Fechet v. Drake

12 P. 694 | Ariz. | 1887

BARNES, J.

Plaintiff in this ease seeks to quiet title to real estate mentioned in his complaint. He derives his title from a judgment sale under a decree of ■ foreclosure of a mortgage. The mortgage was executed-August 8, 1883, and the sheriff’s sale under a decree of foreclosure was made June 2, 1885, and, after time of redemption had expired, a deed was executed and delivered. On April 1, A. D. 1885, defendant became the assignee in insolvency of the mortgagee.

The question in this case is whether the property in question passed by the mortgage, or remained in the mortgagor, and passed by the assignment, under the insolvency proceedings, to defendant, Drake. The record shows that an electric light company had been organized, and was engaged in lighting the city of Tucson by that means; that in 1883 the company purchased lot 2, in Tucson, of one Wilkins, for the purpose of placing and constructing an electric plant thereon so as to light said city thereby; that, after the purchase of said lot, such plant was constructed, including boilers, engines, dynamo, and, as a necessary, integral, and ordinary part of such plant, there was erected in the streets of the city 18 masts, and wires were strung thereon, along which the electric light current ran so as to conduct the same to the electric lamps located in the different parts of the city, and so light the same. The said wires, so strung, were attached to the building on said lot, and to the dynamo therein, and thereby the current was completed. To cut the wires; or by any means destroy such connection, rendered the whole plant useless for that purpose. The mortgagee- conveyed said lot, “together with all machinery, including the boiler, engine, and dynamo now situated on the said land, and together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurte*243nances thereunto belonging, or in anywise appertaining.” The only question here is whether, by this mortgage, there passed to the mortgagee, the wires so strung along said masts. Defendant insists that the same did not pass, and that he may cut such wires, and treat the same as the personal property of the mortgagor. Plaintiff insists that the whole plant, including the wires so strung, passed by the mortgage.

This raises a very important question. It is urged that the said wires are a fixture to the lot, and as such pass by the mortgage. There is great confusion in the boohs in the definition of the term “fixtures.” It is held to denote “such articles of a chattel nature as, when once annexed to the realty, may not be removed by the party annexing them, as against the owner.” Ewell, Fixt. 1, and cases cited. On the other hand, just the reverse is held to be the true definition; that is, chattels annexed that may be removed, etc. Ferard, Fixt. 2, and cases cited. It is difficult to determine in which of the above senses it is most frequently employed.

“A fixture is an article which was a chattel, but which, by being physically annexed or affixed to the realty, became accessory to it, and a part and parcel of it.” This definition is sustained by all the authorities. Amos & F. Fixt. 11. “Things fixed in a greater or less degree to the realty.” 2 Kent, Comm. 345, note a. “Anything annexed to the freehold.” 2 Smith, Lead. Cas. 239, note. In Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio St. 511, 59 Am. Dec. 634, the court discuss this whole question: “The term ‘fixture’, in the ordinary signification, is expressive of the act of annexation, and denotes the change which has occurred in the nature and legal incidents of the property; and it appears to be not only appropriate, but necessary, to distinguish this class of property from movable property possessing the nature and incidents of chattels.”

The fact that there are exceptions to the rule in favor of tenants as against landlords, and in favor of trade, does not change the definition. Quicquid plantatur solo, solo cedit, was the maxim of the common law; and, as between vendor and vendee, and mortgagor and mortgagee, remains to-day unchanged. Co. Litt. 53; 2 Smith, Lead. Cas. 114; 2 Kent, Comm. note a, 345; Elwes v. Maw, 3 East, 57. Whichever definition may be regarded best, all concur that, where the *244chattel is “fixed” or “annexed” physically to the soil, it becomes a part of the realty.

The electric light current was affixed to the soil as firmly as the nature thereof would permit. It was attached physically to it, and became a part of the fixed machinery. To that extend this electric light current is a fixture. But is is contended that, while this is so, yet that a fixture must be on the land, and that that may not be a fixture which is off the land.

A case is cited holding that, where an engine was on one lot, and connected with a machine on another lot, that the machine on each lot is a fixture on the lot on which it is constructed. McDonald v. Minneapolis Lumber Co., 28 Minn. 262, 9 N. W. 765. That is not this ease. Here one lot is devoted to the maintenance of an electric light plant. Upon it are erected buildings, and in them are placed motive power and dynamo by which an electric current is to be created, and from the same led by means of wires annexed thereto, and running out of the building, strung on poles set up in the streets of the city, through the city, to points where this light is needed, and, returning by the same means, are so connected with the dynamo as to complete the circuit, and so make effectual the operation of a machine of which it is an integral and necessary part. It has a “right of way” along the streets of the city, which is no more than a mere license, and the license is subject to the public use of the streets, and in no way affects the fee to the same. Such use of the streets is a public use, and the power to grant such use is to be found in the same powers that grant the use of the streets to railway companies, gas companies, water companies, and the like. The mortgage or sale of a railway would carry its tracks -laid in or across a highway annexed to its tracks, on its exclusive right of way, or even its locomotives and cars thereon. Rolling stock of a railway is a part of the realty where a railroad is mortgaged, though used on lines not included in the mortgage. Minnesota Co. v. St. Paul Co., 2 Wall. 609, and see note to this case.

The later, and we think the better, doctrine does not require an actual fastening to the soil as essential to making a chattel a fixture. The third rule stated by Mr. Carpenter (2 *245Wall. 646) is sustained by these authorities: “If the thing be essential to the use of the real estate, and has uniformly been used with it, then it passes, though not fastened to it.” Farrar v. Stackpole, 6 Greenl. 157, 19 Am. Dec. 201; Snedeker v. Warring, 12 N. Y. 170; Pierce v. Emery, 32 N. H. 484; Minnesota Co. v. St. Paul Co., 2 Wall. 609; Peoria etc. R. R. Co. v. Thompson, 103 Ill. 209.

The electric current, including wires, poles, insulators, and appliances, was an essential part of the machine. To sever it was to destroy it. The object of the law is to preserve, and not to destroy. A machine made of many parts, operated for a- useful purpose, may have great value. Sever the parts, and they are each comparatively worthless. And it is the duty of the courts, so far as may be, to so construe the law that the usefulness and value of such property be maintained. In Regina v. North Staffordshire Ry. Co., 3 El. & El. 392, Lord Cockburn held that telegraph apparatus, consisting of posts driven into the ground, and wires passing through sockets annexed to the posts, but which wires might be disconnected from the posts without injury, or displacing them, were a part of the appliances of the defendant railway company, and were fixtures, as they were so attached that it was intended that they should remain permanently connected with the railway, or the premises used with it, and remain permanent appendages to it as essential to its operation. Such is this case.

We have so far considered this as though it were an ordinary conveyance of the lot, but the mortgage conveyed the lot, “together with all the machinery, including the boiler, engine, and dynamo now situated on said lot, and together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereto belonging, or in anywise appertaining.”

In Pickerell v. Carson, 8 Iowa, 544, a sale of “the fixtures and appurtenances contained in the daguerreian rooms,” etc., embraced all such property as was used in carrying on the business, such as maps, pictures, stove, carpet, apparatus and furniture, machines and stock, as appurtenances, and sky-light, balcony, partition, etc., as fixtures.

The electric current is, then, an appurtenance to the machinery situated on that lot, and is therefore covered by the *246language of the mortgage, even it not a fixture. Extra rolls in a rolling-mill, removable at pleasure, were held to be a part of the realty as appurtenant to it. Pyle v. Pennock, 2 Watts & S. 390, 37 Am. Dec. 517. A statue and a sun-dial also. Snedeker v. Warring, 12 N. Y. 170; Wadleigh v. Janvrin, 41 N. H. 503, 77 Am. Dec. 780. A mortgage of a railway, with its appurtenances and franchises, includes its rolling stock, tools, and all movable property used in its operation. Peoria etc. R. R. Co. v. Thompson, 103 Ill. 209.

The ingenuity of invention, creating new appliances for usefulness, constantly brings new facts for the consideration of the courts; and to these established principles must be applied. To determine whether a particular chattel has become a “fixture” or an “appurtenance” we must be guided by authority. A consideration of the authorities leads to the conclusion that in each case it is a mixed question of law and fact, largely to be determined by the intention of the parties, and the uses to which the chattel is devoted. In this case it was the evident intention of the parties to make this electric current a part of the machine mortgaged and attached to the land,—to become a part of the realty. We hold, therefore, that the chattel so attached passed with the mortgage.

The judgment is affirmed.

Porter, J., concurs.