34 Conn. 517 | Conn. | 1868
The plaintiffs were bona fide purchasers for value of a lot in the city of Bridgeport, on which there was at the time a barn erected by Hanford N. Hayes, when he was the owner of the lot. Hayes erected the barn at the request of the defendant, under a parol agreement with him that he should occupy it at a stipulated rent so long as Hayes should own the lot, and that when he should sell it the defendant should have the barn and pay therefor the sum of two hundred dollars. Hayes did sell his lot and it was by parol agreed between him and the purchaser that the barn should not be embraced in the sale, though the deed from Hayes made no mention of any such agreement. The plain
Prima facie then the bam in question was a fixture and as such passed by the deeds to the plaintiffs. Was there any thing in the circumstances under which it was erected to change it into a personal chattel as against the plaintiffs, who purchased supposing it to be what in fact it appeared to be, a
Nothing has taken place since the barn was erected to change its character from one species of property to the other. If it was so annexed to the soil at first as to become a fixture, there has been no severance of it since. The case, therefore, turns upon the effect of the parol agreement between Hayes and the defendant. Did that agreement prevent the building from becoming a fixture ? If it did not then it remained a fixture until after the plaintiffs took their deeds. Now had the bambeen erected by Hayes previous to his agreement witli the defendant, and a similar parol agreement had been afterwards made in respect to it, no one would claim that such an agreement would have any effect to change the nature of the property from real to personal estate, until it was fully performed; and considering that it was erected by the owner of the soil and was annexed to it in the usual mode, we are of opinion that the parol agreement, although it was in a sense the cause of its erection, had no other effect in impressing a character upon, the property than it would have had-had the building after its erection been the subject of a similar agreement.
In the decision of this case we have felt it to be our duty to rely upon' the authority of our own, cases, and upon a practice which with us is believed to be uniform, of treating buildings of this description as permanent fixtures. annexed to the soil. We are aware that in England, by some if not by most of their cases, where wooden buildings are erected on brick or stone foundations, and are not let into or fastened to the brick or stone work, and are only held to their places by their own weight, they have been held to be personal prop
As there was no controversy in respect to the facts in the case and it all depended upon the question of law which we have been considering, we. advise the superior court to render judgment for the plaintiffs.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.