64 Neb. 84 | Neb. | 1902
This is an action in replevin, the property in controversy being sections of lumber and building material which prior to the replevin action bad formed the main portion of a
As to the principal issues involved, the evidence is without substantial conflict or contradiction. The record discloses that the plaintiff in the replevin action had, long prior to the transaction out of which the litigation arose, been the owner of the real estate on which the buildings were situated and had sold the same to one Wilbur, who, to secure the purchase price, executed a note secured by a mortgage thereon in favor of the plaintiff as grantor. After the purchase of the land, Wilbur bought of the defendant in replevin the main portion of the building in controversy, agreeing to pay therefor $25. He also at the same time borrowed of her the structure known as the “addition,” agreeing to return the same at a future time. He neither paid for the main building nor returned the addition. The buildings were placed on the land on stones laid on the surface of the ground, with railroad ties placed between the stones, and against which dirt was thrown, forming a sort of embankment to the foundation as thus made. The main building consisted of two rooms, lathed and plastered, and with a brick chimney. The addition formed only one room, with no inside finish, and was fast
This brings us to a consideration of the plaintiff’s right to the property in controversy through and by virtue of the deed of conveyance of the real estate on which the structures were situated. Conceding the execution and delivery of the deed the day it bears date, the evidence is conclusive that at the time he purchased the land the plaintiff was aware the addition to the main structure was owned by the defendant in replevin, and that it had been placed on the real estate temporarily, and with the intention of the parties to return the same to the owner in the near future. He was personally cognizant of the fact that the landowner never acquired title thereto, and had possession of the structure only as a borrowed chattel.
The evidence does not disclose such attaching to the soil or the main building as to make it a fixture as a matter of law. It seems reasonably clear that all parties regarded and treated it as chattel property, that it was not the intention to affix it permanently to the land, and that it remained the property of the person loaning the same,— the defendant in the replevin action,—of' all of which the plaintiff had notice. Freeman v. Lynch, 8 Nebr., 192; Sword v. Low, 122 Ill., 487; McDonald v. Shepard, 25 Kan., 112.
In any view of the record as presented to us, the defendant’s title to this portion of the property was so indisputably established by the evidence that no question of fact was left for the determination of the jury. The rule is that a purchaser of land with notice of title in third persons to buildings situated thereon takes the real estate subject to'the rights of such tMrd parties in and to such structures. Wilgus v. Gettings, 21 Ia., 177; Coleman v. Lewis, 27 Pa., 291; Crippen v. Morrison, 13 Mich., 23, 33.
It is argued by the defendant in error that, because the petition in error is not subscribed by the plaintiff in error or her attorney, it must be treated as a nullity, and as though no petition in error had in fact been fthed in the case. The petition appears to be authenticated in the name of the plaintiff in error by her attorney in his own name, the names appearing only in typewriting. Whthe probably the petition would be vulnerable to a motion to strike because not properly subscribed, we do not think it can be treated as a nullity and disregarded altogether. The petition in error is before us, purporting to be a pleading of the plaintiff in error, and an application of the party aggrieved for a review of the trial had, resulting in a judgment against her, assigning certain alleged errors in the trial of the action in the court below, and is, we hold, sufficient to require from us a consideration of the errors therein complained of.
The judgment, for the reasons first stated, must be reversed and the cause remanded, which is accordingly done.
Reversed and remanded.