74 Miss. 450 | Miss. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
The simple question presented by this appeal is, may a purchaser from a tenant who bought and put upon leased premises —a plantation — a gin, condenser, etc., with the intention of removing them at pleasure, remove and hold them against the landlord ? The question is easily answered. Against the general doctrine of fixtures made by one upon the premises of another, there have always been generous exceptions in favor of trade, manufactures, and, as in the case before us, tenants. The placing of gins, condensers, etc., on plantations cultivated largely in our staple product, cotton, are essential to the preparation and manufacture of the article for market, and the rights of tenants, as against their landlords, are not to be doubted.
The tenant not only put the machinery in question upon the leased premises during his term, but he did so with the inten
Affirmed.
A. H. Jayne, for appellants, after the delivery of the foregoing opinion, filed an elaborate suggestion of error, insisting that the testimony of one of plaintiff’s witnesses, Ullendorff, was incompetent, and should have been excluded by the court below, and that, without the testimony of that witness, the evidence was insufficient to maintain plaintiff’s case.
- Woods, C. J., delivered'the following response to the suggestion of error:
Conceding that the evidence of Ullendorff, on the trial below, should have been excluded, as vigorously contended by the learned counsel, still, on the evidence of McMath himself, no
If the vendees of the tenant had the right to remove the gin, condenser, and feeder, as held by us in our original opinion, the wrongful act of the tenant in carrying off a gin belonging to his landlord, or in negligently permitting it to be lost or destroyed, did not affect that right. The tenant only thereby laid himself liable to his landlord for such wrongful act, or for his negligence, whereby the gin of the landlord was lost or destroyed.
We adhere to the former opinion.