Parker v. Blount County

41 So. 933 | Ala. | 1906

HARALSON, J.

— Detinue for an iron safe. The commissioners’ court of Blount county owned the old building used for the courohouse. Such building is no longer used for such purposes. They purchased the safe in 1896, and placed the same in said courthouse for the purpose of keeping in it the records of the court. It was very heavy and was moved on rollers attached to the safe. The commissioners had a foundation of stone and cement build from the ground to the level of the floor of the house, for the purpose of securing and supporting the safe; and when said foundation was finished, the safe was rolled on and supported by this foundation, but was not attached in any manner to it. The door of the room in which the safe was placed was too small to admit it, and it became necessary to take out a part of the *277wall of the room, large enough for the safe to enter, and be rolled on to its brick and cement foundation, and it could only be removed in some such way.

It was shown that the courthouse lot was sold by the county to It. F. Wyatt, who testified, that when he purchased the old courthouse, the safe was not sold with it, and he did not purchase the same, nor did he sell it to W. F. Harrell, to whom he sold the lot and building, and said Harrell knew" and understood- it. The bill of exceptions recites that the safe was the property of Blount county. The minutes of the commissioners’ court lecites that Wyatt purchased from the county, “the Bangor court house lot,” and they conveyed the. same to Wyatt, and he sold and conveyed the property to- Harrell, who conveyed the same to defendants as trustees of Columbia. College. It further appears, that when Wyatt purchased the lot from the county, he did not attempt to buy the safe, nor did the commissioners attempt to sell it to him, but it' was agreed between the commissioners’ court and Wyatt that he should sell it for the county, if he could find a put chaser.

“The true rule is, that articles not otherwise attached to realty than by their owm weight are prima facie personalty, and articles affixed to land in fact, although only slightly, are prima facie realty, and the burden of proof is on the one contending that the former is realty or that the latter is personalty.”—19 Cyc. 1136; Bank v. Kiser, 119 Ala. 201, 24 South. 11; Powers v. Harris, 68 Ala. 410.

“The early theory was that physical annexation was essential to constitute a fixture. * * * In the leading American cases the conclusion was (reached) that there is no one test, but that whether a chattel lias become a part of the freehold, requires the united application of the following elements: 1. Actual annexation to the realty or something appurtenant thereto. 2. Appropriation to the use or purpose of that part of the realty writh which it is connected. 3. The intention of the party making the annexation to make the article a permanent accession to the freehold.”—19 Cyc. 1037. It is further stated, supported, it seems, by authorities in many states,, that “mere weight is not sufficient to make *278a chattel .a part of the realty, although resting on a surface prepared for it, * * * and that the weight of authority seems to be that merely inclosing a chattel in a building, through the entrance to which the chattel can be removed only in pieces, or Avhich will have to be destroyed, or in which an opening must be made before the chattel can be removed from the premises, or inclosing an article, as an iron safe, in brick or iron, does not necessarily amount to annexation, even between vendor and purchaser or mortgagor and mortgagee."Ib. 1041; Tillman v. De Lacey, 80 Ala. 106; De Lacey v. Tillman, 83 Ala. 155, 3 South. 294.

In this case, as has appeared, the safe was not sold by the county commissioners when they sold the courthouse, but they retained the title to and now claim to own it, and authorized the vendee of the realty, to sell the same for them, if he could find a purchaser. It further appears, that the safe rvas not in any manner annexed to the house, or to the brick foundation on which it rested. The fact that it required a part of the Avail of the house to be removed to admit the 'safe ¿o its foundation, and that it would require an aperture in the wall of the building to be made in order to remove it, do not import to it, the character of a fixture. The owner of the safe and purchaser of the realty agreed in the sale of the courthouse lot that it was a .chattel, subject to be removed from the building. This was competent to be shown, and was recognizing it as a chattel, then, and for all purposes, ever thereafter. It was competent for the parties to so treat it. Even in cases of houses affixed to the soil, they may be treated as chattels, if the owner and vendor of the land and its purchaser, agree to so treat them.—Powers v. Harris, 68 Ala. 411; The Bank v. Kaiser, supra.

There was no1 conflict in the evidence, and on the undisputed proofs, the court very properly gave the general charge for the plaintiff, Blount county.

Affirmed.

Weakley, C. J., and Dowdell and Denson, JJ., concur.