The buildings to which the plaintiffs claim the right of possession were built for the defendant on his land. Colton agreed to erect the buildings upon the foundations prepared by the defendant for the sum of $2,100, to be paid in installments, — $500 when the buildings were raised and boarded, $500 when the outside was completed, $600 when the plastering was finished, and the remaining $500 when the buildings were completed. Colton abandoned the contract after receiving $1,600 for labor and materials furnished under it, and the defendant completed the buildings at an expense exceeding the contract price. Upon these facts Colton had no title *Page 375 to the buildings. It was never understood that he was the owner. This is not a case of buildings belonging to the builder, though erected on land of another by permission of the owner of the land. In such a case the buildings do not become a part of the realty, but are personal property, and the owner may sell or remove them. But in this case the buildings were built for the defendant. The work was done under his superintendence; and if the buildings were not regarded as accepted as fast as the work progressed, from the necessity of the case, upon payment of each installment of the price, the title to the buildings so far as then completed passed to the defendant. 2 Pars. Cont. 29. The plaintiffs therefore have no title and no right of possession to the buildings, because they derived none from Colton under whom they claim. At the time when the windows were furnished by the plaintiffs, for which they claim a lien, Colton was not the owner of the buildings, but a contractor merely; and the plaintiffs, having neglected to avail themselves of the statutory provisions for securing a lien in such cases, have no cause of action against the defendant upon the facts appearing in this case.
Case discharged.
ALLEN, J., did not sit: the others concurred.