Tolar v. Burkett

26 So. 2d 629, 32 Ala. App. 434, 1946 Ala. App. LEXIS 332
CourtAlabama Court of Appeals
DecidedJune 18, 1946
Docket4 Div. 945.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 26 So. 2d 629 (Tolar v. Burkett) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alabama Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tolar v. Burkett, 26 So. 2d 629, 32 Ala. App. 434, 1946 Ala. App. LEXIS 332 (Ala. Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

BRICKEN, Presiding Judge.

Appellees brought their suit in the Circuit Court of Houston County, Alabama, against L. Y. Tolar, claiming of him $124 for the alleged conversion by him of five rolls of fence wire and one hundred seventy-one fence posts and seventeen pieces of shrubbery, as alleged in count one of the complaint.

In count two of said complaint, plaintiffs claimed of defendant $124 as damages for the wrongful taking by the defendant of said wire, fence posts and shrubbery.

In each of the above counts of said complaint, the plaintiffs claimed of the defendant the other and further sum of $6 for rent of certain house and lot.

The defendant filed demurrers to the complaint, which were overruled by the trial court. The case was tried in the court below before a jury and on August 14, 1945, said jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs for the sum of $50 as damages, etc. Upon said jury verdict, the trial court rendered a judgment for the plaintiffs and against the defendant for $50 damages and for all cost that had accrued in said case.

On September 11, 1945, the defendant filed his motion for a new trial, which was duly continued and finally set down for hearing on October 3, 1945, on which day the trial court rendered judgment overruling and denying said motion, to which judgment the defendant duly and legally excepted.

*436 This appeal is from the judgment of the trial court awarding damages to plaintiff and also from the judgment of that court overruling and denying defendant’s motion for a new trial.

The appellant presents for our consideration, three assignments of error upon this record, viz.:

(a) The refusal of the trial court to give the general charge requested by defendant in writing as to the first count of plaintiffs’ complaint;
(b) The refusal of the trial court to give the general charge requested by defendant in writing as to the second count of said complaint;
(c) The refusal of the trial court to grant defendant’s motion for a new trial.

Under the facts in this case, and under the law applicable to said facts, the three assignments of error may be properly considered together.

In the year, 1932, and prior to that year, a five-acre tract of land located in what is now Houston County, Alabama, and known as the “S. W. Burkett Home-place,” was owned by and in the possession of S. W. Burkett, who in January, 1932, rented said real estate to L. Y. Tolar, the defendant. The defendant went into possession of said property as a tenant of Mr. S. W. Burkett. While the defendant was occupying said realty as a tenant, the said S. W. Burkett died, and thereafter the defendant continued to rent said real estate “through the estate of “S. W. Burkett, deceased, and Mrs. Lillie B. Burkett, widow of the said S. W. Burkett, and probably from the plaintiffs down to the first day of January, 1944. The defendant built a wire fence on, or around the premises, and Mrs. Tolar, his wife, planted shrubbery about the residence during the tenancy. When the defendant removed from said premises, he had the wire fence, (fence wire and fence posts), removed from the Burkett premises and Mrs. Tolar, his wife, had the shrubbery dug up and removed therefrom, for which according to plaintiffs’ testimony, the refendant was responsible.

Upon the trial of the case the plaintiffs introduced in evidence a certain deed, executed on October 16, 1943, by Brunice Burkett Katsonas and husband, Mary Lucy Burkett Garrett and husband, and Maggie Burkett, an unmarried woman, to Trixie Burkett and Carr Buckett, the plaintiffs, conveying to them, with general covenants of warranty, the real estate above mentioned and upon which the defendant had built said wire fence and upon which also Mrs. Tolar had planted said shrubbery.

In the case of Wheeler v. State, 109 Ala. 56, 19 So. 993, 994, our Supreme Court, (Brickell, C. J.), said: “A fence, whether there be a permanent annexation to the soil, or if it be of rails so arranged as to constitute an inclosure, is a fixture,— a part of the land, and passing with the freehold.”

Arbor vitae and other similar evergreens, commonly called shrubbery, are small trees planted about residences for ornamental purposes. They are dependent upon the soil in which they are placed for their very existence, as well as for their growth, and are, of course a part of the realty in which they live and grow, and they likewise pass under a conveyance of the land. Cochrane v. McDermott Advertising Agency, 6 Ala.App. 121, 60 So. 421.

The plaintiffs upon the trial of the case introduced testimony tending to show that they purchased the land involved in this case on October 16, 1943, without any reservations whatever, and without any notice that Mr. Tolar claimed any right to or interest in the fences on said property, or that Mrs. Tolar, defendant’s wife, claimed the shrubbery. The plaintiffs further introduced testimony tending to show that before the termination of the tenancy under which the defendant was occupying said premises, the plaintiffs gave said defendant personal notice that they had purchased said real estate and wanted its possession at the end of the year; that the defendant after this notice had the fences on said property taken down and removed and that certain shrubbery on said premises had been dug up and removed for which last removal plaintiffs’ testimony tended to show that the defendant had assumed responsibility. The plaintiffs also introduced testimony tending to prove the value of the fence wire, fence posts and shrubbery removed from plaintiffs’ prem *437 ises by the defendant, or under his direction and responsibility.

The defendant did not deny that he had the fence on plaintiffs’ premises torn down and removed, nor did he question the value of said fence and fence posts as testified to by plaintiffs’ witnesses. He did deny removing the shrubbery, but he did not deny that he had stated to Mr. T. L. Stapleton, in substance, — “That his (Mr. Tolar’s) wife moved the shrubbery there from the Trixie Burkett and Carr Burkett place, but that he (the defendant) was responsible for it.”

The defendant did not file any special pleas but he testified in his own behalf, and also corroborated his own testimony by the testimony of other witnesses which tended to show, in substance, that in July or August, 1934, — -“Mr. Tolar asked Mrs. Burkett (Lillie V. Burkett) about getting some wire to fence the place and she said she couldn’t put out anything on the fence, and he said, well, what about if I buy some wire and posts and put a fence around the patches, will it be all right, to move it when I get ready to move, and she said, that’s all right, you are plum welcome to put them around there and when you get ready to move, they are yours and you can take them up and move them.”

It is the law of this State that a fixture, which ordinarily is a part of the land, may by agreement between the parties, be severed from the land and become a personal chattel. Harris v. Powers, 57 Ala. 139; Cochrane v. McDermott Advertising Agency, supra.

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Bluebook (online)
26 So. 2d 629, 32 Ala. App. 434, 1946 Ala. App. LEXIS 332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolar-v-burkett-alactapp-1946.