Haywood v. . Briggs

41 S.E.2d 289, 227 N.C. 108, 171 A.L.R. 480, 1947 N.C. LEXIS 364
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 31, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 41 S.E.2d 289 (Haywood v. . Briggs) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haywood v. . Briggs, 41 S.E.2d 289, 227 N.C. 108, 171 A.L.R. 480, 1947 N.C. LEXIS 364 (N.C. 1947).

Opinion

*111 Devin, J.

There was no controversy as to the facts. The question of law presented is whether the lessees of the life tenant, after the death of their lessor, were entitled, as against the remaindermen, to remove the buildings which had been erected by them on the leased premises.

It was provided in each of the leases that all improvements and fixtures placed on the premises by the lessees should remain the property of the lessees, with right of removal, at the termination of the leases whether by expiration of time or by act of law, within a reasonable time. But the remaindermen were not parties to either of the leases and were not bound by any of the terms wherein expressed. As to these leases the remaindermen were strangers. There was no privity between the lessees and the present owners of the fee. Upon the death of the life tenant the title to the real property passed by operation of law to the remaindermen unaffected by any leases the life tenant had executed or any agreements she had made with respect thereto. The life tenant could not create an estate to endure beyond the termination of her own estate, nor could the lessees thereafter claim any rights under her leases. Tiffany Real Prop., 3rd Ed., 247; Armstrong v. Rodemacher, 199 Iowa, 928; Matter of O’Donnell, 240 N. Y., 99; Jones v. Shufflin, 45 W. Va., 731, 31 S. E., 934. So that, upon the death of Sallie A. Eigsbee, nothing else appearing, the remaindermen were entitled to the immediate possession of the lots described,, and also to all structures placed thereon and so attached to the freehold as to constitute a part of the realty.

Eecognizing these principles of law, the interveners, the lessees of the life tenant, however, base their claim upon the general principles of law relating to trade fixtures, and contend that under the circumstances of the case the buildings erected by them come within the definition of trade fixtures, and independent of any express agreement the structures were stamped with the character of personal property, and hence removable at their option. They contend that this position is available to them against the remaindermen.

In view of the fact that the buildings here claimed by the interveners consist of two large warehouses under one roof, erected on concrete foundations, with 100,000 feet of floor space, covering half a city block, it is somewhat difficult to conceive of them as personal property, but conceding that under the rule stated by Mr. Justice Story in Van Ness v. Pacard, 27 U. S., 137, and by virtue of the agreement between the life tenant, lessor, and the lessees, they may be so regarded, it would seem to follow that within the period covered by the leases and during the lifetime of the lessor the lessees would have had the right to remove the buildings from the lots described, if this could have been done without injury to the freehold. Olymphia Lodge v. Kelly, 142 Wash., 93; Davidson v. Mfg. Co., 99 Mich., 501; Schultz v. Motor Co., 243 Ky., 459; Pennington v. Black, 261 Ky., 728. But we do not think, under the *112 circumstances of this case, this right can now be maintained against the remaindermen. They were in no wise bound by the leases, and to them the fee simple unencumbered title to the real property passed under the will of Atlas M. Rigsbee immediately upon the falling in of the life estate. The erections were by those who were strangers to the title as thus devolved and without privity.

The general principles of law relating to the question presented by the appeal in this case have been frequently stated. From 36 C. J. S., 967, we quote: “A lessee from the tenant for life has no greater' rights than the tenant for life himself. The lessee’s rights cannot be increased by an agreement with the tenant for life, not assented to by the remainder-man, giving the lessee the right of removal.” In 22 A. J., 744, it was said, “Where the fixtures are of such a character that, in the absence of any contract on the subject, they constitute, in law, a permanent accession to the estate, it has been held that a tenant for' life cannot, by contract with his tenant, so far bind the remainderman as to authorize the removal of such fixtures by his lessee after the termination of the life estate.” From 1 Tiffany Real Prop., 3rd Ed., page 88, we quote: “Since a tenant for life cannot, in the absence of an express power, create an estate extending beyond the measure of his own estate, it follows that if such tenant leases for a term of years, and the life estate comes to an end by reason of his death or of that of the cestui que vie, the interest of the lessee also comes to an end, and he cannot retain the possession against the reversioner or remaindermen. Even though the reversioner or remainderman desires to continue or to revive the lease made by the life tenant, he cannot do so, since he is not in privity with the latter.” And again from the saíne author, page 247: “In the absence of a statutory power or of- an express power to that effect in the creation of the estate, one having a limited estate in land cannot, as against the person entitled in reversion or remainder, create an estate to endure beyond the normal time for termination of his own estate. This self-evident principle has been applied in the case of the making of a lease for years by a tenant for his own or another’s life, the rights of the remainderman or reversioner being recognized as superior to any claim on the part of the lessee.”

In Sanders v. Sutlive Bros., 187 Iowa, 300, the first headnote states the pertinent holdings in these words: “A lease made by a life tenant terminates upon his death.” In the annotation of this case in 6 A. L. R., 1513, the cases cited as holding fixtures erected by lessee of life tenant not removable after death of lessor are Jones v. Shufflin, 45 W. Va., 729; White v. Arndt, 1 Whart. (Pa.), 91; Demby v. Parse, 53 Ark., 526; Hafflick v. Stober, 11 Ohio St., 482; while Ray v. Young, 160 Iowa, 613, holds the contrary view.

*113 In Jones v. Shufflin, 45 W. Va., 729, it appeared that after the death of the life tenant the lessee sought to remove a building which he had erected on a lot leased him by the life tenant. The lessee’s claim was based on the law of fixtures. The Court said: “The law is well settled that the remainderman is entitled to the property with all improvements thereon at the expiration of the life tenancy. . . . This rule prevails more strictly between tenant for life or his lessee and the remainderman, the latter of whom is not bound by any agreement between the tenant for life and his lessee under which the lessee may have erected buildings on the land. The plaintiff, being entitled to the remainder, and not having consented to the lease, is in no wise bound thereby, and the improvements come to her as though they had been placed thereon by a stranger. If a building is erected on land against the will of the landowner, or without his consent, it becomes realty, and cannot be removed therefrom without the commission of waste. The defendant in this case acted with open eyes.”

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.E.2d 289, 227 N.C. 108, 171 A.L.R. 480, 1947 N.C. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haywood-v-briggs-nc-1947.