Francis B. Freeman, Jr., purchased a cattle scale for $11,000. The scale, which weighs approximately six thousand five hundred pounds, was sold as a portable model. The manufacturer sold additional items that permitted the scale to be moved. Freeman did not buy that equipment. Freeman placed the scale in a barn on a concrete pad poured for the scale, then poured concrete ramps that would allow cattle to enter and exit the scale. Freeman further welded an iron fence into place to help funnel the cattle through the scale area. Although the scale was designed to be portable, 70 percent of the scales sold were installed the same way Freeman installed his. The scale has remained in place since its installation. The scale could be moved by cutting away a welded metal fence and lifting the scale with heavy machinery. The removal of the fence would take approximately one hour with use of a cutting torch, after which the scale could be moved within fifteen minutes. Mary Ann Barrs purchased the land—including the barn that housed the cattle scale—from Freeman for $3.5 million. Barrs claims that the cattle scale was a fixture that was part of the land and passed to her in the sale. Explain whether the cattle scale is a fixture.
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