60 N.H. 493 | N.H. | 1881
Manure made in the ordinary course of husbandry, in the absence of any special contract or custom. is regarded as a part of the realty, and passes by a conveyance of the land without reservation. Sawyer v. Twiss,
It is contended that Snow is estopped to claim the manure, because he assisted in making the sale of his co-plaintiff's interest in the farm to Clark Bunker in May, 1878. The case does not show any facts upon which to base an estoppel, and the evidence as to what was said about the manure at the time of giving the deed was excluded by the referee on the defendant's objection. If, as is asserted by the plaintiffs, the excluded evidence would have shown a claim by the plaintiffs at that time to the manure, and an assent by Bunker to that claim, the evidence was competent to rebut any claim of estoppel as against Snow, and should have been admitted. The evidence was probably excluded by the referee on the authority of Conner v. Coffin, supra, that a parol reservation of manure is inoperative, and that the evidence tended to contradict the deed; but Snow was not a party to the deed. In Strong v. Doyle,
It is claimed that if the plaintiffs are the owners of the manure, there has been no conversion of it by the defendant. The case shows a demand for the manure, and a refusal. No question appears to have been made on the trial as to the conversion, and the refusal must be understood as relating to the right to take the manure, and implying a claim of ownership, and a denial of the plaintiffs' title, and not merely as having reference to the right to enter upon the premises. Town v. Hazen,
It is also objected that the plaintiffs cannot recover, because the manure was intermingled with the "scrapings" of the yard. The plaintiffs occupied the barn cellar and yard by permission or license of the owners, and had the right to take the manure, doing no unnecessary damage. It does not appear that the defendant made any such claim when the manure was demanded by the plaintiffs, and it is too late now to insist on this objection. The plaintiffs are entitled to judgment for the value of the manure at the time of *496 the conversion, with interest from that date. As the damages have not been assessed by the referee, the action must be recommitted for that purpose, unless the parties agree.
Case discharged.
BLODGETT, J., did not sit: the others concurred.