after stating the case: The contention, of the defendant is, not that there was any express warranty as to the title of the “LeEoy Wharf at Newbern’s Landing,” but that the law implied a warranty of title, and as the defendant has lost that piece of the property conveyed to it by the LeEoy Steamboat Company, it should be compensated in damages and the money in the hands of the plaintiff should be applied to the payment of its claim, as defendant was legally — -and if not, then equitably — entitled thereto. But the defendant’s reasoning fails at its very inception. There was no covenant of warranty against the existence of liens or encumbrances as to any of the real property conveyed to it. Having omitted to have such a covenant inserted in the deed, the law will not imply one in its favor, ljut compel the defendant to abide by the terms of the contract as settled by the parties and expressed in their deed. “Covenants of title (in a sale of real property) are never implied. Consequently, in the absence of fraud or mistake, if a deed contains no covenant, all questions of title are at the risk of the grantee. If the title fail, he is without remedy, either at law or in equity, against the grantor.” 11 Cyc., 1063, and cases in note 20. And so it is said in Walsh v. Hall, 66 N. C., at p. 237: “Where land has been sold and a deed of conveyance has been duly delivered, the contract becomes executed, and the parties are governed by its terms, and the purchaser’s *460only right of relief, either at law or in equity, for defects or encumbrances, depends, in the absence of fraud, solely upon the covenants in the deed which he has received. Rawle Covenants for Title, 459.”
In McKesson v. Hennessee, 66 N. C., 413, it appeared that plaintiff in 1860 had purchased a tract of land from the defendant and taken a deed therefor in fee, but without any covenant of warranty or against liens or encumbrances. Defendant sued upon the note given by plaintiff for the purchase money and recovered judgment thereon, and plaintiff sought to enjoin him from enforcing it on the ground that the title had failed. Issues were submitted to the jury as to the state of the title and the damages if it was found to have been defective, but this Court held them to be irrelevant, as there was no covenant in the deed to protect the title, Chief Justice Pearson saying: “The complaint and answer both treat the deed of Nancy Hennessee to McKesson as a conveyance and not as an executory agreement to make title. It follows, there being no warranty or covenant of seizin, that the claim which the plaintiff seeks to set up has nothing to rest on. The legal effect of the deed was a quitclaim or release by way of extinguishment, and the finding of the jury was upon matter immaterial.” It seems, therefore, to be settled now that at law, and even in equity, a vendee has no remedy on the ground of failure of title, if he has no covenants, and there is no fraud or mistake. Chesterman v. Gardner, 5 Johnson Ch. (N. Y.), 29; Gouveneur v. Elmendorf, ibid., 79; Snyder v. Laframboise, 12 Am. Dec., 187, and note in Extra Annotated Edition at p. 191, citing Dorsey v. Jackman, 7 Am. Dec., 611; Doyle v. Knapp, 3 Scam., 334; Owings v. Thompson, ibid., 505; Slack v. McLagan, 15 Ill., 242; Sheldon v. Harding, 44 Ill., 68, and other cases. See, also, Maney v. Porter, 3 Mumphreys (Tenn.), 346-363; Botsford v. Wilson, 75 Ill., 132. The Court said in Sheldon v. Harding, supra: “There can he no doubt that a quitclaim deed for land, without reference to the character of the title, is, in the absence of fraud, a sufficient consideration to support a contract; money paid for such a conveyance cannot be recovered back, or a plea of failure of consideration maintained to a note given for such a conveyance. Such deeds are made because the vendor is unwilling to warrant the title, and they are accepted°because the grantee is willing to take the hazard of the title, and believes it is worth the price he pays or agrees to pay. And, unless fraud is practiced upon the grantee, the law permits such contracts to be made, and will uphold and enforce them. But where the vendee agrees to give a specific title he must do so whether there is fraud or not.” It has been stated in some of the books that while no covenant of title will be implied from the mere fact of the conveyance of the land, one will be implied where it was evidently intended by the words of the instrument that it should be so, but this is but the usual inference permitted to be drawn from the language of *461the parties, where their meaning is sufficiently certain and explicit to justify it. It is not a warranty implied by law from the conveyance. Besides, in this case, there is an express warranty or covenant as to liens or encumbrances on the steamers, excluding the idea that any warranty or covenant of other kind was intended as to the wharves, landings or other real property which was just as much subject to defects as the personal property. The deed, therefore, on its face and by its terms, as said in Basnight v. Small, 163 N. C., at p. 15, instead of strengthening the contention of defendant, refutes it, upon the familiar maxim, “Expressio unius est exclusio alterius
The defendant contends, however, that the wharf at Newbern’s Landing is personal property, and that there is always a warranty of title, though not of quality or soundness, implied in the sale of chattels; but we cannot agree that the first premise is correct. The wharf was built upon the land, or banks of the stream. The structure was permanently annexed to the land for the better enjoyment of the freehold and was manifestly intended to become a part thereof, although the vendee may not have an absolute fee-simple estate therein, but only a base, qualified, or determinable fee. The rule of the common law as stated by Lord Ellenborough in Elwes v. Mawe, 3 East, 38 (2 Smith’s Leading Cases (9 Ed.), p. 1423), to determine what is a fixture as between vendor and vendee, is that “Whatever is affixed to the freehold becomes a part of it and passes with it,” and he adds: “The rule is observed in its full vigor.” Any accepted definition of a fixture, when applied to the admitted facts of this case, will lead us to the conclusion that this wharf is of that character, and passed as a part of the land to the vendee. It is in no legal sense personal property. Pemberton v. King, 13 N. C., 376; Moore v. Valentine, 77 N. C., 188; Foote v. Gooch, 96 N. C., 265; Overman v. Sasser, 107 N. C., 432; Hopper v. Lutkins, 4 N. J. Eq., 149; S. v. Martin, 141 N. C., 832, and especially Basnight v. Small, 163 N. C., 15, where it was held that a tramway consisting of rails fastened to cross-ties, which were laid on the ground, for the purpose of removing timber from the woods where it was cut, w;as a fixture, and so here, the wharves were built on the bank of the river and its bed, for the purpose of improving the landings and aiding in the carriage of articles of commerce from one landing to another. The analogy between the two cases is .perfect.. Hopper v. Lutkins, supra, which also clearly illustrates the doctrine, was a case where the purchaser of a mill-seat and water-power accepted his vendor’s deed without any covenant for his protection, as to the height of the dam or the extent of the’flow to which he is entitled, and afterwards was subjected to damages by reason of the improper height of the dam, and though this was a defect in his title to the full and free use of the water, the Court held that, without a showing of fraud or mistake, he was without any remedy against his *462vendor, either in law, or even in equity, to enjoin a recovery on the note given for the purchase money.
In any admissible view of the facts, so far as considered, the ruling and judgment of the court were correct, but we may also go further and state, that the money was deposited with Gaither to discharge liens on the steamers alone, and not any on the land, nor is there any stipulation that any part of the fund should be applied to compensate defendant for any defect in the title to the other property conveyed. So that, apart from the above considerations, it would seem that defendant meets with an insuperable difficulty in the fact that such an application of the fund as it seeks to have made is not authorized by the agreement of the parties made, which we are not at liberty to alter. The purchase money on the “wharves, docks, piers, and landings,” by clear inference, was paid over to the LeRoy Steamboat Company at the time the sale was consummated, and only $2,000 of that part applicable ro the steamers was retained and deposited to pay off any liens upon them.
We affirm the judgment, as there is no error discoverable in the record.
No error.