The plaintiff, Smeltzer and wife, commenced this action to recover from the defendants, Wehb and wife, the possession of a farm in Grant ■county which the defendants theretofore held' under a lease from the grantors of the plaintiffs. The' action was commenced and prosecuted under our unlawful detainer statute. Trial in the superior court for Grant county sitting with a jury resulted in verdict and judgment in favor of the plaintiffs, from which the defendants have appealed.
The farm in question, consisting of some six hundred acres of land with a dwelling and other buildings fhereon, was, on January 12, 1914, leased by the then. *569owners, D. L. Woods and wife, for a term which, by the express terms of the lease, expired November 1,. 1915. Some two months prior to the date of the expiration of the specified term, Woods and wife sold and conveyed the farm to respondents, who thereupon, as claimed by them, demanded of appellants that they surrender possession of the farm at the expiration of the specified term. This was not a formal written notice to quit such as is required by statute to be served upon a tenant looking to the termination of a lease or tenancy, but, as claimed by respondents, was a sufficient demand and notice to prevent appellants acquiring the right to occupy the farm for another year under the terms of the lease should they remain upon the farm sixty days after the expiration of the term, under Rem. Code, § 813, which reads:
“In all cases of tenancy upon agricultural lands, where the tenant has held over and retained possession for more than sixty days after the expiration of his term, without any demand or notice to quit by his landlord or the successor in estate of his landlord, if any there shall be, he shall be deemed to be holding by permission of his landlord or the successor in estate of his landlord, if any there be, and shall be entitled to hold under the terms of the lease for another full year, and shall not be guilty of an unlawful detainer during said year, and such holding over for the period aforesaid shall be taken and construed as a consent on the part of a tenant to hold for another year. ’ ’
The only evidence of this demand and notice introduced upon the trial was oral testimony of conversation had between Smeltzer and Webb and of work done by Smeltzer and his three sons upon the farm which amounted to taking possession of a large part of the land in October and November, 1915, by consent of appellants, from which testimony the jury found in effect that the demand and notice was made and given *570as claimed by respondents. Appellants, however, continued to occupy the dwelling and use a portion of the land .for more than sixty days after the expiration of the specified term of the lease, and thereafter respondents commenced this action to recover possession of the whole of the premises. .
The principal contention here made in appellants’ behalf is that the trial court erred in admitting testimony of the maldng of the oral demand for possession of the farm shortly prior to the expiration of the specified term of the lease. The argument is, in substance, that an oral demand or notice in such cases does not satisfy the requirements of § 813 above quoted, but that such demand and notice must be in writing, attended by all the formalities as to contents and service as notices to quit looking to the termination of tenancies which may become forfeited or which do not have a specified fixed ending. It seems to us this contention is effectually answered by our decision in Mounts v. Goranson, 29 Wash. 261, 69 Pac. 740. In that case, it is true, the notice was in writing, but it was not pretended that it was such formal notice, either as to contents or service, as is required in other unlawful detainer cases. That action, like this, was commenced after the tenant had retained possession more than sixty days following the termination of the lease term, that is, more than sixty days following the termination of the term as it had been extended from year to year by consent, the final termination date being May 6,1897. After quoting the section of our statute defining unlawful detainer and §§ 812, 813, Rem. Code, which sections were then §§ 5527 and 5528, Bal. Code, Judge Mount, speaking for the court, said:
“It is clear from the first section quoted that the defendants were unlawful detainers for the period of sixty days after May 6, 1897, and no notice or demand *571to quit was necessary. Under the next section quoted, when defendants held for more than sixty days without demand or notice to quit, they were then entitled to hold for another year. We are of the opinion that this same condition arose at the expiration of the next year. Defendants were again unlawful detainers for sixty days, and so for each year they were permitted to occupy the premises under the lease; and an oral or written demand for the premises within sixty days after the expiration of any year, or any notice prior to the end of the year that the lease would he terminated, was sufficient to authorize the bringing of the action. The notice required by the statute to he served, wherein the time and manner of service must he stated in the complaint, as was held by this court in Lowman v. West, 8 Wash. 355 (36 Pac. 258), is a notice which terminates the lease before the limitation of time on account of some condition broken; hut such is not the case here.”
This is not a case of giving a statutory notice to quit looking to the termination of a tenancy, hut it is a case of preventing the commencement of a new tenancy, or rather of preventing the renewal by consent of a tenancy which, by express terms of the contract creating* it, expired on a specified date. We conclude that the trial court did not err in admitting testimony of the making of the oral demand for possession by respondents. Some other contentions are made in appellants' behalf, hut we think they are so clearly untenable as to not call for discussion here.
The judgment is affirmed.
Ellis, O. J., Fullerton, Webster, and Main, JJ., concur.