dissenting:
Contrary to the majority’s focus on the parties’ relationship as business partners,1 resolution of this case depends solely on the proper interpretation of a month-to-month lease agreement for real property, unaffected by other aspects of the parties’ business relationship.
I.
During the one-day bench trial on October 24, 1995, the parties presented evidence of their written agreement, which provided:
AUGER or his designee shall have the right to lease from the Partnership at a reasonable rate ... (ii) the Woodson/Cal-low lots for parking of vehicles until such time as the Partnership shall need the use of same.
No other provision of the partnership agreement is at issue here. The trial court, not surprisingly, found this agreement “sufficiently ambiguous to require the use of parol evidence ... to flesh out what precisely was meant.”2 The court then found, by considering both the written agreement and testimony about the oral negotiations between the parties, that Auger and Tasea had agreed to a month-to-month lease of commercial property for $500 a month. That is what the court found “reasonable rate” under the agreement meant. There was no finding that the parties had agreed it could mean anything else. In short, the trial court concluded that the lease provision of the partnership agreement had created a month-to-month tenancy for $500 per month — period.
The question, then, is how Tasea could lawfully get out of the arrangement either by evicting Auger or by charging him more. Under District of Columbia law, a landlord can hold a tenant liable for an amount greater than the agreed rental for property leased month-to-month only in two ways: (1) the *22landlord may unilaterally terminate the lease by giving a valid thirty-day notice to quit,3 followed by the tenant’s remaining on the property as a hold-over tenant liable for any increased value;4 or (2) the parties can mutually agree to a new lease, accomplishing a novation of the old lease without need for a formal termination procedure. In the first situation, any increase upon expiration of the tenancy must be attributable to a demonstrably greater value of the premises than the previously bargained rent level reflected. See supra note 4. In the second situation, the parties will have bargained for a new tenancy at a higher rent level.5
In deciding whether Tasea should be awarded possession of the property, the trial court expressly found that Tasea’s representatives “have not served the notice to quit, and therefore they have no right to evict Mr. Auger until they do so.” Thus, the question became: could Tasea — faced with Auger still lawfully on the premises — begin to charge a higher rent?
The trial court considered how much money Auger owed under the lease. The court began by ruling that, although Auger had not received a valid notice to quit, Tasea could not increase the rent for the thirty-day period that a valid notice to quit would allow a tenant to remain at the contracted rent.
Mr. Auger has not paid the partnership the $500 a month he agreed to pay in this which I find was a part of the agreement.
And, the $500 a month which runs from August 1st, 1991, I find until December 1, 1993, 28 months for $14,000. I calculated that by the fact that that rental until that date is that Mr. Auger is a month-to-month tenant, and a month-to-month tenant under the law of the District of Columbia is entitled to 30 days notice to leave, and the 30 days has to be at the anniversary of the 30th day of the agreement, and I find that the 30th day would be December 1,1993 because the notice of the increased rent was sent to him on October 8th. So he had through in my judgment, he is entitled to remain at the old rent for a full 30 days more. And, that would expire December 1st.
The court then made a mistake. It ignored the novation/renegotiation requirement for increasing the rent absent a valid notice to quit; the court simply allowed Tasea to increase the rent unilaterally.
At [December 1st], there is no limitation in the partnership agreement about the partners not being able to raise the rent_ I see no reason why any agreement should stand between the partnership’s right to raise the rent to $168.94 a day, which is what they said they were going to do if Mr. Auger remained. I find that this is within the rights of the partnership to do it. This is a commercial lease between sophisticated business-men_ Mr. Auger could easily have avoided paying this rent by moving out. He chose not to, and therefore I find that he is voluntarily remaining on the property in the face of the notice, and is therefore responsible for the rent at $168.94 a day from December 1, 1993 to today, which adds up to a total of $55,243.13, which plus the $14,000 is a grand total of $69,243.38 rent due and owing from Mr. Auger.
There was no finding that the parties mutually had agreed to a particular higher rent, or that Auger had agreed in advance to a partic*23ular rent increase if certain events occurred, such as a valuable zoning change or more lucrative plans for the property. The court nonetheless ruled, as a matter of law, that since the partnership (Tasea) had “said [in an October 8, 1993 letter to Auger] they were going to” raise the rent to $168.94 per day, they had a right to do so simply because “there is no limitation in the partnership agreement about the partners not being able to raise the rent.” The court magically transformed the parties’ relationship as to the parking lot from landlord and tenant to general partner and limited partner, and ruled that Tasea could dictate, unilaterally, what Auger should pay.
II.
We should analyze this trial court ruling in depth, beginning with our standard of review. This court accepts the trial court’s findings of fact unless clearly erroneous or without evidentiary support, but we review the trial court’s legal conclusions de novo. See Bingham v. Goldberg, Marchesano, Kohlman, Inc., 637 A.2d 81, 89 (D.C.1994). We therefore must accept the trial court’s finding that the parties’ oral negotiations created a month-to-month tenancy at the “reasonable rate” of $500 per month unless it is clearly erroneous or without evidentiary support. On the other hand, the question whether a landlord unilaterally may raise the rent under a month-to-month tenancy without terminating the tenancy either through a legally valid, properly served notice to quit, or through a novation as part of a newly negotiated lease, is a question of law subject to review without deference to the trial court’s analysis.
If we proceed from the trial court’s finding that the parties had negotiated a month-to-month lease at $500 per month — a finding that the majority does not challenge and is not clearly erroneous on this record — then there is no basis in the agreement or at law for the court to permit a unilateral rent increase simply because the partnership agreement has “no limitation” against it. There is not a particle of evidence, let alone a trial court finding, that Auger agreed to such a thing. The agreement was for rent at a “reasonable rate.” The court found the parties had agreed that $500 per month was reasonable. Even if Tasea and Auger both had anticipated that the “reasonable rate” for the premises would increase over time, there is no basis of record for inferring, let alone a trial court finding, that the parties had agreed that the time for an increase had come, or that they had put in place some mechanism for determining an increase in the established “reasonable rate” without further negotiations.6
True: Auger owed back rent from the beginning, at $500 per month; he was not a model, not even an honorable, tenant. But, as spelled out earlier, there are two — and only two — lawful ways to impose a rent increase in such a situation, and Tasea did neither. Tasea did not properly terminate Auger’s tenancy, taking steps to evict him and hold him hable, as long as he stayed, for the reasonable (increased) value of the premises as a hold-over tenant. See supra notes 3 & 4. Nor did Tasea negotiate a new rental *24agreement with Auger in lieu of invoking the judicial process.7
This case therefore turns on the proposition that, in the absence of an agreement to the contrary — and despite the majority view, there is no contrary agreement here — a landlord cannot alter the terms of a month-to-month tenancy without first terminating that tenancy by a valid notice to quit.
The statutory scheme makes this clear. D.C.Code § 45-1402 provides:
A tenancy from month-to-month ... may be terminated by a 30 days notice in writing from the landlord to the tenant to quit, or by such notice from the tenant to the landlord of his [or her] intention to quit, said notice to expire, in either case, on the day of the month from which such tenancy commenced to run.[8]
This notice to quit requirement applies to commercial, as well as residential, tenancies. See Ontell v. Capitol Hill E.W. Ltd., 527 A.2d 1292, 1294 (D.C.1987). As the trial court recognized, “service of a valid notice to quit is a condition precedent to the landlord’s suit for possession.” Moody v. Winchester Management Corp., 321 A.2d 562, 563 (D.C.1974). Tasea, moreover, does not dispute the trial court’s ruling that Auger had the legal right to retain possession of the property until Tasea satisfied the legal requirements for obtaining possession.9
Tasea nonetheless contends that “a landlord’s right to raise the rent is not dependent on serving a notice to quit.” Tasea, therefore, takes the paradoxical position that a notice to quit is required to terminate the tenant’s right to possession of property but not required to terminate the other contractual provisions of the lease — including perhaps the most significant provision, the rent. Such a rule of law theoretically would allow a landlord unilaterally to terminate a month-to-month tenancy, without resort to judicial action for summary possession, by announcing a substantially higher rent on a moment’s notice — without giving a valid notice to quit — and charging the tenant who chooses to leave under such circumstances a whopping premium for the period between the announced rent increase and the date the tenant finally manages to leave.
Recognizing this possibility, the trial court did not allow the rent increase to take effect until the period for a valid notice to quit had expired. But that proves the point: the court realized the law protects the tenant for a period of time before the landlord can force a change in the tenancy, and yet the court— acting inconsistently — allowed a lesser quality notice to justify a unilateral rent increase than the notice required to justify an eviction. The trial court thereby permitted the landlord to accomplish a rent increase— meaning a new lease — without the tenant’s consent. If one tries to justify this ruling by saying that the tenant, in holding over, implicitly consented to the new rent, one necessarily would be saying that the landlord can force a month-to-month tenant to accept a new lease without giving the statutory notice required before making the- tenant give up the old one. This is not a bargained novation/new lease; it is a unilateral pressure play not recognized at law.
The proper procedure for altering the terms of a tenancy is reflected in Wilson v. John R. Pinkett Inc., 265 A.2d 778, 779 (D.C.1970). In Wilson, the landlord asked the tenants at sufferance to agree to a written lease, including a provision expressly waiving their right to receive a notice to quit. When the tenants failed to agree, the landlord served them with a notice to quit. The ten*25ants argued on appeal that the landlord unilaterally was attempting, unlawfully, to change the terms of the tenancy. We rejected this contention, concluding that the “landlord’s request that the tenants agree to a written lease was an attempt not to change the terms of the tenancy but to terminate it and substitute a different one for it.” Id. We therefore upheld the landlord’s course of action, ruling that it was proper for the landlord, after serving a valid notice to quit, to evict tenants who refused to enter into a new lease agreement on the landlord’s terms. Although we did not directly address whether service of a valid notice to quit was a prerequisite to forcing a change in the terms of the tenancy, including the rent level, it is clear from the context that we considered such statutory notice essential, absent a bargained amendment of the lease.
This same principle was recognized more recently in Sklar v. Hightower, 342 A.2d 57 (D.C.1975). In that case,
[t]he landlords orally informed the tenant that she must vacate by September 1, a date less than 30 days in the future, unless she agreed to a rent increase. That in effect was an attempted notice to quit by the landlords (with the tenant being given the option of staying and paying a higher rent), which itself did not comply with § 45-902 because it was not written and it did not furnish the full 30 days’ notice.
Id. at 59. The tenant left the premises, despite the inadequate notice to quit, and then the landlords sought an additional month’s rent because the tenant herself had not given the statutory thirty days’ notice. We affirmed the trial court’s ruling that the tenant did not owe the extra rent. We concluded that the landlords’ own conduct pressing for early vacation of the premises amounted to a “waiver of the thirty days’ notice requirement” and thus estopped them from claiming additional rent. Id. It is clear, moreover, from our presentation of the issue in Sklar quoted above that the landlords’ noncomplying notice to quit, if not honored by the tenant, would not have permitted the rent increase the landlords sought.
The trial court’s ruling is fundamentally at odds with the general principles of contract law applicable to lease agreements. See Bown v. Hamilton, 601 A.2d 1074, 1078-79 (D.C.1992) (“ ‘leases of urban dwelling units should be interpreted and construed like any other contract’”) (quoting Javins v. First Nat’l Realty Corp., 138 U.S.App. D.C. 369, 373, 428 F.2d 1071, 1075 (1970)). The trial court found that Auger and Tasea had entered into a month-to-month lease at $500 per month. “The parties to a contract are free to modify that contract by mutual consent.” Hershon v. Hellman Co., 565 A.2d 282, 283 (D.C.1989). No evidence was presented, however, that there was mutual consent to a higher rent rate here. To the contrary, Auger filed suit against Tasea approximately one month after receiving Ta-sea’s rent demand.
Tasea’s unilateral modification argument also fails because modification of a contract must be supported by consideration. See Hershon, 565 A.2d at 283 (“In order to be valid, however, the modification must possess the same elements of consideration as necessary for normal contract formation.”). No consideration supported Tasea’s demand to increase the rent from $500 per month to $168.94 per day.
III.
Tasea wanted Auger either off the property or on the property at a rent higher than $500 a month. The law therefore obliged Tasea (1) to evict Auger by properly serving a valid notice to quit, or (2) to keep him there after terminating the existing tenancy with a valid notice to quit, exposing Auger to liability as a holdover tenant after the notice period expired, or (3) to keep him there at a mutually agreed higher rent. None of these three possibilities happened. Tasea’s unilateral effort to impose new lease terms should fail. I would reverse and remand for entry of judgment for arrearages in the amount of $500 per month.
Respectfully, therefore, I dissent.
. Although acknowledging that this case concerns "the leasing of space,” i.e., a lease agreement, the majority concludes that "the thrust of this dispute is the rental of parking space under the terms of a partnership agreement.” Ante at 21.
. It is unclear how or why the majority is able to conclude that the contract is “a broad but unambiguous agreement.” Ante at 21.
. See D.C.Code § 45-1402 (1990 Repl.).
. See Novak v. Cox, 538 A.2d 747, 751 (D.C.1988) (hold-over "tenant could not remain on premises without paying its ‘fair use and occupancy value' ”); Habib v. Thurston, 517 A.2d 1, 18 (D.C.1985) (hold-over tenant liable for damages for continued use and occupancy of premises); Fisher v. Parkwood, Inc., 213 A.2d 757, 759 (D.C.1965) ("receipt of rent after the lease was can-celled was merely for use and occupancy during the hold-over period”); see also Sanchez v. Eleven Fourteen Inc., 623 A.2d 1179, 1181 (D.C.1993) ("A holdover tenant is bound by the terms and conditions of the original lease and is liable to the landlord at least for rent or its equivalent.”).
.If a landlord serves on the tenant a valid notice to quit and says, at the same time, that as of the termination date the rent will increase 100-fold if the tenant holds over, the trier of fact will confront the question whether, under all the circumstances, the tenant can be held to have agreed to a new, higher-rent tenancy if the tenant stays on the property or will be held responsible, instead, for damages based on fair use and occupancy value.
. Tasea argues that the lease agreement was for a "reasonable rate” and that the reasonable rate increased dramatically when Tasea obtained a license to use the lots commercially. Tasea’s argument, however, directly contradicts the trial court’s factual finding, supported by the evidence, that the parties had agreed the reasonable rate Auger would pay was $500 per month. No mechanism for changing that amount was in evidence.
A contract will be unenforceable if its terms are so uncertain that a court cannot accurately assess damages. Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 33 cmt. b (1981). In this case, it is doubtful, as a matter of law, that the court could have enforced a "contract” in Tasea's favor had the parties merely agreed to a "reasonable rate” of rent without indicating what that meant or how it might be ascertained from time to time. Instead, the proper measure of damages would have been non-contractual: the reasonable value of Auger’s use and enjoyment of the premises. See William J. Davis, Inc. v. Slade, 271 A.2d 412, 416 (D.C.1970) (landlord entitled to reasonable value of premises when court determines lease is void because of housing code violations). Here, the trial court made no finding that the $500 per month agreement had lawfully been terminated, let alone a finding that the reasonable value of the premises had increased in a particular amount.
. Of course, Tasea, as landlord, could properly terminate the existing tenancy and use the expired notice to quit — with the accompanying threat of eviction — as leverage to negotiate a new lease with a higher rent. See Wilson v. John R. Pinkett, Inc., 265 A.2d 778, 779 (D.C.1970).
8. A valid notice to quit must be (1) personally served on the tenant, or (2) personally served on a person over the age of sixteen upon the premises, or (3) posted in a conspicuous place on the premises and "mailed first class U.S. mail, postage prepaid to the premises within 3 calendar days of the date of posting.” D.C.Code § 45-1406; see Jones v. Brawner Co., 435 A.2d 54, 56 (D.C.1981).
.Auger could have brought a suit for wrongful eviction if Tasea had resorted to self-help to bar him from using the property. See Mendes v. Johnson, 389 A.2d 781, 787 (D.C.1978) (en banc) (establishing tort of wrongful eviction).