Beckwith v. Boyce
Beckwith v. Boyce
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was an action of trover brought by Boyce, to recover damages
The plaintiff claimed the lumber under a bill of sale from the sheriff of St. Louis county, who had levied on it, and sold it under two executions issued against Dickinson & Holmes. The lumber, at the time of the levy and sale, consisted of two sheds, erected on a lot belonging to Smith, the largest of which was for the purpose of making brick,— the other for drying them. -They were standing at the time of the sale, the posts which supported them being stuck in the ground. Smith, the intestate, had leased this lot to Dickinson & Holmes, for one year from 1st March, 1840, who'occupied the same for some time, making brick thereon with a new patent brick-making machine, but abandoned the premises sometime in the fall or winter of 1840. The sale of the sheriff was in July, 1841 ; at tlie time of the sale, Smith was present on the lot, and notified all present not to buy, as be would not let a single foot of <t be taken away. The rent of the lot, it appeared, was due to said Smith; and the lease from Smith to Dickinson was given in evidence, in which, after the signature of Dickinson, were the words, “If the air we contract is not fulfilled, the fixtures are not to be removed.5’
The court gave the jury two instructions :
1. If the jury believe from the evidence, that any part of the property, for the conversion of which this action is brought, was erected on the la: d of the defendant’s intestate, as a fixture or fixtures, for the purpose.! of trade by Dickinson and Holmes, such fixtures could not be romuved from the freehold of the defendant’s intestate, after the expiration. of the term under which Dickinson and Holmes held, unless such fi;.. tres were removed before D. & H. had left possession of the said fro'-.hold, or before the defendant’s intestate bad actually re-entered upoi die same.
2. If - he jury believe, from the evidence, that the property for which this suit was brought, constituted erections, and apparatus set up by Horace ft Dickinson, for the purpose of carrying on the trade of manufacturing brick, and that said Dickinson was the lessee of defendant, Smith, c-f the premises upon which the same was set up for the purpose of manufacturing brick, then the action of trover will lie for said proper!.;.
The first question, and indeed the principal one presented by tbis record is, whether the sheds erected by Dickinson and Holmes, for the purpose of carrying on ¡he manufacture of brick, were fixtures. Fixtures arfe defined to be “chattels or articles of a personal nature which
In Horn vs. Baker, (9 East. 215) it was not doubted but that distiller’s ran, supported upon brick work and timber, but not let into the ground , md vats standing on horses or frames of wood, were goods and chattel : but it was held that stills set in brick work and let into the ground were fixtures.
The iiv- t instruction given by the circuit court, leaves to the jury the determination of this embarrassing question, and the jury are told that if, m their opinion, the property sued for was a fixture, then it could í.ot be removed after the termination of the lease, or at least, after th . lessor had resumed possession. Admittitting that the jury were competent to decide whether the property sued for was a fixture or not, without any information from the court as to what made personal pro
The second instruction seems to intimate the law to be, that if the property sued for consisted of erections for manufacturing purposes, the plaintiff was entitled to recover. This must have been upon the assumption, that if the property was placed there for manufacturing purposes solely, it was no fixture, and therefore liable to be levied on as the personal chattels of Dickinson & Holmes. It is true that fixtures erected for manufacturing purposes have been regarded somewhat differently from those erected for agricultural purposes. In Elwes vs. Man, (3 East. 38) Lord Ellenborough considered erections for agricultural purposes, such as beast houses, folds, cart houses, &c., as not removable by the tenant even during the term. When the building is erected as a mere accessory to a personal chattel, it may be removed; but when it is accessory to the realty, it cannot. The latter are not regarded as fixtures at all. The English and American cases are uniformly hostile to the idea of mere loose moveable machinery, even where it is the main agent in prosecuting the business to which a freehold property is adapted, being considered as a part of that freehold for any purpose. “To make it a fixture,” says Judge Cowen, in Walker vs. Therman, “it must not only be essential to the business of its erection, but it must be attached to it in some way; at least, it must be mechanically fitted, so as in ordinary understanding, to make a part of the building itself.”
The law applicable to the case now under consideration was correct
Judgment reversed and cause remanded.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BECKWITH, Adm'r. &c. v. BOYCE
- Cited By
- 10 cases
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- Published