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What is a periodic tenancy and how does it terminate?

Bar Exam Prep Real Property Landlord-Tenant What is a periodic tenancy and how does it terminate?
😀 Real Property • Landlord-Tenant PROP#062

Legal Definition

A periodic tenancy is one that continues for successive periods, and may be created by express agreement, implication, or operation of law (where the tenant holds over). It is automatically renewed until a party provides proper notice of termination, typically one full period in advance and timed to terminate at the end of a period. However, a year-to-year lease requires 6 months notice.

Plain English Explanation

If you've ever rented an apartment or housing, you've likely had a periodic tenancy. In fact, many apartments are leased on a "month to month", periodic basis that is open-ended with no specific termination date. There are a few ways to create a periodic tenancy:

(1) An express agreement, like a formal, written lease that identifies the tenancy as some "period to period" (generally either month-to-month or year-to-year, but any period will suffice, such as "quarter to quarter").
(2) Implication, like if you were to allow a friend to live with you for an extended period of time, it may become implied that they are a month to month tenant.
(3) Via operation of law. For example, imagine if Amy had a tenancy for years that was set to expire on May 1st. On May 1st, Amy doesn't move out. Instead, Amy sends her landlord a check for another month of rent. If the landlord cashes the check, it will be accepting the fact that Amy wants to stay and, by default, Amy will now have a periodic tenancy (likely month to month).

Note that exams love to test the notice period for terminating a periodic tenancy. Generally speaking, notice is equal to one full period in advance. In other words, a month-to-month tenancy requires 1 month notice. A week-to-week tenancy requires 1 week notice. The only type of periodic tenancy that doesn't follow this rule is one that is year-to-year, which generally requires 6 months notice to terminate.

Hypothetical

Hypo 1: Amy rented an apartment from Bob for $1,500 per month. Amy signs a 6 month lease that explicitly states she must move out by the end of 6 months. Result: Amy has a tenancy for years

Hypo 2: Amy rented an apartment from Bob for $1,500 per month. Amy signs a 6 month lease that allows her to stay on as a month-to-month tenant. Result: Amy has a tenancy for years that will turn into a periodic tenancy if she chooses to stay beyond 6 months.

Hypo 3: Same facts as Hypo 2, except after 7.5 months Amy decides she no longer wants to live there and tells Bob she wants to immediately terminate her lease. Result: Amy has a periodic tenancy and is month to month. Generally, periodic tenancies require 1 period of notice to terminate. Here, that period would be 1 month. In other words, Amy must give Bob 30 days of notice that she intends to terminate her lease.

Visual Aids

What is a periodic tenancy and how does it terminate?

Related Concepts

How do lease covenants affect a landlord-tenant relationship where one party breaches? How may a landlord waive a covenant prohibiting assignment? If a leasehold is condemned or taken via eminent domain, what is the effect on a tenant's duty to pay rent? If an assignment occurs, what is the relationship between the assignee and the landlord? If a tenant breaches one or more of their duties, what remedies are available to the landlord? If a tenant violates a covenant against assignment or sublease, what remedies are available to the landlord? In a landlord-tenant relationship, who has a duty of restoration when the premises being leased are destroyed due to no fault of either party? In assessing a landlord's tort liability, what six duties does a landlord have to make the premises safe? In assessing a landlord-tenant issue, what is an assignment? In assessing a landlord-tenant relationship, what are the landlord's duties? In assessing a landlord-tenant relationship, what are the tenant's duties? In assessing a landlord-tenant relationship, what is the result of a tenant's covenant to repair? What are the exceptions to the hold-over doctrine? What constitutes a constructive eviction? What constitutes an actual eviction? What constitutes a partial eviction? What is a landlord's duty to deliver possession? What is a landlord's duty to provide quiet enjoyment? What is a landlord's duty to repair? What is a leasehold estate? What is a retaliatory eviction? What is a sublease? What is a tenancy at sufferance and how does it terminate? What is a tenancy at will and how does it terminate? What is a tenancy for years and how does it terminate? What is a tenant's duty to not use the premises for an illegal purpose? What is a tenant's duty to pay rent, and how does it affect their security deposit? What is a tenant's duty to repair? What is the hold-over doctrine? What is the implied warranty of habitability, and what remedies are available to the tenant if breached? When does a covenant run with the land? When does a tenant cause ameliorative waste? When does a tenant cause permissive waste? When does a tenant cause voluntary waste?
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