6 Daly 463 | New York Court of Common Pleas | 1876
In the cases of Voorhees v. McGinnis (48 N. Y. 278), and in Potter v. Cromwell (40 N. Y. 287), three tests are referred to as used in determining whether the thing referred to had, by annexation, become part of the freehold or not. 1st. Whether the annexation was of a permanent character. 2d. Its adaptability to the use and enjoyment of the freehold; and 3d. The intention of the parties when it was annexed; and an application of these tests, I think will solve the question presented in this case.
The building in which these seats, or iron chairs, were put up, was constructed as a theatre, and the seats for the audience were as much a part of the theatre as any other portion of the structure. There could be no doubt that the ordinary wooden seats or benches, which were formerly in use in the parquette or pit óf a theatre, nailed to the floor, would be regarded as a part of the structure itself. “ The shelves, drawers and counter-tables,” says Washburn, “fitted in a store, pass with the store as realty” (1 Washburn on Real Property, p. 17, 3d edition). Instead of the ordinary benches for the use of the audience, in the pit or parquette of the theatre, a patent iron chair has come into pse during the last sixteen or seventeen years; but the manner" in which these iron chairs are put down and adapted for the use of the audience, make them as much a part of the structure as the wooden benches which were formerly nailed to the floor. To adapt these patented seats to the use to which
The plan of the floor also, according to the testimony in the present case, must necessarily show the radial lines on which the chairs must be placed, as each chair has its own special place, and cannot be put in any other place, generally speaking. They are located on different radii, for chairs erected on one radius cannot be used or set up in a different radius, and the woodwork of the back and seat has to be constructed in reference to the special chair and its location. The chairs are screwed to the floor, for they would not otherwise stand alone if sat upon, and must be screwed down firmly.
The chairs furnished in the present case were screwed to the floor, and were adapted to the position in which they were placed.
The foreman of Jackson Brothers testifies, that he first examined the floor, and made his radius for each circle of chairs that would be required. He made a diagram, showing the position of each chair, how many were required in each radius, and how many could be put in the house. He then made the chairs to fit the diagram, and testified that they had to be made exactly in accordance with the diagram.
It further appears, iri the testimony of Mr. Jackson, that a short row of chairs might be taken out by itself, but the row would be sure to break if the taking out were carried too far; that where the chairs are unscrewed from the floor, the seats drop out; that the chairs can be taken down and carried else-when in parts, without injury to the building, except the screw holes in the floor, and without any injury to the chairs. In respect to which, it is sufficient to say, in the language of Judge Hunt, in Voorhees v. McGinnis (supra), that the circumstance that the thing may or may not be removed without great injury to the building, or to itself, is not now deemed to be controlling.
I do not see, however, that the statement of this witness materially affects the question. The wooden benches formerly in use in the auditorium of a theatre, could be taken up and put in another auditorium, with some sawing and adaptation of them to the new position, or one bench might be taken up and placed in the position of another. This would not at all affect the question whether they were or were not fixtures annexed to the freehold when the benches were originally put down. The fact that the structure in the present instance was a theatre; that these chairs were adapted to and put up in the auditorium for the rise of the audience, shows that the annexation was as permanent in its character as any other part of the theatre; that
I think, for these reasons, therefore, that the conclusion of the referee was right, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
Robinson and Van Brunt, JJ., concurred.
Judgment affirmed.