52 Iowa 541 | Iowa | 1879
In that case an injunction was obtained in the state court of Missouri, restraining the bank from proceeding to sell under a deed of trust executed to the bank in security for a loan of $15,000. Upon writ of error to the Supreme Court of the United States the judgment of the state court was reversed. In the course of the opinion, respecting the defense that the trust deed was taken in violation of the banking act, and was void, the court say; “We cannot believe it was meant that stockholders, and perhaps depositors, and other creditors should be punished, and the borrower rewarded, by giving success to this defense whenever the offensive fact shall occur. The impending danger of a judgment of ouster and dissolution was, we think, the check, and none other, contemplated by Congress. That has been always the punishment prescribed for the wanton violation of a charter, and it may be made to follow, whenever the proper public authority shall see fit to make its application. A private person cannot, directly or indirectly, usurp this function of the government.”
As the question under consideration arises under a statute of the United States, this decision of the United States Supreme Court is authoritative and binding upon us, and is conclusive of the validity of the mortgage in question, as between the parties thereto.
II. As to the relation .of the plaintiff’s mortgage to the liens of the other defendants:
1. The mortgage to N. B. Lord bears date June 16, 1871, the mortgage to Charles H. Williams bears date February 24,
2. It is conceded by the plaintiff that if the mechanic’s liens have not become merged in the superior estates of the defendants Pray and Holt, and the mill is found to be such independent structure as can be removed, the three claims above named, as well as the four mechanic’s liens mentioned in the sixth, seventh, eighth and ninth paragraphs of the court’s findings, are prior to the lien of plaintiff’s judgment on the mill. These questions are hereinafter considered.
III. The mill structure upon which these mechanic’s liens are claimed was erected in the summer of 1875, subsequent to the date of the mortgage to plaintiff. It is claimed by the plaintiff that the mill building is not such an independent structure as is susceptible of removal, under the doctrine of Getchel v. Allen, 34 Iowa, 559, and the cases following it, and that, therefore, the mortgage attaches to the building and takes precedence of the mechanic’s liens thereon, and is the fourth lien upon the mill building, as well as upon the balance of the realty. We think, however, the evidence shows the mill building to be such independent structure as may be removed. It is a frame building, and may, we think, as appears from the weight of the evidence, be removed without material detriment to the realty.
Tbe case of Bringholff v. Munzenmaier holds that fixtures so attached to the realty by the owner as to become a part of it, between vendor and vendee, pass to the vendee free of the lien of a prior mortgage thereon of which the vendee had no notice. The case of Winslow v. The Merchant's Insurance Company holds that fixtures, and additions in the nature of fixtures, which are placed in a building by a mortgagor, after lie has mortgaged it, become part of the realty as between him and the mortgagee, and cannot be removed or otherwise disposed of by him while the mortgage is in force. In Richardson v. Copeland it is held that a steam engine set upon a granite block, and a boiler set in bricks in such manner that it cannot be removed without taking down the brick, and both used for running machinery in an adjoining shop, became a part of the realty, and a mortgage thereof as personal property, executed contemporaneously with the bill of sale from the vendor, but after the engine and boiler have been put in operation, passes no title in them as against a subsequent purchaser of the real estate, though willi notice of the mortgage. The principle upon which this case is decided is, that a mortgage of the engine and boiler as personal property, after they had been attached to and had become a part of the realty, is void. In Cross v. Marston, 17 Vt., 533, it was held simply that a case of drawers and the sash of a show case placed in the building of another and fastened in their places with nails, did not, under the circumstances of the case, become part of the realty so as to pass to a subsequent purchaser of the building. We regard all these cases as essentially different from the case at bar. No question of notice between mortgagee and vendee is involved. The chattel mortgage upon this machinery was executed before it was placed in the mill, and hence the right to mortgage it as personal projierty is clear. The evidence shows that there is but one place where tbe machinery is connected with tbe main frame in the building, and that is in tbe basement, where a box is bolted to one of the frame timbers for the shafting to run in. The ma
The several liens are confirmed in the order of precedence named by the court, except that the mortgage to plaintiff shall be established as the fourth lien upon the real estate, subject to the liens specified on the mill and machinery. The chattel mortgage will be enforced against the machinery in the mill, the mechanic’s liens against the mill structure, and the mortgages against the whole property subject to the chattel' mortgage and the several mechanic’s liens, each lien being satisfied in the order of its priority. The cause will be remanded to the court beloiv for a decree in harmony with these views.
Reversed.