Merritt & Bourne v. Judd & Byrne

14 Cal. 59, 1859 Cal. LEXIS 240
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1859
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 14 Cal. 59 (Merritt & Bourne v. Judd & Byrne) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Merritt & Bourne v. Judd & Byrne, 14 Cal. 59, 1859 Cal. LEXIS 240 (Cal. 1859).

Opinion

Baldwin, J.

delivered the opinion of the Court—Terry, C, J. concurring.

Replevin for a small steam engine and pump.

This case has been argued with a research and ability highly creditable to the counsel, the more especially as their labors and arguments are of a value somewhat disproportioned to that of the matter of litigation which has elicited them. The facts, as stated by Respondents, are as follows: R. S. Whigham, the plaintiffs’ predecessor in interest, leased a quartz ledge of the defendant, Byrne. During the lease, Whigham placed the engine and pump upon the ledge, where it was used to pump water from the shaft, and to raise the quartz rock to the surface. The lease expired on the 1st September, 1856, and, on the next day, Byrne gave to Whigham. a bond for a deed on certain payments to be thereafter made by Whigham. Whigham continued in possession under this contract. On the 1st January afterwards, Whig-ham,- being still in possession of the ledge, sold the pump and engine, together with other property, to Redick McKee, and gave him possession, with the knowledge of Byrne. McKee worked the ledge under Whigham, and from that time it lay idle, the quartz not paying.

Some time after the sale by Whigham to McKee, Byrne entered and took possession of the pump and engine, and removed them, under protest by McKee’s agent. He then leased them [63]*63to defendant, Judd, who was also present, and took part in the removal of the property, and was then notified of the claim of McKee. At the time of the commencement of the suit, the engine and pump were in possession of Judd, under this lease from Byrne.

Whig-ham failed to comply fully with the conditions of his purchase of the lead, having made part payments only of the purchase money.

The engine and pump were attached in the following manner: Two timbers, ten or twelve feet long, and from two feet to thirty inches in diameter, were placed side by side upon the ground; they were only bedded in the ground sufficiently to make them level. On these bed timbers were placed a frame of four timbers, each about eight inches in diameter, the side timbers about seven feet long-, and the end ones about three feet. These frame timbers were bolted or spiked together, and bolted or spiked to the bed logs. The boiler of the engine was spiked or bolted tb this frame. The engine rested on the frame beside the boiler. The boiler, engine, and pump, were attached together by the usual connections, the pump itself extending into the shaft. Over the whole was a roof or shed, which was constructed merely for the protection or shelter of the machinery. The machinery was not attached to the building in any way, except that the pump was stayed by rods, reaching to the rafters of the roof.

McKee sold the pump and engine to the plaintiffs.

The quartz lead was upon the public lands, and was within the limits of a pre-emption claim owned by Whigham.

The main question raised by this state of facts is, was this property a fixture in the common law sense; and if so, had the plaintiffs, the tenants, a right to remove it ? and this question depends upon two inquiries: 1. Whether there can be a fixture on public land; and, 2. Whether if there can be, the particular facts here constitute the property such, and give the right of removal claimed by Eespondents ?

1. It is contended by the counsel for the Eespondents, that there can be no such thing as a fixture upon public land.

Fixtures are variously defined—though the writers substantially agree at this day in the general definition. Kent defines [64]*64it to be " an article of a personal nature affixed to the freehold.” (2 Com. 844.) In Smith's Leading Cases, (vol. 2, p. 296,) an elaborate essay is found upon the subject. The author, after criticising the definition given in several English cases, says : “ It seems better, therefore, for the purposes of this note, to use the word ' fixture' in that which appears to be its natural and most obvious sense, viz: anything annexed to the freehold. By the expression, 'annexed to the freehold/ is meant, fastened to, or connected with, it; mere juxtaposition, or the laying of an object, however heavy, on the freehold, does not amount to annexation.”

We are not disposed to agree with this first proposition of the counsel. From an early period of our State jurisprudence, we have regarded these claims to public mineral lands, as titles. They are so practically. It is very evident that the government will not change its policy in respect to them—that they will not be sold, nor the present tenure altered. Our Courts have given them the recognition of legal estates of freehold, and. so, to all practical purposes—if we except some doctrine of abandonment, not, perhaps, applicable to such estates—unquestionably they are, and we think it would not be in harmony with this general judicial system to deny to them the incidents of freehold estates in respect to this matter. If to decide thus, be a departure from some technical rules of law, it is but following other rules, which hold that a system of decisions, long established and long acted upon, shall not be departed from when important rights have vested under it, merely because the reasons upon which it rests might not, in the judgment of subsequent Judges, be considered sound. We can see no difference in respect to the principle between a house built upon public \land, and a fixture; the reason which makes the one a part of the inheritance, applies to the other, and it is only by deny{ing to the vendee, or quasi owner, the character of owner, that the legal conclusion can be escaped, that the title to the land, whatever it is, carries with it the title to the structures annexed to the soil.

2. We come to consider the next question, whether the property as we have described it, was a part of the freehold. It must be annexed to the soil. Thus, in the case of Culling v. [65]*65Tuffnall, (Buller’s N. P. 34,) where a tenant had erected a bam on pattens and blocks of timbers lying on the ground, but not fixed in or to the ground, it was held he might take them away at the end of his term. The author of Smith’s Leading Cases, after reviewing a number of precedents, says: The general rule is, that to constitute an article a fixture—i. e. a part of the realty—it must bo actually annexed thereto, and, e converso, whatever is so annexed becomes part of the realty, and the person who was the owner of it when a chattel, loses his property in it, which immediately vests in the owner of the soil.” The authorities make a distinction in this right of removal, as between persons differently related—that is, as between heir and executor, between executor and remainderman, and between landlord and tenant. As, however, this question is rested here on this last relation, we need not consider the rules governing the others. The author, (Smith,) says, that the general rule governing this subject, is, that the tenant, if he have annexed anything to the freehold during his term, cannot again remove it without the consent of his landlord. (Co. Lit. 53 a.”) After the passage of the statute of Gloucester, (for the punishment of waste by the tenant,) it was held that a lessee engaged in trade, and who had set up fixtures for carrying it on advantageously, had, in some cases, a right to remove them at the expiration of the term. This was, at length, firmly settled in PooZe’s Case, (1 Salk. 368,) and has been since supported by many cases.

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14 Cal. 59, 1859 Cal. LEXIS 240, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/merritt-bourne-v-judd-byrne-cal-1859.