95 Vt. 414 | Vt. | 1921
The plaintiff is seeking to establish its title to a certain gasoline storage tank, which the defendant claims to ■own under a deed hereinafter referred to.
The questions involved in this review may be somewhat simplified if we observe at the outsej; the relation of the parties to the controversy. It is seen that the question of title does not arise between vendor and vendee, lessor and lessee, life tenant and remainder man, or heir and administrator, but between a lessor and the lessee’s grantee. The written lease created a mere. bailment of the tank. 24 Cye. 879. That it was the property of the plaintiff, and personal property in its hands, is apparent. As between the parties to the lease, its character and ownership remained unchanged. The plaintiff has never parted with its title or consented to a change in the character of the property, unless such a result follows from the method of installation and subsequent conveyance of the real estate. The rule of law governing such cases is easily stated, though' not always easily applied. It is this: The annexation by a bailee to his own real estate of personal property bailed, with or without the knowledge and consent of the bailor, does not change the character of the
We are aware that it is held in some jurisdictions (see Fryatt v. Sullivan Co., 7 Hill [N. Y.] 529) that, even though the bailee’s annexation of the chattel is tortious, the owner cannot reclaim it, but must look to the bailee for his damages. But with us the method and result of the attachment control. If the identity of the property is lost, as where bricks are built into a building, stone laid in a wall or walk (Jackson v. Walton, 28 Vt. 43), it becomes a part of the real estate. In determining this question, the intention of the party in making the attachment and the damage involved in its removal are for consideration.
The case in hand cannot be distinguished from the Cross Case above referred to. Indeed, this case is stronger for the plaintiff than that one. There the defendant was an innocent purchaser; here, by the great weight of the testimony, at least, the defendant knew whén he purchased that the plaintiff owned the chattel. There the plaintiff knew that the chattel was attached to the building, and by implication consented; here there is nothing in the evidence to show that the plaintiff knew or’con
Judgment affirmed.