Witherspoon & Gilliam v. Nickels

Harrison, J.

The appellants sought to enjoin the appellee, who was sheriff and ex-qfficio collector of taxes of Hot Spring-county, from selling a steam saw and grist mill, levied on for the taxes for the year 1870.

The mill was situated upon the land of Yalentine .Brown, and was attached to the soil, but it belonged, when the assessment was'made, to Charles Trickett, from whom the appellants "afterwards purchased it, and was afterwards assessed as his personal property. The appellants claimed that the milt was a fixture, and as such, its value was included in the assessment of the land. Though a structure such as this, apparently possesses the stability and permanency pertaining to real estate, it is not necessarily a fixture, and part of the realty;- for as the court remarked in Fuller vs. Taylor, 39 Maine, 522, “there can be no doubt that one m ay own a building-standing on the land of another, with his consent;” and in that case, it was'decided that a dwelling house erected on the land of another, with the previous knowledge and consent of the owner of the land, remains the personal property of the builder. And in Ashmem vs. Williams, 8 Pick, 402, it was held that a town house, erected on land of the town, under a contract with the builder, that the town should occupy pai-t of it at a certain rent, and should have the right to purchase the house at an appraised value, was the personal property of the builder. Curtis vs. Hoyt, 19 Conn, 154; Russell vs. Richards, 10 Maine, 429; Hilburne vs. Brown, 12 Id., 162; Hensly vs. Brodie, 16 Ark., 511; Hill on Fixtures 18; Green. Cruise’s Digest, 43.

The appellants’ assumption that the mill was a fixture, is, inconsistent with and repugnant to their ownership of it. If a fixture, it necessarily belonged to the owner of the land, as a part of it; and it may be laid down as a self-evident proposition, admitting of no exception, that the title to the land cannot be in one person, and that to the fixture in another.

But if the mill had been assessed with the land, and not as the personal property of Trickett, and no taxes were due upon it, a * court of law would afford the appellants an adequate remedy for any injury they might suffer by the sale of it, and equity has no authority to interfere, by injunction, to prevent it. , t

Decree affirmed.