Opinion
(December Term, 1840.)
1. A purchaser of a growing crop of corn, at an execution sale, must declare in trespass on his personal chattels against one who tortiously severs the corn from the stalks and throws it on the ground.
2. A grant of the vesture or herbage of land passes a particular right in the land itself, and for that purpose also "a particular possession and occupation" of the land itself. Such a grantee may therefore maintain trespass quare clausum fregit for any interruption of his possession.
3. But there is a distinction between those profits which are the spontaneous products of the earth, and the corn, etc., which are produced annually by labor and industry, and thence are called fructus industriales. The latter are, for most purposes, regarded as personal chattels, and a sale of them, while growing, is only a sale of goods.
4. He who directs, aids, or encourages another in the commission of a trespass is himself a trespasser.
TRESPASS, tried at Fall Term, 1840, of MACON, before Bailey, J. The declaration was for a trespass by the defendant on the personal property of the plaintiff. The facts were these: The plaintiff claimed under a sale by execution of the standing crop of corn, which had been (266) raised by the defendant Bates on his own land. The sale was regular and the plaintiff was the purchaser. The sale was made on 14 September, 1837. It was proved that the defendant Bates pulled down the corn soon thereafter, and swore the plaintiff should never take it; that he would kill his driver and team, if he attempted to take it away; that shortly after that time (the witness did not know whether Bates had finished pulling the corn, or whether he was in the field) the plaintiff brought his wagon to haul the corn away. The defendant McKay, who also claimed the corn under an execution sale, rode up and said the plaintiff should not have the corn, and stepped before the team, and swore if the plaintiff took the corn he should take it over his dead body, but agreed that he might take a load of oats, and, on his agreeing to take the oats, suffered the plaintiff's wagon to pass into the field for that purpose. The defendants' counsel contended that this did not constitute a trespass on the personal property; that the defendant Bates had a right to pull down the corn, though the plaintiff had a right to the crop under his purchase at execution sale; and that the defendant McKay committed no trespass on the property, he merely preventing the plaintiff from hauling it by threatening him. His Honor charged the jury that if the plaintiff's purchase of the growing crop was fair, the property in the corn vested in him, and he had the right to gather it; that the defendant Bates had no more right to pull the corn than any other man, and that, if he did so, he was a trespasser; and that if they, from the evidence, believed that the other defendant, McKay, directed, aided, or encouraged him to commit the trespass, he would also be guilty, and the plaintiff would be entitled to recover some damages.
The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff, and assessed 5 cents damages. The defendants moved for a new trial on the grounds stated above, which was refused by the court, who rendered judgment for the plaintiff. From this judgment the defendants appealed to the Supreme Court.
No counsel for plaintiff.
Francis for defendants.
As the law authorizes an execution to be levied (267) upon a growing crop as a chattel, it must afford to the purchaser a remedy against all who unlawfully disturb him in the enjoyment of it. What that remedy should be seems to have occasioned some perplexity with the courts. In New York it appears to be fully settled that the vendee of a growing crop acquires such an exclusive right to the possession of the land whereon it grows as to make that land his close until the crop can be gathered and removed, and that, therefore, he may maintain trespass quare clausum fregit against any who enter thereon without his leave. Stewart v. Doughty, 9 Johns., 108; Austin v. Sawyer, 9 Cowen, 39. And this doctrine is avowedly founded on the analogy which is thought to prevail between the interest which is transferred by such a sale and that which passes under the grant of the vesture or of the herbage of the soil. Our researches and reflections have, however, brought us to a different conclusion.
"If a man hath 20 acres of land, and by deed grant to another and his heirs vesturam terrae, and maketh livery of seizin secundum formam chartae, the land itself shall not pass, because he hath a particular right in the land; for thereby he shall not have the houses, timber, trees, mines, and other real things, parcel of the inheritance, but he shall have the vesture of the land, that is, the corn, grass, underwood, sweepage, and the like; and he shall have an action of trespass quare clausum fregit." Co. Lit., 4 b. "The same law, if a man grant herbagium terrae he hath a like particular right in the land, and shall have an action quare clausum fregit; but by grant thereof, and livery made, the soil shall not pass as aforesaid. If a man let to B the herbage of his woods, and after grant all his lands in the tenure, possession or occupation of B, the woods shall pass, for B hath a particular possession and occupation, which is sufficient in this case." Co. Lit., ut supra. These portions of Lord Coke are universally regarded as laying down accurately the law in relation to the interests which pass under a grant of the vesture or of the herbage of land. A grant of this kind, therefore, doth pass, (268) not indeed the whole land, but a particular right in the land itself — and for that purpose, also, "a particular possession and occupation" of the land itself. It passes to the grantee the exclusive right to use and enjoyment of these profits as a parcel of the land; of consequence, the exclusive right to the profits themselves, and of consequence, also, the exclusive possession thereof, as indispensable to the exercise of this right. Burt v. Moore, 5 Term, 330. Wherever there is such an exclusive right to the possession, trespass quare clausum fregit will lie, because for that purpose the land is the close of the possessor. Wilson v. Mackwreth, 3 Bur., 1826; Hoe v. Taylor, Moore, 365. But the law makes a pointed distinction between those profits which are the spontaneous products of the earth or its permanent fruits and the corn and other growth of the earth which are produced annually by labor and industry, and thence are called fructus industriales. The latter for most purposes are regarded as personal chattels. Upon the death of the owner of the land before they are gathered, they go to his executor and not his heir. Upon the termination of an estate of uncertain duration by an act other than that of the lessee, they belong to him as personal chattels, and do not go over to the owner of the soil; they are liable to be seized and sold under execution as personal chattels, and a sale of them while growing is not a contract or sale of land, or any interest in or concerning land under the statute of frauds, but a sale of goods. See Co. Lit., 55 a, b, and 56 a; Smith v. Tritt, 18 N.C. 241; Evans v. Roberts, 5 Barn. and Cress., 829 (12 E. C. L., 377); Sconell v. Baxall, 1 Young and Jac., 398. The vendee of the sheriff, therefore, purchases them as personal chattels, not as a parcel of the land, and by the sale acquires no particular right in the land itself whereon they are growing, nor any particular possession or occupation of the land. The law unquestionably annexeth to this transfer of the chattels whatever is necessary for the taking and enjoying thereof; and, therefore, in the language of Littleton, sec. 68, he who shall have the corn "shall have also free entry, egress, and regress, to cut and carry away the corn." Lord Coke, commenting upon these words of Littleton, adds: "And the law in this case driveth him (269) not to an action for the corn, but giveth him a speedy remedy to enter upon the land and to take and carry it away, and compelleth him not to take it at one time, or to carry it away before it be ready to be carried; and therefore the law giveth all which is convenient, viz.: free entry, egress, and regress, as much as is necessary." Co. Lit., 56 a. And he further remarks: "If the lessee" (whose uncertain term has been put an end to, without his fault, and who endeavors to enter to gather his growing crop) "be disturbed of this way, which the law doth give unto him, he shall have his action upon his case and recover his damages; and this action the law doth give unto him, for whenever the law giveth anything, it giveth also a remedy for the same." Co. Lit., ut supra. From this, the conclusion seems unavoidable that the purchaser of the growing crop does not become the tenant of the land, but acquires as incidental to that purchase a temporary easement in nature of a right of way over the land. The corn growing is his property, and, therefore, he may bring an action for that; but the law giveth him a more speedy remedy, not a further interest or property affecting the land itself. The law doth not make the land his close, but authorizes him, although it be the close of another, to make entry thereon to obtain his property. And as it giveth him this right of way, it will give him compensation in damages in an action upon the case against any one who disturbs him in the enjoyment of this right. This view is in accordance with that taken in a very learned and accurate work, Williams on Executors, vol. 1, p. 460, where it is stated: "When there is a right to emblements, the law gives a free entry, egress, and regress, as much as is necessary, in order to cut and carry them away; but the emblements do not give a title to exclusive occupation." It has been supposed that the case of Crosby v. Wadsworth, 6 East, 601, countenances the doctrine that the purchaser of a growing crop of corn acquires an exclusive possession of the close, so that he may maintain trespass quare clausum fregit. It must be admitted that the distinction, which we believe to be the true one, between the transfer of a growing crop of corn and of the growing (270) herbage was not pointedly taken in that case; but the case did not call for such a distinction. The contract there was for a standing crop of mowing grass then growing on the vendor's land, and not of fructus industriales, and therefore was properly regarded as a contract respecting "an unsevered portion of the freehold, and not movable goods, or personal chattels." Lord Ellenborough's remarks, 6 East, 610. But in the case of Evans v. Roberts the distinction is drawn and fully recognized, and thereby, we think, much of the perplexity and confusion which had been occasioned by not adverting to that distinction removed from the subject. Our opinion upon this point is, that the action is properly brought as for a trespass on the plaintiff's goods.
We see no error in that part of his Honor's instructions which informed the jury that if, from the evidence, they believed the defendant McKay directed, aided, or encouraged the other defendant in the commission of the trespass, he also was liable as a trespasser. The judge did not put McKay's guilt upon the ground of a subsequent assent to the trespass of Bates, as the counsel for the defendants supposes, but upon the ground of previous or contemporaneous direction, aid, and encouragement. Whether the evidence proved such concurrence was a matter for the decision of the jury; for we think there was evidence tending to prove it, and fit for their consideration.
PER CURIAM. No error.
Cited: Robinson v. Gee, 26 N.C. 191; Flynt v. Conrad, 61 N.C. 192; Lewis v. McNatt, 65 N.C. 65; Walton v. Jordan, ib., 172; Bond v. Coke, 71 N.C. 100; London v. Bear, 84 N.C. 274; Kesler v. Cornelison, 98 N.C. 385; S. v. Green, 100 N.C. 423; S. v. Cook, 132 N.C. 1057; Ives v. R. R., 142 N.C. 134; York v. Westall, 143 N.C. 281; Midyette v. Grubbs, 145 N.C. 88.
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