Online Encyclopedia

LODGER AND LODGINGS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 861 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
Spread the word: del.icio.us del.icio.us it!

LODGER AND LODGINGS  . The

See also:
term " lodger " (Fr. loggr, to lodge) is used in
See also:
English law in several slightly different senses . It is applied (i.) most frequently and properly to a person who takes furnished rooms in a house, the landlord also residing on the premises, and supplying him with attendance; (ii.) sometimes to a person, who takes unfurnished rooms in a house finding his own attendance; (iii.) to a boarder in a boarding-house (q.v.) . It is with (i.) and (ii.) alone that this article is concerned . Where furnished apartments are let for immediate use, the law implies an undertaking on the
See also:
part of the landlord that they are
See also:
fit for habitation, and, if this condition is broken, the tenant may refuse to occupy the premises or to pay any
See also:
rent . But there is no implied contract that the apartments shall continue fit for habitation; and the
See also:
rule has no application in the case of unfurnished lodgings . In the absence of express agreement to the contrary, a lodger has a right to the use of everything necessary to the enjoyment of the premises, such as the door bell and knocker and the skylight of a
See also:
staircase . Whether the rent of apartments can be distrained for by the immediate landlord where he resides on the premises and supplies attendance is a question the answer to which is involved in some uncertainty . The
See also:
weight of authority seems to support the negative view (see Foa, Landlord and Tenant, 3rd ed. p . 434) . To make good a right to distrain it is necessary .to show that the terms of the letting create a tenancy or exclusive occupation and not a mere licence . Where the owner, although residing on the premises, does not supply attendance, the question depends on whether there is a real tenancy, giving the lodger an exclusive right of occupation as against the owner .

The

ordinary test is whether the lodger has the control of the
See also:
outer door . But the whole circumstances of each case have to be taken account of . A lodger is rateable to the poor-
See also:
rate where he is in exclusive occupation of the apartments let to him, and the landlord does not retain the control and dominion of the whole structure . As to
See also:
distress on a lodger's goods for rent due by an immediate to a
See also:
superior landlord, see RENT . As to the termination of short tenancies, as of apartments, see LANDLORD AND TENANT . The landlord has no
See also:
lien on the goods of the lodger for rent or charges . Over-crowding lodging-houses may be dealt with as a nuisance under the Public
See also:
Health Acts 1875 and 1891 and the
See also:
Housing of the Working Classes Acts . As to the lodger franchise, see
See also:
REGISTRATION OF VOTERS . It has been held in England that keepers of lodging-houses do not come within the category of those persons (see CARRIER; INNKEEPER) who hold themselves out to the public generally as trustworthy in certain employments; but that they are under an
See also:
obligation to take reasonable care for the safety of their lodgers' goods; see
See also:
Scarborough v . Cosgrove, 1905, 2 K.B . 8o5 . As to Scots Law see Bell's Prin. s .

236 (4) . In the

See also:
United States, the English
See also:
doctrine of an implied
See also:
warranty of fitness for habitation on a letting of furnished apartments has only met with partial acceptance; it was repudiated , e.g. in the
See also:
District of
See also:
Columbia, but has been accepted in Massachusetts . In the French Code
See also:
Civil, there are some
See also:
special rules with regard to furnished apartments . The letting is reputed to be made for a
See also:
year, a month or a day, according as the rent is so much per year, per month or per day; if that test is inapplicable, the letting is deemed to be made according to the custom of the pace (
See also:
art . 1758) . There are similar provisions in the Civil Codes of Belgium (art . 1758), Holland (art . 1622) and Spain (Civil Code, art . 1581) . See also the articles, BOARDING House, and FLAT; and the bibliographies to FLAT and LANDLORD AND TENANT . (A . W .

End of Article: LODGER AND LODGINGS
[back]
THOMAS LODGE (c. 1558–1625)
[next]
LODI

Additional information and Comments

There are no comments yet for this article.
» Add information or comments to this article.
Please link directly to this article:
Highlight the code below, right click and select "copy." Paste it into a website, email, or other HTML document.