sup.) 32 N. E. 574, 18 L. R. A. 491. Under the conveyance here involved, the grantee had the right to sell, convey, or assign the rights and privileges granted by the contract, and the right to the use for the purposes mentioned of all the land described therein, and at the expiration of the term was to surrender the premises; therefore the contract had all the elements of a lease, and the grantee was in effect a tenant of the grantor, and consequently upon the termination of the lease could be ejected by writ of forcible detainer.
The Judgment of the lower court is affirmed.