127 N.E. 487 | NY | 1920
This action was brought to foreclose a mortgage dated November 13th, 1915, made by the *498 defendant Maple. Avenue Construction Company to secure the payment to plaintiffs of the sum of seven thousand dollars. The mortgaged premises were located in the borough of Queens at the southeasterly corner of Pansy street at its junction with Cooper avenue, and consisted of a plat of land running from Cooper avenue northerly on the easterly side of Pansy avenue about one hundred ninety-eight feet, and thence easterly one hundred feet, then back to Cooper avenue, the remote easterly line being a little shorter than the westerly line. It is evident from the record in this case that the mortgagor constructed upon the southerly portion of the premises five houses, and later five houses upon the northerly portion of the premises.
On December 31st, 1915, the southerly portion of the premises was released from the mortgage in question, four thousand dollars having been paid thereon.
The defendants Fishman and Weinstock were made parties defendants in the foreclosure action under the general allegation in the complaint that they severally had or claimed to have some lien upon the premises, which lien, if any, was subsequent to the mortgage.
The defendant Weinstock answered and alleged that he was the owner of certain property in the premises described in the complaint which had been delivered to the Maple Avenue Construction Company under a conditional bill of sale by the terms of which title to the goods consisting of mantels, consoles and bookcases was to remain in him until fully paid for and upon which the sum of two hundred twelve dollars remained unpaid, for which amount he had a lien thereon. The conditional bill of sale was filed on March 24th, 1916. The defendant Fishman by a like conditional bill of sale delivered to the Maple Avenue Construction Company certain sinks, washtubs, boilers, bathtubs and other property, which conditional bill of sale was filed on May 23d 1916, prior to the installation of any of the said chattels in *499 the premises described as subject to the lien of the mortgage, and upon which the sum of seven hundred dollars remained unpaid.
The trial justice found that the appellants had made conditional sales of the articles as asserted by them to the construction company and the balance remaining due to each of the appellants was the amount alleged in their answers, and that as to all the articles so delivered by appellants the same were a part of the realty and their removal could not be had without damage to the buildings. The trial justice also held as conclusion of law that the appellants were foreclosed of any right, claim or lien in the mortgaged premises, including any right or lien in the goods delivered, and decreed that the chattels be sold as a part of the realty free from all rights or liens of defendants and that the premises be sold according to law in separate parcels. Upon appeal by appellants to the Appellate Division, the judgment was affirmed by a divided court.
The conditional bill of sale in the Fishman case embraced three hundred forty articles, principally classified in multiples of ten, thus ten sets of porcelain washtubs, ten pairs galvanized iron washtub covers, ten pairs galvanized iron washtub legs, indicating that the chattels were selected and described for each one of ten houses. As to a number of the chattels, the evidence adduced upon the trial as to the manner of installation of the same was meagre, thus rendering impossible a conclusion as to whether the same could be detached without injury to the buildings. This conclusion necessitates a new trial of the action, and it will suffice to call attention to well-established principles of law for the guidance of the trial justice upon a further trial without entering into extended detail as to the numerous chattels.
As between the vendors appellants and the vendee construction company and its associate, the bills of sales of the chattels disclose that it was the expressed intention *500
of both parties that the chattels enumerated therein were to retain their character as personal property even should they be annexed to the realty. That the parties were privileged to enter into such contract, subject only to the limitation that where the subject or mode of annexation is such as that the attributes of personal property cannot be predicated of the thing in controversy, as where the property could not be removed without practically destroying it, or where it or part of it is essential to the support of that to which it is attached, is unquestioned. (Ford v. Cobb,
Among the items in the bill of chattels embraced in the Fishman conditional sale were ten sets porcelain washtubs which rested upon ten pairs of legs which stood on the floor. On top of each tub was a cover which lay flat thereon. The entire tub and supports are removable by unscrewing the faucets in the tubs which are attached to the water pipes in the wall. The items mentioned resemble in substance certain other articles found to be fixtures so attached to the realty as to be irremovable therefrom and thereby subject to the mortgage. In Central UnionGas Company v. Browning we held that certain gas ranges delivered to the owner of an apartment building in the city of New York under a conditional bill of sale, which ranges were connected with the building by the usual service gas pipe and a stovepipe flue, when the ranges could be severed by unscrewing couplings and then lifting the ranges out of the apertures made for them, did not lose any of their characteristics as personal property and were removable from the building by the vendor, not only as against the owner of the premises *501
but as against the defendant, a bona fide purchaser at a foreclosure sale of the premises in which the ranges were installed. (Central Union Gas Co. v. Browning,
In Davis v. Bliss a gasoline engine was purchased under a conditional bill of sale and installed by bolting the same upon a substantial foundation constructed of cement and by running an exhaust pipe from the floor of the engine room through the floor, ceiling and roof of the building and by connecting the engine by two underground pipes with a gasoline tank set outside the building. The referee in that case found that the engine could readily be detached and removed from the building without tearing down any part of or causing any serious damage to the latter and without at all destroying or impairing the usefulness of the former. While the judgment below was reversed by this court, such reversal was solely upon the measure of damages. The present Chief Judge HISCOCK, writing for the court, in that case said: "We shall assume that under ordinary circumstances the engine would have become a part of the realty. Upon the other hand, we regard it as too well settled to require discussion that the results which would ordinarily flow from attaching such a piece of personal property as this was to the real estate in such a manner as this was attached may be controlled by special circumstances, and the character of the article as personal *502 property be preserved not only as against the vendee but also, in the absence of statutory provision, as against the mortgagee, owner and, under certain circumstances, the subsequent grantee of the real estate." (p. 81.)
Counsel for the respondent in his brief asserts that the case of Wood Harmon Warranty Corporation v. Plandome ConstructionCompany (
The appellant Weinstock delivered eighteen bookcases, eighteen consoles and four mantels in the property, some of which were installed in the houses upon that portion of the premises released from the lien of the mortgage *504
for which full payment had been made, the remaining chattels were placed in the houses upon the land covered by the mortgage and were not fully paid for. Evidence was offered tending to show that the enumerated articles were attached by one nail on each side driven into a block of wood in the brick wall placed there by the brick-layers, and could be detached by drawing the nails and without injury to the articles or the wall. If removed the wall would be exposed which is partly plastered, leaving a space of about two feet in the wall which was not plastered. Necessarily the removal of such chattels would involve a finishing of the walls unless like articles were procured to take the place of those removed. The record is quite deficient upon the important question whether or not the articles in question by reason of the nature of the same were intended to correspond with and properly form a part of the inner surface of the houses (Ward v. Kilpatrick,
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, with costs to abide the event.
HISCOCK, Ch. J., CHASE, CARDOZO, McLAUGHLIN, CRANE and ELKUS, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed, etc. *505