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Bryan v. Lawrence

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1858
50 N.C. 337 (N.C. 1858)

Summary

In Bryan v. Lawrence, 50 N.C. 337, it is held that rough plank put in a gin-house to spread cotton-seed upon, though not nailed down, passed as a fixture, with the land.

Summary of this case from Horne v. Smith

Opinion

(June Term, 1858.)

Stills, put up for distilling, incased in brick and mortar-work, are fixtures that pass by a deed conveying the fee.

A large copper kettle, put up for cooking food for hogs, incased in brick and mortar-work, is a fixture that passes with the land.

Rough plank, put into a gin house to spread cotton seed upon, though not nailed down, is a fixture that passes in like manner.

ACTION of TRESPASS, quare clausum fregit, tried before ELLIS, J., at the last Spring Term of Edgecombe Superior Court.

Jenkins, Attorney General, for the plaintiff.

No counsel appeared for the defendant in this Court.


The plaintiff purchased of the defendant his farm in Edgecombe county, by deed in fee, and went into possession of the same. Upon the premises, thus conveyed, there were two stills, used for distilling brandy, incased in brick and mortar work, and covered with a shelter, which could not be removed without pulling down the work. There was also on the land a large kettle, put up in the same manner, which was used for cooking food for hogs. There was about 800 feet of plank which had been laid down in an undressed state, as an upper floor of a gin-house, used to spread cotton seed upon. They had been placed there the winter before, were rough and of different lengths, and were not nailed or otherwise fastened down.

After the plaintiff had taken possession under his deed, the defendant entered into the premises, took down the stills and kettle, and carried them off. He also took the plank out of the gin-house and carried it away. For these acts, this suit was brought. The above facts were stated in a case agreed by counsel, with an agreement that if the court should be of opinion with the plaintiff, he should give judgment for a sum specified; but if of opinion with the defendant, he should enter a non-suit. His Honor gave judgment for the plaintiff, and the defendant appealed.


The question, of what are, or are not fixtures, as between the vendor and vendee of real estate, has not often been the subject of judicial decision in this State, and the counsel for the plaintiff has been unable to refer us to any case in our reports upon the subject. He has, however, called our attention to two cases in the English, which throw much light upon the question which we are now called upon to decide. The first is the case of Colegrave v. Dias Santos, 2 Barn. and Cres. 76, (9 Eng. C. L. Report 30,) where a house was sold in which were grates, kitchen ranges, closets, shelves, brewing-coppers, locks and bolts, as well as stoves, cooling-coppers, mash-tubs, water-tubs, and blinds. The fixtures were not excepted, and it was held that the grates, kitchen ranges, closets, shelves, brewing-coppers, locks and bolts, passed to the vendee, as such, but that the other articles, enumerated above, did not pass. In the other case of Wiltshear v. Cottrell, 1 Ell. and Black 674, 22 Eng. C. L. Rep. at page 687, which was a sale of land, it appeared that there were on the land staddles which were erected for the support of ricks, and were stone pillars mortared to a foundation of stone and mortar, let into the earth, and were capped with stone mortared on the pillars. There was also a threshing machine, fixed by bolts and screws to posts which were let into the ground, and the machine could not be got out without disturbing some of the soil. The staddles, ricks and the threshing machine were decided to be fixtures which passed with the land to the vendee.

Upon the principle of these decisions, we have no doubt that the purchaser acquired a good title to all the articles taken away by the defendant in the present case. The stills and kettle became fixtures by being fixed in and enclosed by the brick-work, and by their not being liable to be taken away without taking down the brick-work. The plank became a part of the gin-house by being put in it for the purpose of being used with it, and in that view, it makes no difference whether they were nailed to the sleepers, or not. Had they been laid upon the sleepers in piles, for safe keeping or for convenience, or spread there to dry, and not to be used with the house, they might have been regarded as personal chattels, and of course would not have been included in the sale of the land. The judgment in favor of the plaintiff upon the case agreed was right and must be affirmed.

PER CURIAM, Judgment affirmed.


Summaries of

Bryan v. Lawrence

Supreme Court of North Carolina
Jun 1, 1858
50 N.C. 337 (N.C. 1858)

In Bryan v. Lawrence, 50 N.C. 337, it is held that rough plank put in a gin-house to spread cotton-seed upon, though not nailed down, passed as a fixture, with the land.

Summary of this case from Horne v. Smith
Case details for

Bryan v. Lawrence

Case Details

Full title:HUGH B. BRYAN v . JOSHUA LAWRENCE

Court:Supreme Court of North Carolina

Date published: Jun 1, 1858

Citations

50 N.C. 337 (N.C. 1858)

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