after stating the facts of the case as above, proceeded :
In the cas.e of Latham v. Blakely, 70 N. C. Rep., 368, decided at last term, this Court, in a very similar case of facts, .•upon a thorough review of all the conflicting authorities, held that the gin was a fixture. That case governs this as to the ■status of the gin and press, which we declare to be fixtures to .the land and a part of the freehold.
The case is not altered by the fact that these fixtures were erected subsequent to the mortgage. In Winslow v. The Merchants Ins. Co., 4 Metcalf, 306, it was held that a steam engine and other machinery of a manufactory were to be considered as fixtures, and had vested as such in the defendants tunder a mortgage of the building prior to the period at which *99they were erected against the plaintiff who claimed as here, under a subsequent specific mortgage of the machinery itself. Many cases to the same effect are collected in 2 Smith L. Cases, 254-5.
The gin and press having thus been so far annexed to the freehold as to acquire the character of fixtures, became mere incidents to the realty and conformed to all the laws by which it is governed, subject to the dower of the widow, descend to the heir, pass to the vendee of the land, unless expressly excepted in the conveyance, &c. Preston v. Briggs, 16 Vermont, 124; 12 N. H., 205; 6 Cowen, 665; 2 Smith L. Cases, 255.
The title to the gin and press, having thus vested in the trustee, Pruden, as pa>rt of the realty, passed by his sale and conveyance to the defendant, unless the exception of these two articles, at the sale of the land, had the effect of preventing the title as to the gin and press from passing with the land.
This is the ground of the plaintiff’s claim, but there are several fatal objections to its validity.
1. The general rule of law is, that parol evidence is inadmissible to contradict or vary the terms of a valid written instrument} therefore, when, as to the extent and limitations of an estate, in a deed, the intention of the maker is to be ascertained, the Court must decide upon the face of the instrument itself. 1 Greenl. Ev. S., 275-6. Clayton v. Liverman, 7 Ire. 92. The deed, in our case, containing no exception of the gin and press, the legal effect of it is to pass them to the defendant, and no parol evidence to the contrary is admissible.
2. The exception of the gin and press at the sale being an agreement touching the sale of an interest in lands, the Statute of Frauds requires it to be in writing. And even if the agreement reserving the gin and press had been in writing, it could only be set up by a bill in equity to reform the deed on the ground of accident or mistake in the draftsman, for the effect of the deed is to pass the land and every substantial part of it} hence, if there be a parol agreement to convey land and to ex*100cept the fruit or trees, or certain timber trees, and a deed is ex ecnted which does not except the fruit or trees, that part of the-agreement in respect to them is defeated. Flynt v. Conrad, Phil. 190.
The case just cited,, of Flynt v. Conrad, illustrates the distinction between, those chattels which by annexation become merged in the'land,.and those which though so annexed to the land do not become a part of. it. Thus growing crops may be reserved by parol by the vendor of the land, in which case they do not pass by the deed conveying the land. The reason is that they are fructus industriali-s, and for most purposes regarded as personal chattels, even before they are severed from the soil; therefore upon the death of the owner of the land before they are gathered, they go to the-executor and not the-heir; they are liable to be seized and sold under execution as personal chattels; and by statute, growing, crops are the suN ject of larceny. Brittain v. McRay, 1 Ire., 265.
The Statute of Fraud thus not applying to agreements concerning growing crops, parol evidence is admissible to show that they were to remain the property of the grantor in the . sale of the land.
But personal chattels which have been fixtures are incoiv porated in, and are, a part of the land as much so as a house or tree, until an actual severance and therefore, a deed conveying the land without excepting therein the fixtures, has the legal effect of passing the gin and press, which are part and parcel of the land.
Pee Cueiam. Judgment reversed, and venire de novo.