58 N.H. 579 | N.H. | 1879
Materials designed for rebuilding or repairing a homestead dwelling are not included in the class of chattels protected from attachment by statute, nor are they in terms covered by the homestead act. If the lumber was exempt from attachment, it was because it had become a part of the homestead. Things movable and personal in their nature, when fitted and applied to use as a part of the realty and necessary to its beneficial enjoyment, may be regarded as incident to it and become an essential part of it. But it is by adaptation and use that chattels acquire this character. A mere unexecuted intention of future use is not sufficient to impart it. Burnside v. Twitchell,
The lumber not being exempt from attachment, the plaintiff, being the defendant in the attachment suit, cannot maintain replevin against the defendant, who was the attaching officer. The defendant in an attachment suit cannot maintain replevin for the goods attached unless they were by law exempt from attachment. Smith v. Huntington,
Judgment for the defendant.
BINGHAM, J., did not sit: the others concurred.