4 Ala. 402 | Ala. | 1842
1. The validity of the sheriff’s sale, .through which the plaintiff in the Court below derived his title to the lumber sued for, is denied ; and one of the objections to it is, that the house was not a chattel subject to execution.
As between Alexander, the owner of the fee, and Quarles, who was in possession under him as a purchaser, no question arises, for both of them have treated the house as mere personal property. We must then consider whether their action in this respect has the effect to detérmine the character of the house as real or personal estate. It is said that the law by which a trade tenant is permitted to have an interest in fixtures erected by him and attached to the freehold, is an exception to the general law, which Courts have always, since the case of Elwes v. Mawe, [3 East, 38,] refused to extend beyond that class of tenants; but this we apprehend, is not the precise question in this case, which is rather whether the owner of the fee can so deal with a fixture, as to divest it of its character of real . estate. '
The first case bearing on this point, which is found in the
The sale of a growing crop was formerly considered in England as conveying an interest in the soil by which it was to be nurtured and matured. [Crosby v. Wadsworth, 6 East, 602; Emmerson v. Heelis, 2 Taunt. 38.] But when the crop has ceased to grow, and is at maturity, a different rule is supposed to govern. [Parker v. Staniland, 11 East, 362.] And in this last cited case the true rule is adverted to, though not distinctly set out — that an immediate severance from the land of the article grown was in contemplation of the parties.
• The sale by a landlord to his tenant of fixtures attached to the estate, and vice versa, has never been considered as within the statute. [Hallen v. Render, 3 Tyr. 959, cited Gibbon on Fixtures, 48.] And it is evident that these decisions could never have been regarded as correct in principle upon any other ground than that the fixtures, by the agreement of the parries, were treated as chattels, with a view to an ultimate severance from the freehold. Many other decisions analagous in •principle, it is supposed, might be found in the English Reports, but these are amply sufficient to.show,that where a matter connected with the freehold is a personal chattel when
Such are the contracts for the purchase of gravel, stone, timber trees, and the boards and bricks of houses, to be pulled down and carried away.
In the case before us, it is not expressly stated that Quarles was to remove the house immediately after the purchase, (for such we consider it,) from Alexander; but the inference is warranted that a removal within a convenient time, was contemplated by both parties. The moment that Alexander consented that Quarles should do as he pleased with it, the house became a personal chattel, and was consequently subject to levy and sale as the property of Quarles, under the execution of Hines.
2. The other question is one of less difficulty, and is in some degree within the influence of previous decisions of this Court. It is supposed the sale was void, because the property was not present at the time and place of sale. Nothing is more clear than the duty of the sheriff to have the property present at ■the time and place of sale; and the reason is obvious — he is directed to sell the property at public vendue, and to be sold well it should be exhibited; but this is a matter which concerns no one but the defendant in execution, or possibly some other execution creditor. And the first, and probably the other likewise, may set aside an irregular sale on timely application to the Court from which the execution issued, as was done in the case of the Mobile Cotton Press v. Moore & Magee, [9 Porter, 697 ] The course of proceeding there indicated is sufficient to preserve the rights of the parties from invasion by an irregular sale. The case of Brown v. Lipscomb, [id. 472,] establishes
By the levy the sheriff had obtained all the possession he could without removing the house, and we must presume, in the absence of any evidence to the contrary, that he invested Mabe with it. This made the title of the latter complete against every one claiming under the defendant in execution, until the sale was set aside by the Court from which the execution issued.
We have omitted all examination of the authorities cited from New York to show that a sale of this description is void, because if such is the law in that State, it could have no influ - ence to change our decision, for the reason that our own system must govern, and harmony ought to prevail between the decisions applicable to real and those bf personal estate.
Our conclusion is, that there is no error; and the judgment is therefore affirmed.