Lane v. Bell Lumber Co.

115 S.E. 207, 122 S.C. 140, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 241
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedNovember 14, 1922
Docket11051
StatusPublished

This text of 115 S.E. 207 (Lane v. Bell Lumber Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lane v. Bell Lumber Co., 115 S.E. 207, 122 S.C. 140, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 241 (S.C. 1922).

Opinions

The opinion of the Court was delivered by

Mr. Justice Cottiran.

Action in claim and delivery of personal property, instituted in the Court of Common Pleas for Dillon County, September 16, 1919. The case was tried before Circuit Judge Mclver and a jury, July term, 1920, and resulted in a verdict for the plaintiff. The defendant has appealed.

The personal property in controversy consists óf a lot of iron rails and attachments which had been removed, a few days prior to the suit, by the defendant, from a tract of land owned by the plaintiff. They had been placed on *143 the land many years before the plaintiff acquired it, by Carskaddon & Co., sawmill men, in the construction of a tramroad. The entire length of the tramroad was about eight miles; it extended beyond the tract owned by the plaintiff, upon which there was only one mile of the tram-road. The rails and attachments removed by the defendant from this mile of the road are the subject-matter of dispute in this action.

The respective claims of the parties will appear from the following statement of facts:

The tract of land in question formerly belonged to' one Nancy Carmicheal. In October, 1906, an action was instituted by the individual members of the firm of Carskaddon & Co. against Nancy Carmicheal, the exact nature of which does not clearly appear, nor is it important here; the action resulted in a decree of the Court which directed J. D. McLucas, Master, to convey the timber rights upon the tract to Carskaddon '& Co. upon certain terms and conditions; accordingly the Master, on November 14, 1906, executed and delivered to Carskaddon & Co. a deed conveying to them all of the interest of Nancy Carmicheal in th'e timber upon said tract and several other tracts, with the right to construct such buildings, railroads, tramroads, and structures as might be required, allowing them ten years from the date of the deed within which to remove the ,timber, and providing that they should have the right, at any time prior to or within ninety days after the termination of contract, “to remove any and all structures and property” which may have been placed upon the premises by them. This deed was duly recorded.

Carskaddon & Co. then began operations, and constructed the tramroad as above described. In ,a few. years they cut all the timber upon this particular tract, but maintained the tramroad in its entire length of eight miles, including the one mile upon this tract for the purpose of transporting the *144 timber cut upon the other tracts which were reached by the tramroad.

In 1913 Carskaddon & Co. became financially involved, and were adjudged bankrupts. At the bankrupt sale one W. F. Stackhouse became the purchaser of their entire assets, including the ’tnamroad in its entire length.

In 1915 Nancy Carmicheal died, leaving a number of heirs at law, among whom were H. C. Finklea, A. M. Fink-lea, and J. W. Finklea. H. C. Finklea was appointed and duly qualified as administrator of her estate.

The ten-year time allowed by the Master’s deed to Carsfeaddon & Co. for cutting and removing the timber was due to expire on November-14, 1916, and tjie ninety-day period within which the}' were licensed to enter and remove “any and all structures and property” on February 14, 1917.

The defendant offered testimony tending to show that prior to' the expiration of the ten-year term Stackhouse, the purchaser of the interests of Carskaddon & Co. at the bankrupt sale, made an agreement with H. C. Finklea, the administrator of the estate of Nancy Carmicheal, that the tramroad should be allowed to- remain where it was, and that he would pay rent for the occupation after the expiration of said period; also that the same agreement was made with A. M. Finklea and J. W. Finklea after they had acquired title to the tract at Master’s sale, as will be shown.

In January, 1916, the heirs at law of Nancy Carmicheal instituted a partition proceeding which involved her real estate. That proceeding resulted in a decree and order of sale dated December 11, 1916. The sale took place on February 5, 1917, and A. M. Finklea and J. W. Finklea became the purchaser of the tract in question. On February 20, 1917, they complied with the terms of sale, and received from the Master a deed for the land; no mention of the tramroad property being made in the deed.

In the early part of 1919, the exact date not appearing in the record, Stackhouse sold the rails and attachments, which *145 had in the meantime remained unused upon the land for several years, to the defendant Bell Lumber Company.

On March 1, 1919, A. M. Finklea and J. W. Finklea conveyed the tract to the plaintiff, S. D. Lane, by a deed in the usual form, without reference to the tramroad property. There was testimony to the effect that one or the other of these grantors, in the negotiations with Lane for the sale, declared that they had no claim to the rails and attachments. This was denied by Lane, who testified that, on the contrary, he calculated upon the value of that property in making his trade, and expected them to go with the land.

In September, 1919, the defendant removed all of the property from the land, and piled it up for shipment at a railroad station. That precipitated this claim and delivery proceeding by Lane,

It thus appears that the plaintiff, Lane, claims the property under his deed from the Finkleas, and the defendant Bell Lumber Company, under their purchase from Stack-house. The vital question is, which has the better title ?

1,2 We are relieved from any embarrassment which might arise in the character of that property (whether fixtures or personal property) by the decision heretofore rendered in the case of Stackhouse v. Carmicheal, 114 S. C., 41; 102 S. E., 783; which involved another portion of the identical eight miles of tramroad, and where it is held: “The railroad in question was not a fixture, but personal property.” The controlling effect of that case upon the question is conceded by the respondent, if it is not concluded by the form of the proceeding and the allegations of the complaint. Its character as personal property, not a fixture, is also concluded by the terms of the deed of the Master to Carskaddon & Co., which confers upon the grantees the right to remove it within a certain period.

“Where an article belonging to one person is annexed to the freehold of another person, the question whether it *146 shall be regarded as a fixture or not may, as between the parties, be controlled by agreement.” 11 R. C. L., 1064.

Both by the circumstances of the annexation, by the agreement embodied in the McLucas deed, and by the admissions of counsel in the pleadings and argument of this case, the property was never a fixture, but originally was placed on the land as personal property, and could only be transmuted into a fixture, so as to make it a part of the realty, by an express agreement to that -effect between the landowner and the owner of the rails, of which there is not a particle of evidence.

3

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

Related

Southern Railway v. Howell
60 S.E. 677 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1908)
Martin v. Laboon
107 S.E. 320 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1921)
Stackhouse v. Carmichael
102 S.E. 783 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1920)
Saye v. Hill
84 S.E. 307 (Supreme Court of South Carolina, 1915)
Tucker v. Vicksburg, S. & P. Ry. Co.
51 So. 689 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1910)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
115 S.E. 207, 122 S.C. 140, 1922 S.C. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lane-v-bell-lumber-co-sc-1922.