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April 11, 2005   

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News & Advice > Legal Advice

Housing Counsel: To Avoid Contract Disputes, Itemize Items That Convey
by Benny L. Kass

Question: We have signed a contract to buy our first house. Before we signed the agreement, there were two refrigerators in the house: one in the kitchen and the other in the basement. The real estate agent told us that both refrigerators would stay with the property. Settlement is scheduled for next week, and now we have been advised that the basement refrigerator will be removed.

I do not understand when a refrigerator is a fixture and when it is not.

Answer: Your question has stumped a lot of people, including several law professors to whom this question was posed.

There is no easy answer as to what is a fixture. An item, standing by itself, may not be a fixture, but when made part of the property, it can change its characteristics.

For example, a kitchen sink in an appliance store is personal property. Once it has been installed in your house, however, it becomes a fixture and is part of the real estate.

Generally speaking, and in the absence of a contractual agreement to the contrary, fixtures remain with the house. Personal items can be removed by the seller.

As you can see, it makes a difference if an item is characterized "personal property" or "fixtures." For example, can a seller take a removable wet bar from the basement, even though the plumbing is hooked up? Does a window air conditioning unit convey with the property?

There are no easy answers to any of these questions. The courts have applied a number of tests, including:

  • The manner in which the item is attached to the real estate. If the article can be removed without substantial injury to the building, it is generally held to be personal property.

  • The character of the property and its adaptation to the real estate. If, for example, an article was fitted or constructed specially for a particular location or use in a house, one can argue that this becomes a permanent part of the building, and thus a fixture.

    For example, the courts have held these items to be fixtures: pews in a church, screens and storm windows specially fitted to a house and electronic computing equipment installed on a floor specially constructed for it.

  • The intention of the parties. What would the average person consider the property to be? Gas stoves, for example, are intended to remain in a house permanently, and thus are fixtures. The so-called "Murphy beds" fastened to the wall on pivots are considered fixtures. But roll-away beds that are not fastened to the wall are not fixtures (except in Wisconsin).

Going through this fascinating history of fixtures, one important caveat comes to mind.

When in doubt, spell it out in the contract. Furthermore, if the seller or the real estate agent verbally advises you that a particular item will convey, have this specifically written into your real estate contract. If you want the refrigerator to convey with the property, put it in the contract to avoid any confrontation in the future.

When real property is involved, verbal statements will generally not be admissible in a court of law. The stakes are too high (especially with property values appreciating as they have been doing in recent years), and there can be a lot of confusion, when the parties do not reduce their promises and their commitments to writing.

Too many homebuyers are often disappointed because they relied on what the agent or the seller said -- or what they thought the agent said -- and just did not reduce those representations to writing into the sales contract.

In your case, my first question is whether the real estate agent was your agent or the seller's agent. If the latter, I would argue that the second refrigerator should stay with the property, or else the agent should buy you a second one. This is based not necessarily on the fact that it is a fixture, but on the promises made by the seller's agent -- and on which you relied.

The seller, on the other hand, may have a case against their agent, if that agent did not have the legal authority to make the representation about the refrigerator.

Be on the safe side: put everything into your written sales contract and have it signed by the buyer and the seller.

Published: April 11, 2005




Author of the weekly Housing Counsel column with The Washington Post for nearly 30 years, Benny Kass is the senior partner with the Washington, DC law firm of Kass, Mitek & Kass, PLLC and a specialist in such real estate legal areas as commercial and residential financing, closings, foreclosures and workouts.

Mr. Kass is a Charter Member of the College of Community Association Attorneys, and has written extensively about community association issues. In addition, he is a life member of the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws. In this capacity, he has been involved in the development of almost all of the Commission’s real estate laws, including the Uniform Common Interest Ownership Act which has been adopted in many states.


Copyright © 2005 Realty Times®. All Rights Reserved.

Benny L. Kass
Columnist Benny L. Kass



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