15 Misc. 169 | New York County Courts | 1895
Action brought by the plaintiff and appellant for the conversion of what is known as a portable furnace. The defendant, on October 8, 1891, sold one Schafer the furnace in question,, specifying in the contract of sale, with other things, that the fur-„ nace, together with all material furnished by the first party, shall remain the property of the first party until the contract price below named is fully paid. The furnace in question was placed upon the premises of Schafer on the 8th and set up on the 9fh of December, 1891. Schafer and wife executed to plaintiff a mortgage upon the premises in question on December 7, 1891, and a subsequent mortgage on May 6, 1892, and the plaintiff became the purchaser of the premises upon the foreclosure of the mortgages in evidence; and, the defendant having removed the furnace before the foreclosure sale, the plaintiff brings this action upon the theory that the furnace was. a part of the realty, and not a chattel which the defendant had the-right to remove.
The case seems to have been tried upon the theory that, in a. proper case, trover will lie by the owner of real property against one who has wrongfully severed a portion thereof. This is probably correct, both upon the theory that the plaintiff may waive a portion or all of the tort, and also that the defendant will be estopped from saying that what he has treated as personal property is real property. Riley v. Power Co., 11 Cush. 11; Wadleigh v. Janvrin, 41 N. H. 503, 520. It was contended by the plaintiff, and I think correctly, that in a proper case a mortgagee who purchases, upon a. foreclosure sale of the mortgaged premises can maintain an action for fixtures wrongfully removed while he was in possession o£ the-premises. Laflin v. Griffiths, 35 Barb. 58. The recent decision of the general term in this department in Pratt v. Baker, 36 N. Y. Supp. 928, determines that a furnace in all respects similar to the one in suit is, in the absence of any special circumstances except those arising from the nature of the property, its purpose, and method of annexation to the freehold, as between -vendor and vendee, mortgagor and mortgagee, a part of the realty. In this .case-the clause in the contract for the purchase of the furnace in question, whereby it was provided that the title to the furnace remained
I think the evidence shows that the plaintiff was a purchaser for value, but the question still remains whether he had actual notice of the defendant’s claim. Gregory v. Thomas, 20 Wend. 19,—in which the court, Cowen, J., says: “The object of the statute here is that of all the other registry acts, to prevent imposition upon subsequent purchasers and mortgagees. * * When everything is actually explained to them, they have the best kind of notice.” Sanger v. Eastwood, 19 Wend. 514; Hill v. Beebe, 13 N. Y. 565. The evidence upon the question of actual notice is meager. It appears from the evidence of the plaintiff that in the fall of 1891 he knew that the defendant was putting a furnace in the cellar of the house.in question; that he saw it a dozen times after he got possession of the house; that he asked Schafer if it had been paid for (the answer of Schafer does not appear); that he saw it directly after it was put in. If I am not mistaken, the foregoing is all the evidence upon the subject of notice to plaintiff, and amounts, in brief, that he saw the furnace in the house, and knew that it was put in by the defendant. I think this is insufficient to justify a finding of knowledge. I am more inclined to hold that the evidence is insufficent to
Judgment must be reversed.