agreement in 1895 between the holders for the time being to adopt the fence as a working boundary and make it rabbit-proof, the arrangement depended wholly on implication from the conduct of the parties and the nature of the subject matter.
In a suit by the other owner for a declaration that he was entitled to the exclusive occupation of the land on his side of the fence, either during the life of the fence or under a tenancy from year to year terminable in the ordinary way by six months' notice expiring at the end of a year, and for an injunction and damages
Held, on the evidence, per totam curiam, that there was an implied agree. ment that each party should have exclusive occupation of the land and water lying on his side of the fence, SO long as the parties or their successors should be in occupation of the land, under whatever title, unless the agreement should be sooner terminated by reasonable notice; and that the occupation by each party of land belonging to the other under such an agreement constituted a tenancy at will.
Held further, per Griffith C.J., Barton and O'Connor JJ. (Isaacs J. dissent- ing), that the tenancy, although a tenancy at will, could not be determined by either party except in accordance with the agreement, i.e., by reasonable notice; that the action of removing the fence under the circumstances was not intended to be and could not be regarded as a notice of intention to deter- mine the agreement that, even if it could be so regarded, it was not a reason able notice and that consequently the agreement and the tenancy were still subsisting and the plaintiff was entitled to an injunction and an inquiry as to damages as for trespass.
Per Isaacs J. -The tenancy, being at will, was necessarily terminable instanter at the will of either party the effect of the implied agreement not to terminate it without giving reasonable notice was not to preserve the tenancy after the determination of the will, but to render the party who determined it without such notice liable for damages for a breach of the agreement. The act of the lessor, whatever his intention may have been, was one for which he would otherwise have been liable for trespass at the suit of the tenant, and, therefore, ip80 facto determined the tenancy. In any view the defendants by their pleadings showed their intention to determine the arrangement as to the particular piece of land and water in question. There was, therefore, no ground for an injunction but only for an inquiry as to damages for breach of agreement.
Per Griffith -Even if there was no tenancy known to the law, there was an agreement for a valuable continuing consideration in the nature of rent, of which a Court of Equity would grant specific performance.
Semble, per Griffith C.J.-A stipulation that a tenancy may be determined by either party at any time by reasonable notice is not inconsistent with a tenancy from year to year, the rule that such a tenancy is only terminable by a half-year's notice terminating at the end of a year being not a rule of law but only a rebuttable presumption.