We do not think so. Prior to the revision of 1841, we had no statute on the subject of determining tenancies at will. The common law rules were in force. In R. S., 1841, chap. 95, § 19, it was provided that “ all tenancies at will may be determined by either party by three months’ notice in writing for that purpose, given to the other party.” This was omitted in the revision of 1857. Revised Statutes, 1857, chap. 94, § 2, was held in Withers v. Larrabee, 48 Maine, 570, (1861), to be a re-enactment of the statute of 1849, c. 98, which provided for the maintenance of the process of forcible entry and detainer, although the relation of landlord and tenant did not exist between the parties ; and of the statute of 1853, c. 39, § 1, which related to the termination of a tenancy at will on the part of the landlord. “ These acts .... have relation to the process of forcible entry and detainer alone, and have nothing to do with the determination of tenancies at will by either party upon notice in writing .... consequently tenancies at will are now as they were before the revision of 1841.” Chapter 98 of the laws of 1862 was the counterpart of the statute of 1853, supra, and gave the tenant the right to terminate the tenancy by giving notice in writing. It, like the former statute, related only to the process of forcible entry and detainer. Chapter 199 of the laws of 1863, therefore, restored § 19 of chap. 95, R. S., 1841, and added the words “and not otherwise except by mutual consent.” As before stated that statute is found now in R. S., 1883, chap. 94, § 2.