The plaintiff's occupancy was a tenancy at will, no different contract being shown. G. L., c. 250, s. 5. The rent was due and in arrear October 11, 1879, and no point is made that it was not demanded before service of the notice. Seven days' notice was therefore sufficient to terminate the tenancy, and after the time fixed in the notice the plaintiff was a trespasser. His goods were damage feasant, and the defendant had a right to enter and remove them to a convenient distance, without breach of the peace, doing them no unnecessary damage. Whitney v. Swett, 22 N.H. 10, 13. A tenant who holds over after the determination of his tenancy, being a trespasser, or at most a mere tenant at sufferance, cannot maintain trespass qu. cl. against his landlord who enters and dispossesses him. After the determination of his tenancy, he has no legal right of possession on which to found his action. This will be apparent from an examination of the pleadings, when the landlord pleads liberum tenementum. The tenant must then reply a tenancy under the defendant, or traverse the plea, neither of which can he do, or state a title superior to the defendant's. Nor can he reply de injuria alone, except when the defence set up is matter of excuse instead of justification. Sterling v. Warden, 51 N.H. 217, 232, and cases cited; State v. Morgan, 59 N.H. 322, 325; — see, also, Hyatt v. Wood, 4 Johns. 150, 159; McDougall v. Sitcher, 1 Johns. 44; Sampson v. Henry, 13 Pick. 36; Meader v. Stone, 7 Met. 147; Taylor L. T., s. 532; Taunton v. Costar, 7 T. R. 431; Miner v. Stevens, 1 Cush. 485: Pratt v. Farrar, 10 Allen 521.
The statute provides that the lessor may terminate the tenancy by giving to the tenant a notice in writing. The notice is not a process issuing out of court directed to an officer and to be served by him. Service may be made by any one whom the lessor may authorize, and may be shown by any one who has knowledge of the fact. 2 Gr. Ev., s. 322. The evidence of the person making the service, given in court in a suit between the parties, with an opportunity to the tenant for cross-examination, is competent evidence to prove the fact of service. Whether an ex parte affidavit *Page 91 on a copy of the notice would be competent evidence, we have no occasion to inquire. It might appear, if the affiant were produced in court and cross-examined, that the service was defective.
Exceptions overruled.
All concurred.