108 N.J. Eq. 567 | N.J. Ct. of Ch. | 1931
The bill is to foreclose two mortgages, first, a real estate mortgage in the sum of $250,000, and second, a chattel mortgage in the same amount given as additional security for *569 the mortgage on the realty. The property, consisting of a hotel and its equipment and furnishings, is in the custody of an insolvency receiver appointed by this court in Sparks v. LaReine Hotel Corporation, docket 76 p. 135. Numerous conditional vendor defendants filed petitions in that cause for the removal of property the subject of conditional sales agreements and in the custody of the receiver. The mortgagee in the foreclosure suit also claimed this property to be subject to both the real and chattel mortgages. There was a reference to a master who viewed the premises and took testimony on the various issues referred. It was agreed that the decision in this suit should be dispositive of the issues raised by the petitions in the other. The master reported that the chattel mortgage was invalid for the reasons set forth in conclusions which he filed. No exceptions to that finding have been filed; the court concurs and it will be confirmed.
(Since the foregoing was written, exceptions to that finding have been filed by the complainant but they will be dismissed for the reasons stated by the master in his conclusions which have been filed.)
The master also filed a report fixing the amount due on the real estate mortgage and to the various defendants on their respective encumbrances and conditional sales agreements. With respect to the subject-matter of the conditional sales agreements, there was a stipulation by the parties as to some of it which was removed. As to certain property claimed by Credit Utility Company, Incorporated, York Ice Machinery Corporation, Eastern New Jersey Power Company, Standard Weather Strip and Screen Company, Incorporated, Jacob Josef Kohn and Mundis, Incorporated, B. Altman Company and Otis Elevator Company, the master first reported that the property in controversy could be removed from the premises without material injury to the freehold and that it was not subject to the lien of the complainant's mortgage. This was immediately before the decision in FutureBuilding and Loan Association v. Mazzocchi,
With respect to the claim of Eastern New Jersey Power Company the master reported that a portion of the property claimed could be removed without material injury to the premises and was not subject to the lien of complainants' mortgage; but that other portions of the property, namely, two electric transformers, were necessary to the operation of the defendant's building as a hotel and that "they could not be removed without material injury to the institution of which they are a part." No exceptions to the master's findings with respect to the property claimed by this defendant, other than the transformers, have been filed, and the report, save as excepted to, will be confirmed.
The complainant has excepted to the master's report as to property claimed by the defendant B. Altman Company. These furnishings clearly never lost their character of personal property. They are in no way attached to the freehold so as to become a part thereof and the chattel mortgage being invalid, the exception with respect to this finding will be overruled.
After the decision in Future Building and Loan Association v.Mazzocchi, supra, the master felt impelled to follow his interpretation of it and bases his present report, with respect to which exceptions have been filed, upon the rule of that case as he conceived it. In this he was correct, but *571 I think he misinterpreted the court's opinion and that his present findings cannot be wholly sustained.
The variant views of counsel respecting the law applicable to the present controversy, reflecting, as I believe they do, confusion at the bar and some difference of opinion on the bench, have impelled me to trace the history and development of the law of fixtures in this state and the present law of conditional sales, which, in my judgment, is an outgrowth of the law of fixtures. It may be said at the outset that the issues here are controlled by the law of conditional sales and not by the law of fixtures, although some understanding of the latter must be had in order to correctly apply the former.
The ancient English rule was that all things annexed to the realty become a part of it and annexation was considered the test. The underlying principle of the law of fixtures "being but one application of the theory of accession, as it existed in the civil law" (1 Tiff. Real Prop. § 266; see, also, 1 Thom.Real Prop. § 138; Broom Max. (9th ed.) 264), the degree of annexation was unimportant. This rule was greatly relaxed by modern decisions, and the degree of annexation and the resultant injury to the freehold by detachment became of increasing importance. Broom Max., supra. The maxim of the common law is that the principal thing should not be destroyed by taking away the accessory. 1 Thom. Real Prop. § 143. In New Jersey as early as 1854 (Brearley v. Cox,
At common law a vendor of personal property could retain title thereto until the purchase price was paid, notwithstanding *574
delivery to the vendee and without notice to anyone (Campbell
v. Roddy (1888),
"(1) If the goods are so affixed to realty, at the time of a conditional sale or subsequently as to become a part thereof, and not to be severable wholly or in any portion without material injury to the freehold, the reservation of property as to any portion not so severable shall be void after the goods are so affixed, as against any person who has not expressly assented to the reservation.
"(2) If the goods are so affixed to realty at the time of a conditional sale or subsequently, as to become part thereof, but to be severable without material injury to the freehold, the reservation of property shall be void after the goods are so affixed as against subsequent purchasers of the realty for value and without notice of the conditional seller's title, unless the conditional sale contract, or a copy thereof, together with a statement signed by the seller briefly *575 describing the realty and stating that the goods are or are to be affixed thereto, shall be filed before such purchase in the office where a deed of realty would be recorded or registered to affect such realty.
"(3) As against the owner of realty the reservation of the property in goods by a conditional seller shall be void when such goods are to be so affixed to the realty as to become part thereof, but to be severable without material injury to the freehold, unless the conditional sale contract, or a copy thereof, together with a statement signed by the seller briefly describing the realty and stating that the goods are to be affixed thereto, shall be filed before they are affixed, in the office where a deed would be recorded or registered to affect such realty."
It is to be noted that while earlier legislation recognized conditional sales, it did not change the basic law of fixtures or alter its application to controversies arising with respect to the chattel conditionally sold, except that the rights as against third parties (judgment creditors, subsequent purchasers and mortgagees) were made to depend upon notice, through the recording systems. The right of the immediate parties to control the question as between themselves by agreement, remained as theretofore. Bearing in mind that the common law stressed the importance of annexation and its degree, that the early New Jersey cases were to the same effect, and that later New Jersey cases stressed the use to which the chattel was appropriated, instead of the degree of annexation, as indicative of the intention of the parties where the question of whether or not a chattel had become a part of realty was concerned, it will be seen that the Conditional Sales act of 1919 marked a radical change in the law applicable to conditional sales contracts. Previously such contracts had been controlled, except as to the statutory requirement of notice, by the law of fixtures. But now, the rights of the vendor, vendee and third parties are controlled by the act itself and the question of annexation and its degree, which in the development of the law of fixtures had been relegated to positions of minor importance, again becomes the controlling factor. In General Motors Acceptance Corp. v.Smith (Court of Errors and Appeals, 1924),
We have seen that as between the parties to a conditional sale, an agreement retaining title in the vendor is controlling; but this rule is subject to the proviso that the chattel is not so closely incorporated into the realty as substantially to lose its identity, or to be incapable of removal without substantial injury to the freehold or to the article itself. 1 Tiff. RealProp. § 271; 1 Thomp. Real Prop. §§ 143, 156, 157, 187; Ford
v. Cobb,
In Detroit Steel Cooperage Co. v. Sistersville Brewing Co.,supra, there is a very illuminating discussion of this whole problem by Mr. Justice Holmes, of the United States supreme court. He says, in part:
"The cases to which the possible exception left open in Holt
v. Henley applies are principally those in which the property claimed has become so intimately connected with or embodied in that which is subject to the mortgage that to reclaim it would more or less physically disintegrate the property held by the mortgagee; e.g., Porter v. Pittsburg Bessemer Steel Co.,
Resort by this court has already been had to the commentaries of the commissioners who drafted the Uniform Conditional Sales act in aid of its interpretation. Crown v. Regna ConstructionCo.,
"The first sentence of section 7 is intended to perpetuate this common law doctrine that there are limits to the powers of seller and buyer with respect to reservation of title to *578 fixtures conditionally sold. They may not, as far as persons who have not consented to the reservation are concerned, agree for the reservation of title to an article which is so closely attached to or incorporated into the land as to lose its identity. The test of such close incorporation is that `material injury to the freehold' will result, if the chattel is removed. This phase will doubtless be construed as continuing in force the doctrine stated in the preceding paragraph regarding attachment of such a character as to cause the chattel to become irrevocably a part of the land, regardless of filing. To expect a purchaserof land to look for a conditional sale contract reserving titleto the seller in bricks built into a house, would beunreasonable." Uniform Laws Annotated, vol. 2-A.
But it is argued that the word "freehold" as used in the act refers to the freehold as it existed before, and not after, the annexation of the chattel, citing Campbell v. Roddy, supra. But the case is not in point. That was a contest between a prior mortgagee of land and a vendor of chattels who had taken a chattel mortgage as security for the purchase price. It was held that the lien of the chattel mortgage should be protected, so far as it would not diminish the security which the real estate mortgagee would have had if the annexation had not been made. There was no retention of title — the chattel mortgage was security, only — and the decision rested "upon an equitable preservation of the lien upon chattels after they are transmuted into realty." In my judgment, the word "freehold," as used in the act, refers to the freehold as it stands at the time as of which the inquiry is made. Where, therefore, the disputed chattel consists of a detachable functional unit, or of any chattel which by annexation has not lost its identity, and is consequently separable without injury either to the freehold or to the chattel itself, the word "freehold" is exclusive of such chattel. But where the personal property is so incorporated into the realty as to lose its identity, and consequently not separable without material injury, then the word "freehold" is inclusive of *579 that property because it is no longer personalty but has been absorbed and become a part of the realty.
Since the enactment of the Uniform Conditional Sales act there has been a growing tendency amongst contractors and materialmen to make materials of all kinds used in construction work the subject of conditional sales agreement, in which title to the material is retained in the vendor until the property is fully paid for. But these agreements, while binding as to the parties to them, cannot, under all circumstances, be held effective as against third parties, notwithstanding the requirements of the statute are strictly complied with. Wherever by the nature of the thing sold it, of necessity, when used, becomes so intimately incorporated into the structure of which it forms a part, as to become not severable without substantial injury, or where the use contemplated is such that the chattel loses its identity, the retention of title in the vendor is void as to third parties at least. The vendor's acquiescence in such use bars him from asserting the title which he has attempted to retain. Although, as has been shown, there are limitations to the right of a conditional vendor to retain title in himself, that limitation cannot be defined with such certainty as to permit its universal application. Each case must be governed by its own facts and circumstances.
In the instant case the master's conclusion that the property involved was a necessary part of the premises and could not be removed without material injury to the hotel building and the institution of which it formed a part, is a finding of fact not in issue and with respect to which no evidence was submitted. The question before the master was whether or not the property could be removed without material injury to the freehold, as that was the test set up in the statute. I think it is clear, therefore, that the master's findings have been based upon a misconception of the law due to a misinterpretation of the opinion of this court in Future Building and Loan Association v. Mazzocchi,supra, and under such circumstances the court must decide the fact for itself *580
and apply the law thereto. Riverside Apartment Corp. v.Capitol Construction Co.,
In the Future Building and Loan Association Case the subject of the controversy consisted of refrigerators, gas ranges and cabinets installed in an apartment house. The vendors had entered into agreements subordinating their rights to the complainant's mortgage. The decision was based entirely upon that subordination agreement. What Vice-Chancellor Backes said at page 425 of the report, beginning with the word "when you consider that the refrigerators and gas ranges are a part of the plant of the apartment house," was by way of obiter, and did not form the basis of his decision. If this case were to be controlled by the law of fixtures, then that comment would be pertinent; but, as has been shown, the issue here is controlled by the law of conditional sales, not by the law of fixtures. Whether or not the chattels were "an integral part of a common plant and with the building formed a unit for the prosecution of a common purpose" (Chancellor v. Cruse, supra), is therefore entirely beside the mark. This leads to a consideration of the exceptions in the order of their statement above.
1 only Canopy, 40' x 4'6" x 28" high, hangers $320.
1 only General Storage Refrigerator, 18' x 11' x 8' high, $2,500.
1 only Dairy Refrigerator, 9'6" x 5'6" x 8'0" high, $1,100.
1 only L-P Seeger No. 418 Refrigerator $500.
1 only L-P Seeger No. 418 Refrigerator $500.
1 only L-P Seeger No. 418 Refrigerator $500.
1 only Milk and Cream Cabinet, 8' x 2'6" x 30" $280.
1 only Hood, 10' x 4" x 24" high, $90.
*5811 only Edison No. NA [*]53 Bake Oven 16.2 K.W. $1,400.
1 only Mixing Machine Hobart F. 30 with Standard equipment.
The master's report indicates that all this property may be removed from the building by loosening certain bolts and nuts and by disconnecting certain pipes, joints and electrical connections, except as to the General Storage Refrigerator, and that in order to remove that, it will be necessary to disconnect electrical connections, remove its doors and cut certain concrete and cork covering and that the cost and expense of repairs made necessary thereby would be approximately $6 and that the refrigerator was installed at a cost of $2,500. The exceptions are sustained.
The evidence before the master indicated that all this property could be removed from the building by the simple process of removing certain screws, bolts and nuts and by disconnecting certain pipes. The exceptions are sustained.
The claim of Troy Laundry Company, Incorporated, was not before the master. The evidence upon which this claim rests was submitted to the court and while the claim is not involved in the master's report it may be disposed of here. The property the subject of the claim consists of several chests affixed upon a clothes ironer, and a tumbler or washing machine. The chests are not attached to the building in any way. The tumbler rests upon the floor but is not attached to it. The only connection with the building is by means of a steam pipe and to remove it it is necessary only to sever this connection. The property is clearly removable without material injury to the freehold and the vendor may remove it.
I will advise a decree accordingly. *584