120 Ark. 252 | Ark. | 1915
Appellants obtained a judgment in the circuit court of Union ‘County against appellee for debt due by contract, and sued out execution on the judgment, which was by the sheriff levied on a small tract or parcel of real estate on which ivas situated a steam cotton gin plant. Appellee filed a schedule claiming the machinery in the gin plant as exempt from sale under execution. The circuit court allowed the claim of exemptions and an appeal has been prosecuted to this court.
The facts in the case are undisputed. Appellee leased the lot from one Bolding in the year 1903 and erected the gin plant, which consisted of a frame two-story building, and placed therein the machinery consisting of engine and boiler and gin stand and cotton pres's, together with necessary shafting and belting. The machinery was placed in the building in the customary way, the boiler resting upon the ground under the shed of the building and is encased in what the witnesses termed a mud casing. The cotton gin and press are placed upon sills resting upon the surface of the lot. Appellee purchased said lot from Bolding in the year 1907 and Bolding conveyed the title in fee to him. Appellee has continued to own and operate the gin since that time.
Appellee was not the owner of the soil at the time he established the gin plant thereon, but by the purchase of the fee his leasehold estate in the soil became merged in the greater estate, and the principle .announced in Ozark v. Adams, supra, applies.
Mr. Ewell lays down the rule, which appears to be overwhelmingly supported by the authorities, that “as .against one who is the owner of the estate in fee as well as of the fixtures, they are part of the freehold and cease to be goods and chattels, and therefore may not be seized as goods land chattels (by the sheriff under a fi. fa. as against the owner of the fee.” Ewell on Fixtures (2d. ed.), page 537. Indeed, the ¡same author lays down the rule that the -owner of the fee can not establish by parol his claim that fixtures attached to the soil are chattels for the purpose of requiring a levy thereon as that character of property. The learned author states the proposition as follows: “Nor can the execution debtor by parol turn out as chattels for purpose of levy growing grass, fruit or trees, or-fixtures annexed to his land, nor without a severance, authorize the levy of execution thereon as chattels ; -and, if attempted to be done, the levy is void. ’ ’ Page 542.
The circuit court reached the wrong conclusion in the case, so the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded with directions to quash the supersedeas.