Opinion
June 8, 1964.
PRESENT: Condon, C.J., Roberts, Powers and Joslin, JJ.
1. EXCEPTIONS. Exceptions Not Briefed. Court granted leave to submit case on briefs without oral argument. Exceptions not briefed were deemed waived.
2. TRIAL. Instructions to Jury.
Held, that special finding by jury that tenancy was from month to month rendered instruction harmless even if erroneous.
TRESPASS AND EJECTMENT action heard by supreme court on exception by defendant to instruction to jury by Carrellas, J., of superior court. Case submitted on briefs. Other exceptions not briefed deemed to be waived. All exceptions overruled, and case remitted to superior court for entry of judgment on the verdict.
Orme, Sullivan Pederzani, Leo J. Sullivan, for plaintiff.
J. Frederick Murphy, for defendant.
This action of trespass and ejectment was tried before a justice of the superior court sitting with a jury and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. The case is here on the defendant's exceptions to portions of the charge given by the trial justice to the jury, to his refusal to give to the jury certain requested instructions, and to his denial of a motion for a new trial. Since only his exception to one portion of the charge as given was briefed by the defendant, his other exceptions are deemed to have been waived. At the request of the parties we granted leave to submit the case on briefs without oral argument.
It appears that defendant was a tenant under an oral lease of certain premises in which plaintiff had a life estate. The testimony as to the nature of that tenancy is in conflict. For plaintiff it is that defendant was a month-to-month tenant; for defendant, that he held an oral lease for the duration of plaintiff's life estate. The trial justice upon plaintiff's request directed the jury to return special findings on the nature of the tenancy and the jury found that defendant held as a tenant from month to month.
The jury were instructed in pertinent part that if they found that the term of the lease was measured by plaintiff's lifetime, then the agreement of lease standing by itself would be void because not in writing as required by law and that in such event they could find for plaintiff only if there had been a partial performance. It is the exception to that instruction which defendant presses contending that a lessor may be charged on an oral lease for the lifetime of a lessor and that such a lease not necessarily being for a longer period than one year is not within the statute of frauds.
Assuming without deciding that there is merit in that contention, defendant was not injured thereby since the jury by their special finding that defendant held as a month-to-month tenant were precluded from reaching the question of whether an oral lease for the lifetime of another had been partially performed so as to remove it from the statute of frauds. It follows that the instruction excepted to, even if erroneous, resulted in no harm to defendant. Moore v. Waterbury Tool Co., 124 Conn. 201, 215; Wolfson v. Baltimore Bank, Mo. App., 157 S.W.2d 560, 567. See Lanni v. United Wire Supply Corp., 87 R.I. 121, 124, Henderson v. Dimond, 43 R.I. 60, 64, and Oliver v. Pettaconsett Construction Co., 36 R.I. 477, 486.
All of the defendant's exceptions are overruled, and the case is remitted to the superior court for entry of judgment on the verdict.