Snedeker v. . Warring

12 N.Y. 170
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 5, 1854
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 12 N.Y. 170 (Snedeker v. . Warring) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snedeker v. . Warring, 12 N.Y. 170 (N.Y. 1854).

Opinions

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 172

[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 173 The facts in this case are undisputed, and it is a question of law whether the statue and sun-dial were real or personal property. The plaintiffs claim they are personal property, having purchased them as such under an execution against Thom. The defendant claims they are real property, having bought the farm on which they were erected at a foreclosure sale under a mortgage, executed by Thom before the erection of the statue and sun-dial, and also as mortgagee in possession of another mortgage, *Page 174 executed by Thom after their erection. The claim of the defendant under the mortgage sale is not impaired by the fact that the property in controversy was put on the place after the execution of the mortgage. (Corliss v. Van Sagin, 29 Maine R., 115;Winslow v. Merchants' Ins. Co., 4 Metc. R., 306.) Permanent erections and other improvements, made by the mortgagor on the land mortgaged, become a part of the realty and are covered by the mortgage.

In deciding whether the property in controversy was real or personal, it is not to be considered as if it were a question arising between landlord and tenant, but it is governed by the rules applicable between grantor and grantee. The doubt thrown upon this point by the case of Taylor v. Townsend (8 Mass.R., 411) is entirely removed by the later authorities, which hold that, as to fixtures, the same rule prevails between mortgagor and mortgagee as between grantor and grantee. (15Mass., 159; 4 Metc. R., 306; 3 Edw. Ch. R., 246; 1Hilliard on Mortgages, 294, note f, and cases there cited; andsee Bishop v. Bishop, 1 Kern., 123, 126.)

Governed, then, by the rule prevailing between grantor and grantee, if the statue and dial were fixtures, actual or constructive, they passed to the defendant as part of the realty.

No case has been found in either the English or American courts, deciding in what cases statuary placed in a house or in grounds shall be deemed real and in what cases personal property. This question must therefore be determined upon principle. All will agree that statuary exposed for sale in a workshop, or wherever it may be before it shall be permanently placed, is personal property; nor will it be controverted that where statuary is placed upon a building, or so connected with it as to be considered part of it, it will be deemed real property and pass with a deed of the land. But the doubt in this case arises from the peculiar position and character of this statue, it being placed in a court yard before the house, on a base erected on an artificial *Page 175 mound raised for the purpose of supporting it. The statue was not fastened to the base by either clamps or cement, but it rested as firmly on it by its own weight, which was three or four tons, as if otherwise affixed to it. The base was of masonry, the seams being pointed with cement, though the stones were not laid in either cement or mortar; and the mound was an artificial and permanent erection, raised some two or three feet above the surrounding land, with a substantial stone foundation.

If the statue had been actually affixed to the base by cement or clamps or in any other manner, it would be conceded to be a fixture and to belong to the realty. But as it was, it could have been removed without fracture to the base on which it rested. But is that circumstance controlling? A building of wood, weighing even less than this statue, but resting on a substantial foundation of masonry, would have belonged to the realty. A thing may be as firmly affixed to the land by gravitation as by clamps or cement. Its character may depend much upon the object of its erection. Its destination, the intention of the person making the erection, often exercise a controlling influence, and its connection with the land is looked at principally for the purpose of ascertaining whether that intent was that the thing in question should retain its original chattel character, or whether it was designed to make it a permanent accession to the lands.

By the civil law, columns, figures and statues, used to spout water at fountains, were regarded as immovable, or real (Pandects, lib. 19, tit. 1, § 17, vol. 7, by Pothier, 107) though it was inferred that statues resting on a base of masonry were not immovable, because they were there, not as part of the construction, but as ornaments. (Corp. Juris Civ., byKreigel, lib. 19, tit. 1, § 17; Poth. Pand., 109; Burrill'sLaw Dic., "Affixus.") But Labeo held the rule to be "ea quæperpetui usus causa in ædificiis sunt, ædificii esse; quæ vero adpræsens, non csse ædificii; thus making the kind *Page 176 of property depend upon the question whether it was designed by the proprietor to be permanent or temporary, or, as it was generally called by civilians, "its destination." (Corp. Jur.Civ., by Kreigel, lib. 19, tit. 1, § 17.)

And Pothier says that when, in the construction of a large vestibule or hall, niches are made, the statues attached ("attachées") to those niches make part of the house, for they are placed there ad integrandam domum. They serve to complete that part of the house. Indeed, the niches being made only to receive the statues, there will fail to be anything in the vestibule without the statues; and he says, it is of such statues that we must understand what Papimanus says: "Sigilla et statuæaffixæ, instrumento domus non continentur, sed domus portiosunt. (Pothier de Communauté, § 56.)

By the French law, statues placed in a niche made expressly to receive them, though they could be removed without fracture or deterioration, are immovable, or part of the realty. (CodeNap., § 525.) But statues standing on pedestals in houses, court-yards and gardens retain their character of "movable" or personal. (3 Touillier, Droit Civil de France, 12.) This has reference to statues only which do not stand on a substantial and permanent base or separate pedestal made expressly for them. For when a statue is placed on a pedestal or base of masonry constructed expressly for it, it is governed by the same rule as when placed in a niche made expressly to receive it, and is immovable. (2 Répertoire Générale, Journal du Palais, byLedru Rollin, 518, § 139.) The statue in such case is regarded as making part of the same thing with the permanent base upon which it rests. The reasons for the French law upon this subject are stated by the same author in the same work, page 517, § 129, where the rule is laid down with regard to such ornaments as mirrors, pictures and statues, that the law will presume the proprietor intended them as immovable, when they cannot be taken away without *Page 177 fracture or deterioration, or leaving a gap or vacancy. A statue is regarded as integral with the permanent base on which it rests and which was erected expressly for it, when the removal of the statue will offend the eye by presenting before it a distasteful gap ("vide choquant

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Bluebook (online)
12 N.Y. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snedeker-v-warring-ny-1854.