Hamilton v. State
Hamilton v. State
Opinion of the Court
Section 4600 of the code prohibits a mortgagor of personal property from selling or otherwise disposing of the same without the consent of the mortgagee and with intent to defraud him. Nnder this section the accused was indicted, the indictment alleging, in substance, that on the 10th of May, 1892, she executed and delivered to Alexander a mortgage on her growing crop to secure the payment of a certain amount of money which she owed him, which would become due on the 15th day of October, 1892; and that on the first day of November, 1892, she sold and disposed of the mortgaged property with intent to defraud Alexander, without first obtaining his consent and before payment of the indebtedness for which the mortgage was executed, and that Alexander sustained loss thereby. The accused was found guilty, and made a motion in arrest of judgment, on the ground that the property described in the mortgage was not personal property, and therefore not within the provisions of the section above referred to.
A distinction exists by which it may be determined whether things growing upon land are realty or personalty. That distinction is, that if the grow'ths arefructus naturales, thatis,thenatural and spontaneous productions of the land, they are regarded as a part of the land, and consequently as real estate; but if they are fructus industriales, that is, the result of labor performed about the land, they are personalty. 1 Corbin’s Benjamin on Sales, §126; note to Norris v. Watson, 55 Am. Dec. 162. Growing trees, fruit or grass, the natural produce of the earth, and not annual productions raised by the industry of man, are part of the land itself; while on the other hand, annual productions or fruits of the earth, planted and cultivated by labor, are personalty. Cotton-, which is planted each year and cultivated, is therefore personal property and subject to be mortgaged as such, though
Judgment affirmed.
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