DocketNumber: No. 8097
Citation Numbers: 172 Ga. 815, 159 S.E. 277, 1931 Ga. LEXIS 215
Judges: Hines
Filed Date: 6/10/1931
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
(After stating the foregoing facts.) The question for decision is this: If a cotenant purchases a furnace for installation in a dwelling owned by him and his cotenants, the purchaser representing that he is the sole owner of the property, and the seller, acting in good faith in relying upon such' representation, sells and installs a furnace upon the premises under a contract of sale in which the purchaser stipulates that he is the sole owner of the premises, that the furnace is to remain personalty, that title thereto is to remain in the seller until the deferred payments of the purchase-price are paid in full, and that upon default of the purchaser in the payment of any one of the deferred payments of the purchase-money the seller can remove the furnace from the dwelling; and if the purchaser, having paid only a small initial payment upon the purchase-price, defaults in the payment of the deferred installments thereof, and under an accelerating clause in the contract of sale the seller declares all of the purchase-money due, makes demand upon the purchaser for the furnace, and upon his refusal to deliver the furnace or permit the seller to remove it the seller institutes an action of trover to recover from the purchaser the furnace, can the cotenant of the purchaser in equity enjoin the trover action and the seller from removing the furnace from the dwelling, if the furnace can be removed from the dwelling without material damage to the dwelling? Where there is a contract by the express terms of which fixtures are to be considered as personalty, they will, as between the parties, be so treated. Smith v. Odom, 63 Ga. 499; Wright v. DuBignon, 114 Ga. 765 (40 S. E. 747, 57 L. R. A. 669); Richards v. Gilbert, 116 Ga. 382 (42 S. E.. 715); Power v. Garrison, 141 Ga. 429 (81 S. E. 225); Armour v. Block, 147 Ga. 639 (95 S. E. 228); Wofford Oil Co. v. Weems
But it is said in this case that the furnace was purchased and installed by one of the tenants in common, and not under contract or agreement with his cotenants; and It is insisted that for this reason the furnace can not be removed, even if the removal would not materially injure the dwelling. With this contention we can not agree. A tenant in common can make improvements upon real estate owned by him and others as cotenants. So where the conditional buyer of a silo placed the same upon land of his wife in such a manner that it could be removed without damage thereto, it was held that the conditional seller’s rights were superior to the rights of the wife, where she failed to show that she was a purchaser without knowledge of the conditional contract, or that she had parted with some right on account of the annexation of the property to her realty, notwithstanding the fact that the contract of condi
There is another conclusive reason why the plaintiff in this case can not enjoin the seller of this furnace from removing it from the dwelling in which it was installed. She comes into a court of equity to assert title to this furnace. While it is true, as a general rule, that if a tenant in common improve the property while in possession and claiming to be sole owner, and with no permission or request from the cotenant, the latter is not chargeable with the value of such improvements beyond her share of the rents chargeable to the former, there is an exception to this general rule; and that is, where one cotenant comes into equity and seeks its aid to enforce his title, equity, in decreeing the relief, will require him to account for the improvements. Bazemore v. Davis, 55 Ga. 504 (10), 519. This doctrine is based upon the familiar and one of the fundamental maxims of equity that he who comes into equity must do equity. Civil Code (1910), § 4521. It would be inequitable for the plaintiff in this case to retain and enjoy the benefits of this furnace, when the seller has been paid only a pittance of its value.
It follows from the above rulings and from the facts in evidence that the trial judge erred in so far as he enjoined the company from the prosecution of its suit to recover possession of this property, and in ordering the sale of the property including the furnace for the purposes of partition.
Judgment reversed.