Waldauer v. Parks

106 So. 881, 141 Miss. 617, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 467
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 8, 1926
DocketNo. 25303.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 106 So. 881 (Waldauer v. Parks) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Waldauer v. Parks, 106 So. 881, 141 Miss. 617, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 467 (Mich. 1926).

Opinion

Andersqn, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellant, Mrs. Lillie Waldauer, filed her bill in this case in the chancery court of the Second district of Bolivar county against appellees, Parks and Webb, for an injunction to restrain appellees from removing from the plantation of appellant in Bolivar county certain propei*ty., described generally as tenant houses, stables, barns, *623 and cotton houses, which had been erected by appellees on said plantation during their five-year lease thereof covering the years of 1919-1923, inclusive. On the filing of the bill a fiat was granted upon which a temporary injunction was issued and served. The cause was heard on bill, answer, proofs, and motion to dissolve the injunction. A decree was rendered on the final hearing, dissolving the injunction, dismissing appellant’s bill, and awarding appellees as damages attorneys’ fees and other expenses incurred by them in and about the trial. The court further decreed a reference of the cause to a master to take and state an account of the reasonable rental value and depreciation in value of the property, the removal of which by appellees had been enjoined, except certain property about which the trial developed there ceased to be any controversy between the parties. From that decree appellant prosecutes a direct appeal and appellees a cross-appeal.

In deciding] the questions presented, we will undertake as each question is discussed to develop the controlling facts out of which it arises, instead of at the start making a statement of the whole case. We will take up, first the question whether or not appellees had the right, before the termination of their lease, to remove from the leased premises certain structures erected thereon by them, the removal of which appellant sought to' enjoin.

Appellant owned a plantation in Bolivar county consisting of about three thousand acres known as the O1’Reilly place. She owned it by inheritance from her husband, Louis Waldauer, who died in the summer of 1919. The lease contract involved was made by appellant’s husband in the latter part of 1918 for the term of five years beginning January 1, 1919, ending therefore on the 31st day of December, 1923. The lease was made to one Mc-Dill, who, in the summer of 1919, assigned it with all his rig;hts thereunder to appellees. The contract carried with it an option to the lessees to purchase the plantation at one hundred dollars per acre at any rent-paying period during the continuance of the lease. Dur *624 ing- the term of their lease appellees cleared up and put in cultivation something over two hundred acres of the plantation that was not in cultivation when the lease was made. About seventy acres of this land was what is known as green land — never1 had been in cultivation. The balance had been in cultivation and was grown up in woods and bushes. During their term, and principally in 1920' and 1921, appellees in order to properly cultivate the lands- already in cultivation at the beginning of their term, as well as those brought into cultivation by them during the term, as above set out, erected on the plantation stables, barns, cotton houses, pumps, fences, and other improvements. The evidence shows that the principal part of these structures (which for convenience will be referred to as building’s) were made necessary on account of the additional land cleared up and brought into cultivation by appellees. As appellees’ lease was expiring in the latter part of 1923, they proceeded to remove the buildings, when appellant filed the bill in this case seeking to enjoin them from doing so. Appellant’s bill alleges- that the buildings were affixed to the freehold and were a part thereof, and were erected by appellees for the purpose of enhancing the value of the inheritance and not with the intention of removing the same at the end of their lease, and that if appellees were permitted to remove them from the plantation, as they were attempting to do, it would cause appellant irreparable injury, etc.

Appellees answered admitting the allegations of the bill as to the unconstroverted facts, but denied that the building's which they had erected on the lands1 were fixtures and had become a part of the freehold, and that they were erected for the purpose of enhancing the value of the inheritance, and averred in their answer that they were erected for trade purposes alone, namely, in order to properly and efficiently and profitably carry on their planting and mercantile operations on the leased premises, and that they were made with the intention at the time of removing the same before the termination of *625 tlieir lease. . Appellees denied in their answer that the removal of the buildings would cause appellant irreparable injury.

There was a mass of testimony taken in the case. It ivas conflicting as to the purpose of the appellees in erecting the buildings during tlieir term. There was little, if any, conflict in the evidence as to the necessity of the buildings for the profitable cultivation of the plantation. The conflict was with reference to whether they were erected with a view of being permanent and constituting a part of the freehold, or as trade fixtures with the intention of their removal at the end of the lease. The chancellor’s finding of facts was with appellees and there was sufficient evidence to justify his finding. Appellant argues, however, that taking the facts as found by the chancellor to be true, nevertheless under the law the buildings in question were of such character as that they became a permanent part of the freehold and were therefore not removable.

The general rule is that whatever is affixed to the land thereby becomes a part of the realty to which it adheres and becomes a part of the freehold and partakes of all of its incidents and properties. To this general rule, however, there are exceptions and qualifications. The greatest relaxation of it is in favor of the tenant who has erected structure's on the land during his tenancy. The general rule is applied with strictness as between heir and executor, mortgagor and mortgagee, and vendor and vendee, but with much leniency as between landlord and tenant. Stillman v. Hamer, 7 How. 421; Terry v. Robins, 5 Smedes & M. 291; Richardson v. Borden, 42 Miss. 71, 2 Am. Rep. 595; Weathersby v. Sleeper, 42 Miss. 732; McMath v. Levy, 74 Miss. 451, 21 So. 9, 523; Van Ness v. Pacard, 2 Pet. 137, 7 L. Ed. 374; Harkness v. Sears, 26 Ala. 493, 62 Am. Dec. 742.

The Yan Ness case is one of the leading cases in this country on this question. The opinion of the. supreme court in that case was written by Justice Story. It is a very able and exhaustive discussion of the doctrine as *626 applies between landlord, and tenant. The building which the tenant claimed the right to remove in that case was- a dwelling’ house erected on the leased land attached to the'freehold.

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Bluebook (online)
106 So. 881, 141 Miss. 617, 1926 Miss. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waldauer-v-parks-miss-1926.