42 Miss. 732 | Miss. | 1869
delivered the opinion of the court.
In an action of replevin, the plaintiff in error obtained judgment in the County Court of Amite county against the defendants in error, for a steam saw and grist mill, with the engine, boilers, and timber-wheels. Upon the trial of the cause, the defendants moved the court to nonsuit the plaintiff, for the reason that the sheriff had not returned a bond with the writ of replevin, as the statute requires. The motion was overruled by the court, and judgment rendered as aforesaid. Erom this judgment the case was taken to the Circuit Coui’t by ap
The defendants in error, here move the court to dismiss the writ of error for want of jurisdiction in this court to entertain it.
A writ of error lies from the final judgment of the Circuit Court in all cases, unless prohibited by law; and we are not aware of airy provision of law which inhibits the prosecution of writs of error from the judgments of the Circuit Court in cases of appeal from the County Court. There is no provision in the' act to establish County Courts, which makes the judgment of the Circuit Court conclusive upon the parties litigant. Either party to any judgment of any inferior tribunal, from which a cánse 'may be taken to the High Court of Errors and Appeals, may have the same reviewed by that court upon writ of error.
But it is insisted by counsel for defendants in error, that the judgment of -the Circuit Court, reversing the judgment of the County Court, and remanding -the cause for further proceedings in that court, was not'a final judgment from'which a writ of error would lie. We cannot agree with counsel in this view of the character of that judgment. The judgment of reversal was certainly the final action of the Circuit Court upon that' appeal, and one from which-a writ of error may properly be prosecuted to this court. We hardly regard this' as open question, since the decisions of this court in the cases of Lyles v. Barnes, 40 Miss. 608, and Lester v. Harris, 41 Miss. 668. In these cases, the jurisdiction of this court to entertain writs' of error from judgments of the Circuit Court in cases of appeal from the County Court, was not questioned, but only the moc|e of trial in the Circuit' Court was regarded ás erroneous, and foi* which alone the judgments in those cases were reversed. The opinion of the court in the case of Hendricks v. Dyer, cited in support of the motion, sustains the doctrine of the cases of Lyles v. Barnes and Lester v. Harris; and the judgment, as entered in' that case, is at variance with the • reasoning of-the
Having disposed of the preliminary question of jurisdiction, we will now proceed to the consideration of two important questions presented by this record for our determination; 1. Is it necessary, in an action of replevin, that the sheriff, in taking property into possession under a writ of replevin, should take a bond from the plaintiff or defendant, conditioned to have the property forthcoming to abide the judgment of the court, and to respond for damages ? 2. Are the articles sued for in this action fixtures, or personal chattels ?
"With respect to the first question, the statute giving the ación of replevin in other cases than those of distress for rent, clearly contemplates that a bond shall be taken by the officer executing the writ of replevin, and returned with it; and without it, the proceedings,'though perhaps not absolutely void, would be defective and erroneous. ■
It provides that the sheriff shall deliver the goods and chattels taken under the writ of replevin to the plaintiff, upon his entering into bond to the defendant, with sufficient security, in double the value of the property, to be ascertained by the valuation of the sheriff, conditioned that he will prosecute the writ with effect, and without delay make return of the property to defendant, if .return'thereof be adjudged, and pay the defendant such damages as he may sustain by the wrongful suing'out of said writ, and also such costs as maybe awarded against him, and save harmless the sheriff for replevying the property; unless the defendant shall enter into bond with sufficient security in like penalty, payable to the' plaintiff, conditioned that the property shall be forthcoming to satisfy the judgment of the court. Kev. Code, 395, art. 3.
When the property shall have been permitted to remain in possession of the defendant, if the plaintiff recover, the judgment of the coin’t shall be against the defendant and his sure
And if the plaintiff in replevin, to whom the property has been delivered, fail'to prosecute his suit with effect, the jury shall assess the value of the property, and the damages sustained by the defendantand the judgment of the court shall be against the plaintiff and his sureties, that they restore the property to the'defendant, or pay him the value thereof so assessed, and also the damages so assessed for wrongfully suing out the writ. ' ...
From these provisions it plainly appears, that, whatever be the result of the suit, whether in favor of the plaintiff or' defendant, the judgment is invariably rendered against the failing party and his sureties, and this could not be' done without bond with sureties. ■ ' • • . •
It is the imperative duty of the sheriff to take a bond from one of the parties to the action, upon the execution of the writ of replevin, not only to protect the interests of the parties litigant, but to indemnify himself for any damage he "may sustain by taking any property by virtue of the writ. And so important is it deemed to have a sufficient bond in such'cases, that the statute provides, in the 10th article, for supplying a new bond in case the old one should at any time be deemed insufficient; that, if the bond given by the'plaintiff-shall be adjudged i insufficient, he shall give a new bond, and in default thereof, the defendant shall be'entitled to'proceed, and enter a judgment, as in case the plaintiff should be nonsuited ,• a fortiori would he be entitled to such judgment, where no bond had ever been given'in the case.
■ This brings us to the consideration of the second question,— Whether the articles in controversy in this suit' are ixxtux’es, or personal chattels. - ■ .
• The testimony on this part of the case is sixbstantially as follows :
That the defendaxxts were ixx possession of the xuill, and ap
The testimony goes to show that the said steam saw and grist mill was put up on the land with the consent of the owner of the freehold, and that the defendant Sleeper claimed to hold the property on account of moneys advanced by him to Lewis Weathersby, and expended in erecting the mill.
As the said Lewis L. Weathersby was, by agreement, to have put up the mill, the money expended by Sleeper in putting it up, and the same advanced by him to said Weathersby for that purpose, create a debt of Weathersby to him, and do not constitute a lien on the property sued for in this action.
The term fixtures has always been applied to articles of a personal nature, which have been affixed to land; and question^ respecting the right to them principally arise between three classes of persons:
1. Between the heir and executor; and there the rule obtains with most rigor in favor of the inheritance, and against the right to consider as a personal chattel anything which has been affixed to the freehold.
2. Between vendor and vendee; and there the strict rule as to fixtures that applies as between heir and executor, applies equally as between vendor and vendee, and mortgagor and mortgagee.
8. Between landlord and tenant; and there greater latitude and indulgence are extended in respect to fixtures erected by the tenant for the purposes of trade, called trade fixtures, which he may remove at any time before the termination of his tenancy.
Whether an article is personal property or a fixture, must be determined by taking into consideration its nature, mode of
The criterion of a fixture above mentioned is subject to qualification in some respects. Whatever would otherwise be the rights of the parties connected with an article which has been attached to the realty, they are liable to be controlled by an established custom or special agreement of the parties. The parties are presumed to be cognizant of an existing usage or custom, and to act with a tacit reference to it. And an article attached to the land may be a fixture or a chattel, according to the special agreement of the parties.
By an application of the criterion here adopted to the case before the court, there is no difficulty in determining the character of the property in controversy. The means by which the mill with engine and boilers were attached to the realty, and those used to keep the machinery steady and in its proper place for use, were such as to admit of its removal without injury to any property, or even inconvenience.
That this steam saw and grist mill, with its engine and boilers, .was not intended as a permanent accession to the freehold, and immovable as such, is too clear to admit of doubt. Neither
It has been repeatedly held, that a building or other fixture, which is ordinarily a part of the realty, is personal property when placed on the land of another by contract or by consent of the owner. And it need not be a trade fixture. Hines v. Armint, 43 Missouri, 300; Asher v. Williams, 8 Pick. 402, and Russell v. Richards, 10 Maine, 429. Hence we conclude that the articles in controversy in this action were personal chattels, and the proper subject of an action of replevin.
And as it is conceded by the plaintiff’s counsel, that no bond was taken upon the execution of the writ of replevin, we think the County Court erred in overruling the defendant’s motion to nonsuit the plaintiff for want of a bond, and for that reason the Circuit Court did not err in reversing the judgment of the County Court, and remanding the cause for further proceedings therein.
The judgment of the Circuit Court is affirmed.