delivered the opinion of the court.
This case involves the appellee’s title to a silo located on a farm near Sabillasville in Frederick County, and its material facts may bo thus summarized: On March 1st, 1917, Albert Anderson, who then occupied the farm in question, bought from the appellee, for $297, under a contract called a “lease,” a silo, to be shipped to him at Blue Ridge Summit. The sale wag. made upon the following condition expressed in the contract, that is, that “the title of said silo or * * roof shalL he held by the E. F. Sehlichter Go., remaining movable property, and that a lien is retained by the company until fully paid for according io the terms of lease.” These terms were “cash upon receipt of above goods, or within 30 days from date of invoice, or only on their order.” At that time Albert Anderson, Katie Ml Anderson and Alvin Anderson owned the farm, hut the nature or extent of their respective interests is not disclosed by the record.
On May 13th, 1918, and February 13th, 1919, respectively, execution was issued on two judgments against Albert Anderson, Katie M. Anderson and Alvin Anderson, and under these writs the sheriff of Frederick County advertised, and on April 1st, 1919, sold the farm at public auction to Charles A. Lewis, the appellant. On March 28th, 1919, the contract of sale was recorded in the “conditional contracts of sale docket” of Frederick County.
*220Shortly after he received it, Albert Anderson erected the silo on the farm which he then occupied and, at the time the farm was sold, it was still there. Oh April 1st, 1919, the day on which ’the farm was sold, the appellee filed in the Circuit Court for Frederick! County a claimant’s suit against the judgment creditors in the cases in which the writs of execution had issued, and thereupon the sheriff notified the auctioneer selling the property not to sell the silo with the farm, but to reserve it. The auctioneer’, in accordance with this notice, in offering the property for sale, announced in the presence of the appellant, who was at the time five or six or seven feet away, that the silo would not be sold, but would be reserved. This announcement was in a tone loud enough to he heard by the appellant, and was in fact heard by at least, one other witness who was farther away. These facts were controverted by the appellant, who denied that- the announcement was made but, as we are not called npon to review that conflict, no opinion will he expressed in regard to it. Upon a trial of the claimant’s suit, judgment was. entered on September 3rd, 1919, in favor of the appellee. Some time during the same month the appellee’s agent went upon the appellant’s property to remove the silo and, while so engaged, was approached by the appellant, who told him he could take it away, that there would he no trouble, but before he removed it the appellant withdrew this permission and refused to allow, him to remove it. The appellee thereupon, on the 22nd of September, 1919, instituted this action in replevin.
The silo consists of a number of staves tongued and grooved and bound together by round iron hoops and iron lug's, and was shipped in three sections, ready to be set- up. It is placed on a cement foundation in which are embedded anchor bolts. Guy wires are attached to these bolts and to t-he top of the silo, and then tightened by means of a turn buckle until the whole is rigid and firm. From this silo a shnte was con*221structed for convenience in transferring tbe ensilage from tbe silo to a bam on the property.
The record contains three exceptions, the first two of which relate to the admissibility of evidence, and the. third to the court’s rulings on the prayers.
In the course of the trial the papers and docket entries in the claimant’s case were admitted in evidence by the court over the objections of the appellant, and these rulings are the subject of the first and second exceptions. At the time this evidence was offered, the auctioneer had already testified that before he sold the property he had been told by the deputy sheriff to announce publicly that he had just “received from the sheriff a telephone message that a property claim had been filed on that silo and the sale would be- subject to that property claim and the silo would be reserved,” and that when he made the announcement at the sale the appellant was near enough to have heard him. It was. both relevant and material for the appellee to have shown that it claimed the silo before the appellant bought the farm on which it was situated, and that the appellant knew of this claim before he purchased the property, and evidence1 that it had filed a claimant’s suit in the same court from which the writs of fieri facias issued under which the- farm was sold, and that the appellant had actual notice of the pendency of this suit, tended to prove such facts, and was properly admitted.
The appellant offered no prayers; the appellee offered seven, of which the court granted four and refused three, and •its action in granting these four prayers is the subject of the third exception.
The plaintiff in its declaration alleged that the defendant took and unjustly detained one silo, which the plaintiff owned. In his pleas the defendant denied the taking and claimed title to the silo. The plea of non cepii being more or less meaningless and “practically useless in this class of cases” (1 Poe Pl. &. Pr., par. 253), the only issue in the case was the title to the property, and the determination of *222that issue depended, upon whether the silo was- to- be regarded as a “fixture,” that is, a personal chattel which could be severed and removed by the party annexing it to the freehold (Bouvier L. D'ict.), o-r as a chattel which had become so- connected with the soil as to become a part of the realty; and the lower court, through the four prayers granted at the instance of the plaintiff, instructed the jury as to the principles of law applicable to the facts relating to these questions, and the correctness of the instructions so granted will now be examined.
By the plaintiff’s first prayer the jriry were told that if they found the silo was the property of the plaintiff at “the time of the sale” to the defendant of the farm where it was located, and that it was expressly excepted from said sale, and that the defendant purchased the interest of Anderson, the judgment debtor in the farm-, and took a deed for it knowing the silo was not to be his property, then their verdict, should be for the plaintiff. The appellant’s objection to this prayer is that it submits to the jury a question of law, and ignores the fact that the appellant by his deed acquired the interests of Katie and Alvin Anderson. In passing upon the first objection it is sufficient to say that no exception having been taken to the prayer on that ground in the lower Court it cannot be considered here. Article 5, S'eetion 9, Code Pub. Gen. Laws. Nor is there any substantial merit in the second objection. In deciding whether the silo was the property of the plaintiff, the jury were necessarily required to decide whether or not Alvin Anderson or Katie M. Anderson had any interest in it because if they owned it obviously the appellee did not.
The prayer in substance states the principles of law applicable to the facts of the case- with which it deals and there was no error in granting it. Walker v. Schindel, 58 Md. 365; Parkhurst v. N. C. Ry., 19 Md. 472.
By the plaintiff’s third prayer the jury were told that the purchaser at the sheriff’s sale acquired only the “right, title or interest” of the judgment debtor in the property sold.
*223This in substance correctly states the law. Cooke v. Brice, 20 Md. 397; Spindler v. Atkinson, 3 Md. 423. And while there are oases in which such an instruction might be misr leading, we find no error in the action of the court in granting it under the circumstances of this case.
By the plaintiff’s sixth prayer the jury were told that if the “silo mentioned in evidence was sold to Albert Anderson by tbe contract between the plaintiff and said Albert Anderson, offered in evidence, then the said silo remained a removable article of property, and did not become a part of tbe freehold, so far as tbe said Albert Anderson, Katie AI. Anderson and Alvin Anderson were concerned.”
This prayer is defective because it assumes that in making the contract to which it refers, Albert Anderson acted as the agent of Katie AI. Anderson and Alvin Anderson, and that they are bound by his acts, or stated in another way, it fails to require the jury to find any facts which would support the inference that Albert Anderson in making; the contract acted as the agent of Katie AI. Anderson and Alvin Anderson. But whether this defect is regarded as an assumption of fact or as the omission of a material fact, no advantage can be taken of it in this Court, because it does not appear from the record that any objection was made to it on either ground in the court below. Regard being bad to the language of the statute, Art. 5, Sec. 9, Code Pfib. Glen. Laws, it is unnecessary to cite further authority in support of the rule that an objection to' a prayer on tbe ground that, it assumes a fact cannot be considered in this Court unless it was noted at the trial of the case below, and in Franklin v. Claflin, 49 Md. 42, it was said: “It has been ingeniously urged that the omission of an essential fact, is. not an assumption of a fact within the meaning of the rule above referred to. To assume a fact, in popular phrase, is to take for granted without proof. It may be done affirmatively or nega,tively, the effect is the same in which over form it is done. The mischief to he remedied by the rule and the Act of *2241861-2, Oh. 154, from which the rule was derived, was to prevent surprise to the parties to a cause on appeal by raising questions which were not disputed or contested in the court below.” And in Morrison v. Hammond, 27 Md. 604, it was said: “These defects often occur through mere inadvertence in the hurry of the trial, and might have been corrected if the attention of the court had been called to them at the time, and although in reality the appellant has not been injured by them, and perhaps never discovered them till the record has come into this Court; yet asi the law before stood they were fatal and this Court was obliged to reverse. In that way parties have often been taken by1 surprise and much injustice has been done. * * * To prevent such injustice the. Act of 1861-2 was passed.” See also- Cheney v. Eastern Transp. Line, 59 Md. 568.
Taking the prayer therefore as it stands and assuming’; that the contract was made by Albert Anderson on behalf of all persons who appear from the record to have had any interest in the farm at the time it was made, the p-rayer states a perfectly sound legal principié and one which cannot be questioned under the decisions in this State.
Where parties capable of contracting, and duly authorized thereto, agree between themselves, by a contract otherwise valid, that a chattel shall, notwithstanding its annexation to the freehold, retain the character and incidents of personal property, as between themselves such chattel shall be treated as personalty, notwithstanding; that but for such agreement the chattel would by reason of its intrinsic physical characteristics after its annexation to the soil be regarded as a part of the freehold. Baldwin v. Francis, 118 Md. 181; Walker v. Schindel, 58 Md. 360; Bronson, Fixtures, par. 28; 19 Cyc. 1048. Eor the reasons stated we find no error in the granting of this p-rayer.
By the plaintiff’s seventh p-rayer, which was granted, the jury are instructed, in substance, that if the auctioneer at the sale of’ the farm announced publicly in the hearing and pres*225ence of the defendant that the silo was excepted from the sale, that then “the defendant took no right or title to said silo, even if the defendant did not hear such public announcement,”
There appears to be a decided conflict in the views of the several courts in which the proposition thus submitted ha,s been considered, as to the power of an auctioneer to depart from or vary the terms and conditions of a sale as written or printed in advertisements or otherwise by any oral announcement at the sale. Ann. Cases, 1912 A 1130; 2 R. C. L. 1124; 24 L. R. A. (N. S.) 488. An examination of the cases dealing with the question shows that in some instances where the authority of the! auctioneer to vary the printed or written terms and conditions, of a sale as contained in advertisements relating to the sale is denied, the decisions rest upon the1 theory that the terms and conditions as printed and published control the rights and obligations of the parties (131 Am. St. Rep. 484), and that parol evidence of any oral announcement by the auctioneer contrary to them is. inadmissible, and there are many considerations which lead to a favorable consideration of this rule, but in our opinion it is not applicable to the facts of this case. The advertisement, although it referred to the various structures on the farm, contained no reference to the silo, and the announcement made by the auctioneer, acting under the express and explicit instructions of his principal, publicly announced in the hearing and presence of the appellant, before hei bought thei farm that the silo was excepted and would not be sold. In so doing he was not varying the terms and conditions of sale printed in the advertisement, but explaining them. This announcement was made as the result of conditions arising subsequent to the publication of the advertisement, that is the filing of a claimant’s suit for the possession of this silo.. Under such circumstances it cannot be said that the sheriff was obliged to sell the silo merely because he had advertised the farm on which it was located, nor was he required to put off the sale *226of the farm -until the claimant’s suit was decided. He could sell the farm without the silo, and as he decided to do this it was obviously proper to announce at the sale of the farm that the silo was not sold with it, and this is what he did, in the presence and in the hearing of the appellant.
Under such circumstances the auctioneer was acting within the actual and apparent scope of his authority in making this announcement, and as the appellant could have heard it had he been listening, he is bound by it.
Finding no error in the rulings appealed from, the judgment will be affirmed.
Judgment affirmed, with costs to the appellee.