7 Mo. App. 260 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1879
delivered the opinion of the court.
On March 6, 1876, the defendant leased to Hermann Lampe, for a term of five years, a lot containing about thirty acres, at an annual rent of $600, payable quarterly. It was stipulated in the lease that a failure to pay the rent when due should, if the lessor so determined, produce au
The defendant seems to rely on the common law to sustain his theory that because the stable was spiked upon cedar posts, which were set from one to two feet deep in the-ground, therefore it was a fixture, and consequently became the property of the land-owner ‘ upon the expiration of the lease. His proposition, ignores the legitimate operation of the contract allowing the lessee to remove his improvements at the expiration of the term. It is not true, even as a common-law rule, that the exclusive test of the right of
It has long been settled that where one builds upon the land of another with the owner’s consent, the building does not become incorporated with the realty, but remains the personal chattel of the builder. Dame v. Dame, supra. If the land-owner afterwards withdraw his consent, the builder may within a reasonable time enter upon the land and peaceably remove the building, doing no unnecessary damage to the owner, without being a trespasser. It is upon the same principle that erections by a tenant under a stipulated right to remove them at the end of the term, are uniformly treated as his personal property. They are put upon the land with the consent of the owner, and with the clear understanding that they do not thereby become his property. Dryden v. Kellogg, 2 Mo. App. 87; Hines v. Ament, 43 Mo. 300; Bircher v. Parker, 43 Mo. 443;
The court instructed the jury that inasmuch as the defendant had never directed or required Lampe to remove the buildings, the fact that they remained on the land for five months after the expiration of the lease could not operate to change the title, nor was it any evidence that Lampe had abandoned the property. This was error. The court should have given in lieu of this, as prayed by the defendant, an instruction to the effect that Lampe or his assignees should have claimed the improvements within a reasonable time after the expiration of the lease, and that the question of what was a reasonable time should be determined from all the facts and circumstances of the case. If the claim was not made within a reasonable time, that fact might be considered by the jury as evidence tending to prove an abandonment of the property to the owner of the land.
The court refused to instruct, for the defendant, that if the stable and fence could not be removed without great injury to the land and to the other stable thereon, then such stable and fence were fixtures, and the plaintiffs were not entitled to recover. Leaving out the unnecessary expression about fixtures, this instruction, as a,n abstract proposition of law, might be correct. But the bill of exceptions shows no testimony to which it could be applied. The mere fact that the posts were let into the soil is of no weight. The building might possibly have been removed from the posts, or the posts might perhaps have been withdrawn from the soil, without leaving the premises in any worse condition than that in which the tenant had received them. In
All the judges concurring, the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.