Killian v. Hubbard

9 N.W.2d 700, 69 S.D. 289, 146 A.L.R. 708, 1943 S.D. LEXIS 32
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1943
DocketFile No. 8596.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 9 N.W.2d 700 (Killian v. Hubbard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Killian v. Hubbard, 9 N.W.2d 700, 69 S.D. 289, 146 A.L.R. 708, 1943 S.D. LEXIS 32 (S.D. 1943).

Opinion

*291 SMITH, J.

-Three small, rough lumber structures, a three-room house, barn, and chicken house, constitute the subject of this litigation. Plaintiff, the record owner of an undivided one-half interest in the land upon which these buildings are located, seeks to enjoin the defendants from carrying out a threat to remove them therefrom. The learned trial court found the buildings to be the personal property of defendant McVey and entered judgment for ■defendants. Of the several propositions plaintiff discusses in presenting her assignments of error, but two warrant consideration, namely, (1) through annexation, the buildings took on the character of real property and (2) the defendants are bound by the judgment quieting title in plaintiff in a former action.

At the trial plaintiff deraigned her title to the land and rested her case on the rebuttable presumption that buildings located on land are a'part of the realty. See 22 Am. Jur. 778, § 63. The defendants sought to overcome this presumption by evidence which stands practically undisputed in the record. Plaintiff predicates her argument under her first proposition on the insufficiency , of that evidence. Before we examine the evidence, we. turn to the applicable principles of law.

In treating with the principles which govern in determining whether particular property which, separately considered, would be classed as a chattel, but which has become subject to classification as real property because of its relation to land,- the text of 22 Am. Jur. 715, § 3 and at 718, § 6, includes the following: “The general course of modern decisions, in both English and American courts, is against the common-law doctrine that the mode of annexation of a fixture is the criterion, whether slight and temporary or immovable and permanent, and in favor of declaring all things to be fixtures' which are attached, to the realty with a view to the purposes for which it is held or employed. This has led to the formulation and recognition of the following general tests which may be applied in determining a particular case: (1) Annexation to the realty, *292 either actual or constructive; (2) adaptation or application to the use or purpose to which that part of the realty to which it is connected is appropriated; and (3) intention to make the article a permanent accession to the freehold. * * * Of the three tests * * * the. clear tendency of modern authority seems to be to give pre-eminence to the intention to make the article a permanent accession to the freehold, * * *.” The views thus expressed have been followed by this court. Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Jensen, 69 S. D. —, 9 N.W.2d 140; Arlt v. Langley, 56 S. D. 79, 227 N. W. 469. The quoted principles influenced the interpretation placed on SDC 51.0104 in Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Jensen, supra. That, section reads as follows: “A thing is deemed to be affixed to land when it is attached to it by roots, as in the case of trees, vines, or shrubs; or imbedded in it, as in the case of walls; or permanently resting upon it, as in the case of buildings; or permanently attached to what is thus permanent, as by means of cement, plaster, nails, bolts, or screws.”

Predicated upon the foregoing section, plaintiff hastens to the conclusion that these buildings take on the character of realty because they are “permanently resting” upon the land. Whether at the time of their erection these buildings were intended to rest “permanently” or “temporarily” upon the land is the very question at issue. . Under the adopted construction of SDC 51.0104, supra, the ultimate conclusion of the issue as to whether the annexation was permanent or temporary must be predicated upon an examination, in the light of these accepted tests, of all of the evidenced circumstances and not solely upon a separate consideration of the factor of physical annexation. See Nelson v. Kloster et al., 68 N. D. 108, 277 N. W. 390.

In connection with SDC 51.0104, supra, plaintiff cites SDC 51.1103, reading in part as follows: “When a person affixes his property to the land of another without an agreement permitting him to remove it, the thing affixed belongs to the owner of the land unless he chooses to require the former to remove it, * * and to the applica *293 tion made thereof in Milison v. Mutual Cash Guaranty Fire Ins. Co., 24 S. D. 285, 123 N. W. 839, 840, 140 Am. St. Rep. 788.

The pertinent testimony considered in the cited case was as follows: “ T know the house that Mr. Milison used to own and that was burned up. I used to own it, and I sold it to William Rule, and he sold it to Mr. Milison. When I sold it to Rule, I did not own or claim to own the land on which the house stood. Some fellow what was called John Sawyer claimed it belonged to him. He applied for patent. I did not sell the lot, but the house.’ ” Founding its conclusion on this evidence, this Court said: “It is clear, therefore, from the evidence that, the dwelling house insured was not the property of the plaintiff, and in the absence of evidence showing a lease or contract on the part of the owner of the mining claim permitting the plaintiff to retain possession of the dwelling house, or the right to remove the same from the land, and in the absence of any acts or declarations on the part of the owner of the mining claim by which he would be equitably estopped from asserting his rights to the building, he had the legal title to, and the right to possession of, the same, and could at any time have enforced that right as against the plaintiff.”

If we rightly understand plaintiff’s counsel, he has gleaned from this language a holding that SDC 51.1103, supra, requires proof of an express agreement permitting the removal of property physically affixed to real property in order that its character as personalty may be said to persist. We do not share that view of the statute nor do we believe that the possibility of an implied agreement for the removal of the buildings from the real property arising from the circumstances under which they were erected was presented in the cited case or considered by this Court in wording its opinion. It will be observed that the evidence considered in that case does not embrace the circumstances under which the building was erected; it but deals with claimed past and present ownership.

In writing for the Minnesota Court in a case where, in *294 the absence of a controlling statute, the propriety of implying an agreement for removal was under consideration, the late Mr. Justice Mitchell reasoned as follows: “Hence, reducing the facts found to their lowest denomination, they amount to just this: Dobson, who had no estate in the land, erected the mill at his own expense on the land of Stanton, ‘with the knowledge and consent’ of the latter. The court did not find, and stipulated facts do not disclose, a single other fact bearing on the question of the intention, or implied agreement of the parties. The finding does, however, amount to one that the building was erected by permission and license from Stanton. At first we entertained some doubt whether this alone was sufficient to establish an implied agreement for separate ownership.

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Bluebook (online)
9 N.W.2d 700, 69 S.D. 289, 146 A.L.R. 708, 1943 S.D. LEXIS 32, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/killian-v-hubbard-sd-1943.