57 Neb. 323 | Neb. | 1899
This was a suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for materials sold and delivered by the Edwards & Bradford Lumber Company, a corporation, to Murray Rank for the erection of a steam flouring mill upon certain real estate in South Sioux City, of which Rank was the owner of the undivided two-thirds and the estate of J. M. Moon, deceased, was the owner of the other one-third. Among those made parties defendants were the holders of mechanics’ liens on the premises, and J. P. Twohig, and the Dubuque Turbine Roller Mill Company, who owned real estate mortgages thereon. Answers and cross-petitions were filed on behalf of said lienors and mortgagees.
There is no controversy as to the facts. The several mechanics’ liens and real estate ‘mortgages are valid, and the decree foreclosing them is correct. It is disclosed by the written stipulation of the parties that on July 15, 1893, and while the mill was being constructed, Murray Rank and those interested with him in the building of the mill entered into a written contract with Schleicher, Scliumen & Oo. for the purchase from the latter, to be used in operating said mill, the engine in controversy and the fixtures thereto belonging, for the sum of $1,800, of which amount $450 were to be deposited by the purchasers in the Citizens State Bank of South Sioux City, to be held by it in trust until the conditions of said contract were complied with, and the remainder of the consideration was to be divided into three notes of $450 each, due in six, twelve, and fifteen months respectively from the date of the delivery of the engine. The purchasers were to be permitted to receive the engine on thirty days’ trial, and if found satisfactory upon such trial the money so deposited was to be forwarded to Schleicher, Schumen- & Co. and the purchasers were to execute their promissory notes as aforesaid. The engine was shipped and received as agreed, and having given satisfaction upon the trial thereof on October 26, 1893, the $450 were paid as agreed and the purchasers also executed and delivered to the yendor their three notes of $450 each, and secured
The vendors and purchasers alike treated the engine as personalty, and no innocent third parties will be prejudiced by the court holding that the engine did not become a fixture and a part of the real estate. The intention of the parties is a controlling consideration in determining whether the engine was personalty or a fixture. As was well said by Irvine, 0., in the course of his opinion upon the same subject in Arlington Mill & Elevator Co. v. Yates, 57 Neb. 286: “There is nothing in the nature of such machinery to stamp it as realty under all circumstances. It may become so or not according to circumstances. If a man sells bricks or nails or shingles for the purpose of erecting a house, these cannot in their specific character be continued, after such use, as personalty, because their very nature forbids such a result; but when an article is of an ambiguous character, such that it may either remain personalty or become attached to the freehold, much depends on the intention of the parties. This is especially true of trade fixtures and of machinery for trade purposes, where they may be removed without substantially impairing, not the property, taking its value with them remaining, but the property considered separately. There it is held that where the vendor and vendee agree that they shall remain personal property they do so, unless perhaps where innocent purchasers have acquired rights in reliance upon their apparent charac
In Tifft v. Horton, 53 N. Y. 380, the court gave expression to the following: “It is well settled that chattels may be annexed to real estate and still retain their character as personal property. * * * It may in this case be conceded that if there were no fact in it but the placing' upon the premises of the engine and boilers in the manner in which they were attached thereto, they would have become fixtures, and would pass as a part of the realty. But the agreement-of the then owner of the land and the plaintiff is express, that they should be and remain personal property until the notes given therefor were paid, and by the same agreement power was given to the plaintiff to enter upon the premises in certain contingencies and to take and carry them away. While there is no doubt but that the intention of the owner of the land was that the engine and boilers should ultimately become a part of the realty and be permanently affixed to it, this was subordinate to the prior intention expressed by the agreement. That fully shows her intention and the intention of the, plaintiff, that the act of annexing them to the freehold should not change.or take away the character of them as chattels until the price of them had been fully paid. i:" * * But it is contended that Avliere in the solution of this question the intention is a criterion, it must be the intention of all those who are interested in the lands, and that here the defendants, prior mortgagees of the real estate, were interested and have not expressed no'r shown such intention. It is not to be denied that, as a general rule, all fixtures put upon the land by the OAvner thereof, whether before or after the execution of a mortgage upon it, become subject to
The following authorities fully sustain the doctrine that the engine in question did not become a part of the real estate, and that the chattel mortgage given thereon to secure the payment of the balance of the purchase-money is valid and binding: Ford v. Cobb, 20 N. Y. 344; Eaves v. Estes, 10 Kan. 814; Crippen v. Morrison, 13 Mich. 24; Buzzell v. Cummings, 18 Atl. Rep. [Vt.] 93; Myrick v. Bill, 3 Dak. 284; Simmons v. Pierce, 16 O. St. 215; Sword v. Low, 13 N. E. Rep. [Ill.] 826; Tibbetts v. Moore, 28 Cal. 208; First Nat. Bank v. Elmore, 52 Ia. 541; Carpenter v. Walker, 5 N. E. Rep. [Mass.] 160,
Eeversed and remanded.