8 Wend. 587 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1832
The action for mesne profits is an action of trespass, and the plaintiff can recover for injuries done within six years before the commencement of the suit, and no mbre, where the statute of limitations is pleaded. In this case, the plaintiff was delayed in his recovery more than six years pending the suit. If the plaintiff be deterred from commencing his suit by an injunction from chancery, during such delay the statute does not attach, and after the injunction is dissolved, he may prosecute within the time which he had when the injunction was served; but that clause of the statute has no application here. The action for mesne profits is consequent upon a recovery in an action of
It has been decided that cutting timber on the land of another, does not divest the owner of his title to his property. What was before part of his freehold, has by the severance become personal property, and may be reclaimed. 3 Wendell, 104. 7 Cowen, 59. In Fanant v. Thompson, 5 Barn. & Ald. 826, it was held that certain mill machinery, when severed from the mill, became the personal property of the owner of the mill, and though it was sold as the personal property of the tenant to whom .the mill had been demised, it was held that no property passed to the purchaser, but that the landlord was entitled to bring trover. Had the machinery in that case been demised to the tenant as personal property, the action could not have been sustained until the termination of the lease, according to Gordon v. Harper, 7 Taunt. 9, and several other cases.
The case before us has no connection with that class of cases where the person in possession had the possession lawfully. Case v. Goes and others, 3 Caines, 361, was trespass for carrying away saw-logs. The defence was a license from one Bull, who was in possession by virtue of a writ of restitution, which however was afterwards quashed. Bull was in possession by
In this case the steam engine before severance was part of the real estate; when severed, it became the personal propery of the plaintiff; it remained upon the premises until August, 1823, within six years before the commencement of this suit. No title having passed out of the plaintiff, nor to Leavenworth, all who were concerned in its removal were trespassers. The' defendant Varick, by requesting Leavenworth to remove the
A new trial should be granted; costs to abide the event.