Brown v. Roland

33 S.W. 273, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 648, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 331
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedNovember 23, 1895
DocketNo. 897.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 33 S.W. 273 (Brown v. Roland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Roland, 33 S.W. 273, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 648, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 331 (Tex. Ct. App. 1895).

Opinion

FINLEY, Associate Justice.

The appellant Brown brought this suit December 13, 1892, against appellee Rowland, alleging title in himself to 921 acres of land upon which was situated mill and gin property asserted by plaintiff to be fixtures on the land, the title to which plaintiff alleged to be in himself, and that defendant was about to remove the said fixtures from said land. He prayed for and obtained a temporary injunction to restrain defendant from tearing down and removing the mill, boiler, engine, gin stands, mill and apparatus therefrom.

The defendant answered (1) by general denial under oath; (2) that appellee purchased the machinery in controversy long before the plaintiff became the owner and holder of the land on which same is situated, and at said time one T. J. Montgomery was the owner and holder of the land on which the machinery is situated, and as such, agreed with the *650 appellee that he might operate such machinery on this land five years, or as long as appellee might wish; and further alleged that the plaintiff had knowledge of the claim and ownership of appellee to the machinery before plaintiff became the owner of the land; and also in reconvention for damages for injury to the machinery and loss of the use of same. The trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant Rowland for the value of the machinery, and for damages against plaintiff.

Appellant’s first assignment of error presented is, “The court erred in refusing to sustain plaintiff’s special demurrer to defendant’s first amended original answer, wherein plaintiff set up the statute of frauds-against defendant’s claim to said fixtures by paroi.”

The answer set up claim to the machinery in controversy as personal property, removable fixtures, situated upon the land of appellant, and charged that at the time appellant purchased the land he knew that such machinery was the property of appellee.

In Moody v. Aiken, 50 Texas, 73, it is held that the sale of removable fixtures does not come within the provision of the statute of frauds, requiring that the sale of land shall be evidenced by a memorandum in writing. The court did not err in this particular.

Appellant’s second assignment of error: “The court erred in refusing the following special charge asked by plaintiff, to-wit, ‘The jury are-charged that if the evidence does not show an actual severance of the-mill and gin machinery in question by some of the owners of the fee in the land on which the machinery is situated, previous to the time when plaintiff became the owner of the land, -then, and in that event, the machinery in question passed in the sale and deed made by the sheriff of' Kaufman County to the plaintiff herein, and the jury should so find.’ ”

The court charged the reverse of this proposition. After attempting to define a fixture, he instructed the jury that, “the owner of such property (fixture) may sell the same by verbal sale, and then such property ceases to be a fixture or part of the realty and becomes personal property, and the purchaser may enter upon the land and remove the same if he can do so without permanent or substantial injury to the land or house.”'

The evidence shows that T. J. Montgomery and wife, by deed dated January 15, 1890, conveyed the land upon which is situated the mill' and gin property, boiler and engine in controversy to one B. J. Johnson. This deed was proven for record August 7, 1890.

August 7, 1890, B. J. Johnson made his sworn application through C. M. Banks, at Waco, Texas, for a loan on the 931 acres of land which was conveyed to him by Montgomery and wife. C. M. Banks, a loan broker, secured a loan on the land for B. J. .Johnson from Brown Bros., of Austin, Texas, as shown by the deed of trust executed by B. J. Johnson and wife on the 18th day of August, 1890, to R. L. Brown, one of the Brown Bros., as trustee. The sum secured by Johnson was $6000. The consideration recited in Montgomery’s deed to Johnson for the purchase of this land is $17,300,. *651 cash paid. B. J. Johnson made default in the payment of said money-obtained by said loan, and said trust deed was foreclosed in the District Court of Travis County. Order of sale issued upon said judgment dated January 11,1892, and plaintiff bought the land upon which the fixtures were and are now situated. The order of sale through which plaintiff deraigns title was dated February 4, 1892. The sheriff of Kaufman County sold the land, and made the plaintiff a deed thereto by virtue of said order of sale, which deed is dated March 2, 1892. ¡Neither the deed from T. J. Montgomery and wife to B. J. Johnson and wife, nor the deed of trust made by him and wife to R. L. Brown, nor the judgment in favor of J. Gordon Brown, nor the sheriff’s deed to plaintiff, makes any reservation of said gin property in favor of defendant Rowland. It was admitted in open court that the title to the land described in plaintiff’s petition 'was in plaintiff, and that both parties claimed the machinery through T. J. Montgomery as a common source.

It was proven that the boiler and engine in controversy are situated under a shed which is a part of the gin house building. The boiler is eased up and around with brick; the top of the boiler is not quite covered, there are iron bands around the casing. The brick casing extends from the ground, below the surface, and would have to be torn down to remove the boiler. The engine is bolted to hewn square timbers about 16 or 18 inches wide and 10 or 12 inches thick, which are set in the ground. The engine is bolted to these square timbers with four iron bolts, one at each corner of the engine, coming up through the timbers and through the corners of the engine, and are screwed down with taps, and by this means the engine is made stationary. The engine and boiler are recognized as stationary machinery. There is a gin house there which has a ground floor and upper floor. The shafting was set on a frame made of scantling and set in the ground on the ground floor, and the gin stands were on the upper floor set in a frame made of scantling about 4 by 6 inches, bolted or nailed to the floor, and the gin stands set into these frames. There were two of these frames nailed to the floor, and the two gin stands set into them to hold the stands in a steady position.

Montgomery erected the building and put the gin and mill upon this land several years before he sold the land to Johnson, and ginned cotton and ground corn for the public. While he, Montgomery, was owner of the land and the machinery, he sold the machinery to defendant Rowland and agreed that he, Rowland, might continue to operate it upon the land for five years, or as long as he desired to do so. This sale was verbal, and neither Brown Bros.- nor appellant had any actual notice of it until after the purchase of the land under the foreclosure sale. Johnson, at the time the property was deeded to him, knew of the sale to Rowland, and acquiesced in it. At the time the deed of trust was given upon the land by Johnson to Brown to secure the $6000 loan, and at the time of the sale thereunder, Rowland was upon the land as tenant of Johnson, cultivating and using it, and was operating the gin *652 and mill for himself, and claimed it as his property. Brown Bros, and plaintiff lived in Austin, Texas, and had no actual knowledge of Rowland’s possession or claim until after the foreclosure sale.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Baird v. Elliott
249 N.W. 894 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1933)
Astin v. Martin
289 S.W. 442 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1926)
Phillips v. Newsome
179 S.W. 1123 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 S.W. 273, 11 Tex. Civ. App. 648, 1895 Tex. App. LEXIS 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-roland-texapp-1895.