Bratton v. Clawson
Bratton v. Clawson
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This was an action pf trespass for carrying off a gin¡ a Dutch fan and thresher, from the gin-house of the plaintiff. The only dispute was upon the trespass in taking the gin. The gin was attached to the running machinery, in the usual way, by a band. The plaintiff had purchased the land, on which the gin-house stood, without any proof of flotice to him, that the gin .or the fan, or the thresher, which also lay in the gin-house, were excepted, or severed from the house. On the other hand, the defendant had 'purchased the gin, fan and thresher, as moveables, and took them from the gin house. As to the fan and thresher] they v were his. But to which of the two purchasers did the gin belong? was the question. That a cotton gin in its place, i. e. connected with the running works in the gin-house, is a fixture, that passes to the purchaser of the house, was before decided in the very case. ..The same law of fixtures was before laid down in' Fairis v Walker, 1 Bail. 540. The only question therefore remaining open was this : Inasmuch as Mr. Stait, the former owner of the gin-house, bad directed the Sheriff to levy on the gin, together with the fan and thresher, and given bond for the delivery, whether such direction and conduct on the part of Stait, amounted to a severance
Motion dismissed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.