Dudley v. Foote , 63 N.H. 57 ( 1884 )


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  • The hay-scales, being originally a part of the real estate of Reuben Johnson, passed, with the soil under them, not to his executor, but to his heirs, as a well dug and stoned by the testator at the same place would have passed to them; and their title was not divested and the legal character of the property was not changed by the classification of the executor's inventory. The sixth part of the scales that passed to Mrs. Gage (one of the heirs) has not ceased to be a part of her undivided sixth of the whole tract of land. The rest of the tract was conveyed by her co-heirs to her husband. The plaintiff has acquired no interest in the land by deed, devise, descent, prescription, or estoppel; and the questions are, whether one half of the scales became the plaintiff's personal property, and whether, in this action of assumpsit, she can recover a part of the income received by the defendants, who are agents of Mr. Gage, who is agent of his wife.

    The land under the weighing apparatus belongs to Mr. and Mrs. Gage, and an undivided part of the income received by the defendants is compensation for the use of that land; and if the plaintiff could recover some of the income she would not be entitled to any of the ground rent included in the income.

    Mrs. Gage has not consented to a transformation of any part of the scales into personal property, nor imposed upon the land the incumbrance of the plaintiff's right to keep her personal property *Page 59 on it; and the cotenants of Mrs. Gage could not subject the land to such an incumbrance to her detriment. If, by the bills of sale, the plaintiff had become owner of one half of the scales as personal property, that half would occupy the Gages' land under a license which Mrs. Gage might claim was unauthorized, and which Mr. Gage might claim was revocable or limited in time. Houston v. Laffee, 46 N.H. 505; Batchelder v. Hibbard,58 N.H. 269; Taylor v. Gerrish, 59 N.H. 569; Morse v. Copeland, 2 Gray 302; Wiseman v. Lucksinger, 84 N.Y. 31; Wood v. Leadbitter, 13 M. W. 838; Adams v. Andrews, 15 A. E. (N.S.) 284; Cornish v. Stubbs, L. R. 5 C. P. 334; Mellor v. Watkins, L. R. 9 Q. B. 400. With or without a revocation or other termination of the license, there would be a question whether the plaintiff could rightfully keep her half of the scales where they are. And as they are probably indivisible, and a removal of the whole or half of them would be a destruction of Mrs. Gage's real estate, there would be a question whether the plaintiff could rightfully carry her half away. But it is not necessary to consider the difficulties of the ownership for which the plaintiff contends, or to inquire whether Mrs. Gage's cotenants could, by deed, constructively change an undivided portion of a stratum of a section of the land into personalty.

    If a deed of the scales, executed by all the heirs of Reuben Johnson, would have conveyed the scales and the land under them (Marston v. Stickney, 58 N.H. 609), and if the cotenants of Mrs. Gage could have made a partial partition of the whole tract by a deed of their five sixths of the scales (4 Kent 368; Davis v. Barnard, 60 N.H. 550), the bills of sale given by them and Mr. Gage, not being deeds, did not convey a legal title. Kingsley v. Holbrook, 45 N.H. 313; Howe v. Batchelder, 49 N.H. 204; Stewart v. Clark, 13 Met. 79; S. Bank v. Cong. Society, 127 Mass. 516; Morss v. Salisbury, 48 N.Y. 636; Wheeler v. Reynolds, 66 N.Y. 227. Material things, united in fact, are sometimes separated in contemplation of law. For some purposes there may be a constructive severance of growing trees or other part of the realty, and a conversion of the constructively severed part into personalty by deed. Kingsley v. Holbrook, supra; Gooding v. Riley, 50 N.H. 400, 412, 413; Hoit v. Stratton Mills, 54 N.H. 109, 110,111; L. F. Co. v. L. G. F. Co., 82 N.Y. 476, 484, 485; Irons v. Webb, 12 Vr. 203. The severance and conversion are effected by the instrument that divides the title of the realty into parts, and conveys a part away. The farm of A is not turned into personal property by his deed conveying the whole title to B, or by a bill of sale that conveys nothing. Here has been no conveyance by either of the Gages, and no actual or constructive severance of the scales or one half of them from the rest of the land. By a bill of sale not under seal, given by Mr. Gage either before or after he received his deed, he could convey neither one half of the whole tract of land, nor one half of an unsevered part of it. Such a bill *Page 60 of sale, signed by him and his wife, would not have transferred the legal title.

    If, for the purpose of this case, any intention of Reuben Johnson could have prevented the scales becoming real estate, it does not appear that he had an intention that could qualify the legal effect of his annexation of them to his soil. The opinion of subsequent owners of the and that the scales were not real estate was an error of law that did not change the legal character of the property, and Mr. Gage's intention to convey one half of the scales was not carried into effect by such an instrument as the law requires for the conveyance of realty. If all the signers of all the bills of sale intended to make the purchaser a tenant in common of the land, or owner of an undivided part of the scales constructively severed from the land, and if either of the bills of sale is a memorandum of a contract of which specific performance can be enforced in equity by a decree for a deed making the plaintiff the owner of one half of the scales unsevered or constructively severed, such a deed cannot be given by the defendants; and all the bills of sale without a seal have not carried to the plaintiff the legal title necessary for the maintenance of this action. For the purpose of this case the bills of sale are as immaterial as so many oral sales of unsevered realty. The scales are a part of the land; and the plaintiff, not being a cotenant of the land, is not a cotenant of its income.

    Judgment for the defendants.

    CARPENTER, J., did not sit: the others concurred.