E. A. Kinsey Co. v. Heckermann

224 F. 308 | 6th Cir. | 1915

WARRINGTON, Circuit Judge

(after stating the facts as above), [1] The question presented is whether the lien claimed by the Kinsey Company is valid under any statute of Ohio. The only statute relied on or discussed by counsel is embraced in sections 8308 and 8310 (3 Page & Adams’ Ann. Gen. Code Ohio), which in material parts are set out in the margin.1 The District Court reversed the order of the *311referee so far as it affected the two No. OB. & S. wire-feed screw machines, and affirmed the order as to the other machines. The theory of the reversal was that, although all the machines were regarded as personal property, the two just mentioned constituted an alteration in the manufactory, but that the other two machines should be treated simply as an addition to the equipment.

We agree with the learned trial judge to the extent of his reversal of the referee, though we do not see how his affirmance of any part, of the referee’s ruling can be sustained. If the change from a single machine producing double circuit connectors to the two machines producing single circuit connectors constituted an alteration within the meaning of the statute, it ought to follow that the introduction of machines to enable the owner to produce articles, instead of purchasing them, and for the purpose of reducing the cost of his output, also amounted to a like alteration, since it involved a change in the manu-factory. The test in each instance is whether the thing done was “altering * * * a. * * * manufactory.” The means adopted in both instances was the installation of machinery and for the purpose of producing something which the owner was not in either instance manufacturing before. True, the single circuit connector replaced the double circuit connector, and the other articles produced replaced the purchased articles; hut the manufactory had to undergo an alteration before either could be done. The manufactory is the thing here to be kept in mind; it had to be put into a changed condition; literally and practically, then, it was not thereafter the same manufactory as it was before, no matter which of the changes wrought may be considered. Stated otherwise, if the introduction of machinery to manufacture articles previously acquired through purchase was an addition, and not an alteration, then, since two wire-feed screw machines were introduced for the purpose of turning out a new and distinct product, while only one machine was removed, it is not easy to understand why, upon this theory of addition, at least one of these new machines should not also have been treated as an addition.

As it seems to us, however, this interpretation would be opposed to the apparent statutory object of employing the word “altering” as a token for the allowance of a lien. This object reaches the manu-factory as the unit to consider, and not simply some the machines there possessed and used. True, the bankrupt did not occupy an entire building; he was, however, a lessee in the possession and enjoyment of a distinct portion of a building which had been specially designed and constructed for separate manufactories; and his entire equipment for turning out his manufactured product was being rightfully maintained and used within this portion of the building. The unitary character, then, of such a manufactory, necessarily includes such interest in the building as the lessee may in [act have, together with the entire equipment and his right to maintain, change, and operate it within the portion of the structure leased. Schott v. Harvey, 105 Pa. 222, 227, 228, 51 Am. Rep. 201; Wells v. Christian, 165 Ind. 662, 664, 665, 76 N. E. 518. Still it is not meant to say that every article used in a manufactory can be made the subject of a mechanic’s lien. The language of the statute, is specific as to the subjects of the *312lien, though it is comprehensive in prescribing conditions for allowance of the lien. We have an example here in respect of “machinery,” which apparently entered integrally into the mechanism required for the manufacturing operation. The statute embraces machinery furnished “for erecting, altering, repairing or removing a * * * manufactory.” Certainly it was not necessary to employ more words, or words more apt, in order to disclose the legislative purpose.

[2] Such an act in its essence and intent is remedial, and is to be liberally construed. Bullock v. Horn, 44 Ohio St. 420, syl. 1 and page 424, 7 N. E. 737; Vernon v. Harper, 79 Ohio St. 181, 187, 86 N. E. 882, 20 L. R. A. (N. S.) 44; Central Trust Co. v. Leuders & Co. (decided by this court March 2, 1915) 221 Fed. 829,# 137 C. C. A. 387. It consequently will not admit of refined distinctions which would include part of this machinery as an “alteration,” and exclude part as an “addition”; for that would be to ignore the prescribed token for allowance of the lien — the changed condition of the man-ufactory.2 These views derive support, we think, from other parts of the statute and some of the deéisions.

[3] We may therefore turn to the contention, which is made so earnestly, on behalf of the trustee, that, as respects the lien claimed, none of this machinery falls within the language and intent of the statute. The argument is that the lien of a mechanic or materialman is one that can be had only for enhancing the value of the premises, and so must be upon something that becomes part of the realty, like a fixture, and not upon machinery which, as here, is intended to be retained as personalty. We have seen that the statute at least in terms applies to machinery and provides for a lien:

“Every person who * * * furnishes machinery * * * for * * * altering * * * a * * * manufactory, * * * by virtue of a contract * * * with the * * * lessee of any interest in real estate * * * shall have a lien to secure payment thereof * * '* upon the * * * machinery so furnished. * * * ”

It might be added that the lien so given is also- expressly extended to the leasehold interest, as the statute in part quoted in the margin at an earlier portion of this opinion shows'; but in view of the stipulation of the parties it is. to be presumed that there was in this instance no value of importance in the leasehold, for nothing is claimed in that behalf; still this feature of the statute is not to be overlooked in determining the validity of the lien. It hardly seems necessary to discuss the facts admitted and before pointed out, nor a statute containing language as plain as this, in order to show the intent either of the parties or of the statute; such intent cannot be made plainer by argument.

[4] The rule is settled, of course, that the federal courts would be bound by any construction which the Supreme Court of Ohio might have placed upon this statute or any earlier statute substantially like *313it. There are many decisions of that court construing statutes creating liens in favor of mechanics and materialmen, but we find no such decision construing these particular statutory provisions. However, in Hart v. Globe Iron Works, 37 Ohio St. 75, a controversy was presented concerning a mechanic’s lien which was perfected and enforced under circumstances kindred to those here involved. The syllabus, which according to the rule there maintained was sanctioned by the court, reads:

‘‘Tinder an agreement, with one engaged in manufacturing on premises of which lie liad a lease for two years, a mechanic furnished and attached to the manufactory certain machinery to be nsed in the prosecution of the business, aí'íer which the tenant made a general assignment of his property for the benefit of his creditors. Held, that this did not interfere with the right of the mechanic to perfect a mechanic’s lien under the act of 1843 (1 S. & C. 833), and that the lien will extend to such machinery.”

It was contended there, as it is here, that a mechanic’s lien could not be obtained on personal property. This was equivalent to saying that the lien could not be asserted against a chattel interest like a leasehold for two years; but the ruling was that 'machinery attached to the building on the leased premises “became so much a part of the leasehold that the mechanic’s lien will extend to the machinery.” The tenant had the right to remove the fixtures, yet this was regarded as immaterial. In closing the opinion Judge Okey said (37 Ohio St. 77):

“Nor are the rights of the parties affected by the fact that the interest of the tenant in the building and .ground was not sold by the assignee, being- considered of no value. The things which, by being annexed to the building, liad become an appurtenance of the leasehold, and a part thereof for the purposes of such lien, were sold, and the mechanic was entitled to payment of his judgment out of the fund arising from such sale.”

Some other matters more or less affected by that decision are deserving of special attention here. The statute there construed was in some material respects the basis of the present mechanic’s lien law (1 S. & C. 833). The act was carried into the revision of the Ohio statutes iu 1880 under sectional numbers 3184 — 3206 (1 Ohio Rev. Sfat. | Ed. 1880] pp. 825, 830); and tlie present section 8308 of the General Code is but an expansion of section 3184 — -that is, additional objects have been included in the section. Neither the act construed in the Hart Case, nor section 3184 as it stood at the date of the decision, in terms fastened the lien on machinery or upon a leasehold interest; and yet the court allowed the lien against the machinery, in spite of the fact that the purchaser of the machinery had no interest in the land, except through a lease for a term of two years, and without value. On April 15, 1889, section 3184 was amended so as to fix the lien directly upon machinery, as well as upon the interest of the landowner, though not upon a leasehold interest (86 O. L. 373). In 1892 the lien was extended to leasehold interests (89 O. I,. 373); and although amendments have since been made, the provisions fixing the lien upon machinery, as well as upon leasehold interests, have been preserved. The purpose of this course of legislation is unmistakable; it was, so far as the case under review requires consideration, to enlarge the rights of persons furnishing machinery *314for altering a manufactory. ■ In view, then, of this legislation, we regard the Hart decision as in principle decisive of the question of the right'to have and enforce such a lien.

The decision in Mutual Aid Building & Loan Co. v. Gashe, 56 Ohio St. 273, 46 N. E. 985, when considered in connection with the decisions below, shows that the court was not disturbed about the power to allow a mechanic’s lien upon personalty, although, as far -as the present question is concerned, virtually the same argument that was made by counsel there is urged here. The questions arose upon a proceeding instituted by Gashe, as assignee of an insolvent corporation, for the sale of real estate and an adjustment of liens. The property was sold and the rights of the lienors were transferred to the sales proceeds. Among other liens there were three mechanics’ liens, but the facts are not sufficiently reported as to the nature of the articles furnished by the lienors to justify allusion to more than one of them. A copartnership, Arbuckle, Ryan & Co., had furnished to the corporation an engine, boiler, and pump, with heater and stone for the engine and the-necessary fittings and connections, and had taken a mechanic’s lien upon the company’s- land and the improvements thereon, to secure payment. Subsequently the copartnership entered into a written agreement with the Mqtual Aid Building & Loan Company, a mortgagee of the insolvent corporation, waiving priority of the mechanic’s lien on the real estate, but not upon the boiler, engine, pump, heater, etc., which, through further provision, “were not to become realty until paid for.” The mechanic’s lien, subject to the waiver, wás sustained in the common pleas court, and the proceeds arising from the sale of the articles were ordered by that court to be paid to Arbuckle, Ryan & Co. Gashe v. Ohio Lumber Co., 5 Ohio Dec. 130, 136. This was affirmed by the circuit court (Mutual Aid Building & Loan Co. v. Gashe, 18 Ohio Cir. Ct. R. 681, 685); and although the decree below was in one respect, not material here, modified by the Supreme Court, it was said in the opinion (against contention that a mechanic’s lien could be allowed only for material which becomes part of the realty) that subject to this modification the “court concurs in the order in which the courts below distributed the funds in controversy” (56 Ohio St. at page 295), and further that the funds arising from the sale of the boiler, engine, etc., furnished by Arbuckle, Ryan & Co. “were properly applied to' the payment of the lien, of that company” (56 Ohio St. 301).

In Pflueger v. Lewis Foundry & Machine Co., 134 Fed. 28, 67 C. C. A. 102, this court had occasion to consider the Ohio mechanic’s lien act in substantially its present form, and portions of its interpretation of the act are quite apposite here. The court did not find it necessary, it is true, to place its decision upon the analysis thus alluded to; and still these features of the opinion are so in accord with our views of the statute, and the Ohio decisions there cited, that we quote the following pertinent and material parts. Said Judge Severens (134 Fed. 30):

“It would seem, as a matter o-f first impression, that the Legislature of Ohio did not intend by section 3184 to prescribe, as a test for the application of its *315enactment, the question whether the thing furnished is something intended to become a fixture, and wili be such, wheh placed in the intended location and relation to the mill or manufactory. The statute makes a distinction between the mill or manufactory and the real estate and the machinery furnished by the lienor. If the machinery furnished becomes a fixture, there was no need to expressly declare that the lien should extend to it. The Ohio Supreme Court holds that the lien given by this statute arises when it is furnished, and it is not postponed until it is put in its place in the mill (Beckel v. Petticrew, 6 Ohio St. 247) — a conclusion wholly inconsistent with the idea that the lien attaches only when the machine or other thing is parcel of the realty, for nothing becomes a fixture until it is affixed. It was held by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit, affirming the decision of Judge Newman (In re Georgia Handle Co., 109 Fed. 632, 48 C. C. A. 571), that, under the statute of Georgia, which gives a lien upon the ‘factory’ to those furnishing materials or machinery for such factory, it was immaterial whether the machinery therein should be considered real or personal property. In either cage it was subject to the lien. The record failed to show how the machinery was attached to the building. But it was held sufficient that it showed there was such attachment as was necessary to its operation.”

The decisions of courts of the various states, construing their respective mechanic’s lien acts, are necessarily affected by the particular provisions of the statutes involved; and such decisions can, be safely accepted only upon comparison of the statutes there construed with the statute under consideration. Our attention has not been called to any further decisions in which a statute like the one now under review was involved, though, as illustrative of the trend of some of the decisions cited, we refer to Canton Roll & Machine Co. v. Rolling Machine Co., 168 Fed. 464, 468, 469, 93 C. C. A. 621 (C. C. A. 4th Cir.), where the lien was enforced against objects not specifically named in the statute.

[5] Upon the whole, we do not see any sufficient reason for denying enforcement of the lien in the present case. The statutory provisions involved do not purport to authorize the taking of a lien upon any property except through the assent, express or implied, of its owner. Gashe Case, 56 Ohio St. at page 296. Here, the parties in interest agreed that the machines should “not become affixed to the realty in the sense of permanent fixtures forming part of the freehold,” but that they should remain “personal property.” 3 There is nothing in the statute expressly requiring the lien to be taken both upon the machinery supplied and the interest of the purchaser in the realty, since, as we have seen, *316the act in terms authorizes the lien to be taken on the “machinery so furnished.” True the relation of the purchaser to the manufactory as its lessee is a condition which, under the statute, extends the lien to-the leasehold interest; but this neither prevents the lessee and lessor from agreeing that the machinery shall not become a fixture, nor deprives the person furnishing the machinery (pursuant to- contract) of the right to take the lien. As Judge Okey said in the Hart Case:

“Here the agreement was that the tenant should have the right, at the expiration of or during the term, to remove such fixtures, but this did not affect the mechanic’s rights.”

And we have seen that the right to make such an agreement and enforce the lien accordingly, was in effect sanctioned in the Gashe Case. No one was concerned in the present instance except those persons whose property rights were involved and whose consent to the arrangement was given; and the case does not present any question of conflicting liens. What reason, then, has the present trustee to complain ? It cannot be because of any value in the bankrupt’s interest in the realty as lessee, nor of any failure of the bankrupt to provide against the right of the lessor to acquire an interest in the machinery as a fixture. Further, the bankrupt’s estate is not being diminished through the enforcement of the lien, for the bankrupt never acquired any interest in the machinery, except subject to the express statutory right of lien; and even if the leasehold interest on its merits ever had any value, in excess of the burden of the rents reserved, such value is not claimed by the lienor in this proceeding.

It results that, since the lien was denied as to a portion of the machinery, the decree must be reversed, with costs of both appeals in favor of the Kinsey Company, and the cause is remanded, with direction to enter a decree sustaining the lien entire arid allowing recovery accordingly.

“Sec. 8308. Every person who * * * furnishes machinery, material * * * for erecting, altering, repairing or removing a house, mill, manu-factory, * * * by virtue of a contract, express or implied, with the owner, part owner or lessee, of any interest in real estate, * * * shall have a lien to secure payment thereof * * • upon such house, mill, manufactory, * * * and upon the material or machinery so furnished, and upon the Interest, leasehold or otherwise, of the owner, part owner, or lessee in the lot or land upon which they may stand, or to which they may be removed.”

“Sec. 8310. Every building erected, or other improvement made, or machinery or material furnished, as mentioned in section eighty-three hundred and eight, on leased lots or lands, shall be held for debt contracted for or on account thereof; also the leasehold term for such lot and land on which they are erected or made. * * * ”

Under statutes involving interpretation of the words “addition” and “alteration,” rulings have been made upon facts which would require the introduction of these machines to be regarded as an alteration. Updike v. Skillman, 27 N. J. Law, 131, 132, 133; Kosidowski v. Milwaukee, 152 Wis. 223, 226, 139 N. W. 187.

The validity of this agreement is not questioned; and the rule Is that it is competent for the parlies in interest so to agree with respect to machines of this character and attached as they were to the building. Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio St. 511, 584, 542, 548, 59 Am. Dec. 634; Fortman v. Goepper, 14 Ohio St. 558, syl. 3, and page 564; Tifft v. Horton, 53 N. Y. 377, 380, 13 Am. Rep. 537; Schumacher v. Edward P. Allis Co., 70 Ill. App. 556, 565, and citations; Arlington Mill & Elevator Co. v. Yates, 57 Neb. 286, 292, 77 N. W. 677; Landigan v. Mayer, 32 Or. 245, 250, 51 Pac. 649, 67 Am. St. Rep. 521; St. Joseph Hydraulic Co. v. Wilson, 133 Ind. 465, 470, 33 N. E. 113; Wheeler v. Bedell, 40 Mich. 693. The agreement was well within the principle declared in Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio St. at page 584: “An article attached to the land may be a fixture or a chattel according to the special agreement of the parties.” Indeed, where the parties so qgree, the principle is applicable to buildings. Long v. White, 42 Ohio St. 59, 61; Kinkead v. United States, 150 U. S. 483, 491, 14 Sup. Ct. 172, 37 L. Ed. 1152, and citations.