249 F. 260 | D. Mass. | 1918
This case comes here on a certificate from Referee Darling. Accompanying the certificate is a report of the evidence with the exhibits that were’introduced. The parties are the trustee in bankruptcy and the Worcester Trust Company, trustee under a mortgage executed to it November 1, 1907, by the Russell Falls Paper Company, the predecessor of the bankrupt corporation, to secure bonds issued by the paper company to the amount oí (250,-000. The Russell Falls Paper Company, hereinafter called the old company, was organized September 27, 1907, by one Maynard and others under the laws of Maine, for the purpose of engaging in the business of manufacturing paper. The business proved unprofitable, and as a result there was, in 1913, a large indebtedness in addition to the Bonded indebtedness. Early in 1915, the Russell Falls Company,
The principal question is whether certain machinery in the mill and on the premises at the time of the filing of the petition in bankruptcy was subject to the mortgage. There is a subsidiary question as to whether the trust company is liable for the fees, cost, and charges of this court, or any part thereof. Under an order of this court, the machinery has been sold free from all liens, and the proceeds, amounting'to $70,000, paid into court to await the determination of the matters at issue. • The parties came to what was, in effect, an understanding as to the values to be placed on the various items, or units, of which the machinery was composed, and the referee has found the values, substantially, if not entirely, in accordance therewith, item by item. The question of values, which otherwise might have been a troublesome one, has thus been eliminated. No question is or has been raised as to the validity of the mortgage. The case was heard at length by the referee, and in addition he took a view.
■ The referee has divided the property as to which there- is or might be controversy into three groups. As a matter of classification, the parties are content with the grouping, though the trust company objects to the conclusion to which the referee has come in regard to the item contained in the second group, and the trustee in bankruptcy to the conclusions to which he has come in regard to items contained in the first group. The third group consists of articles which the referee has classed as personal property, and which he finds the trustee in bankruptcy is entitled to. The trust company makes no claim to any of these articles, and they need not, therefore, be further considered. The first group consists of machinery to which the referee has found the trust company entitled under its mortgage. The second
The machinery was bought largely on conditional sales, which provided that no title should pass until it was paid for, and, in some cases,_ that it should not be transferred or mortgaged. The referee has found that the machinery had been paid for, and that the title had vested before the petition in bankruptcy was filed. This finding is not controverted. It is urged that some of the payments were made by the new company, and some of the machinery was put in by it. There is no finding in regard to these matters. But, even if it was as urged, the title of the mortgagee would not be affected thereby. It is immaterial, so far as the trust company is concerned, whether the old company put in all of the machinery or not, if by whomsoever put in it was annexed to and constituted a part of the realty. It. is also immaterial, for the same reason, who paid for it. Such matters might have some bearing on the question of the intent with which the machinery was annexed to the freehold, but that would be all.
This case, as already observed, is wholly one between the mortgagor and the mortgagee. It would be giving too narrow a construction to' the conveyances that were made by the old company to the trust company to say that because they did not specifically mention the machinery, an intention was thereby manifested to except the machinery and to treat it as personal property. The conveyances included, as already observed, whatever had been annexed to and constituted a part of the realty, unless expressly excepted, and operated to give title to the trust company to whatever thereafter was annexed to and became a part of the realty. Bills of sale of the machinery to the trust company might have been given, as it was voted to do, for the purposes of security; but they became unnecessary by reason of the annexation of the machinery to the realty with the intention thereby to subject it to the mortgage. The same object which would have been accomplished by the bills of sale was effected by annexing the machinery to the realty, with the intention of thereby subjecting it to the mortgage.
The whole arrangement contemplated a permanent addition to1 the property for use in the business that was to be carried on there. The referee has found that the identity was not lost by reason of annexation to the realty, and that the machinery could be removed, as was being done with some of it, without material injury to itself or the buildings. But while the fact, if it had been the fact, that the machinery had lost its identity, or could not be removed without great or irreparable injury to itself or the property, would go far to show almost, if not quite, conclusively that it had become a part of the realty, the contrary fact, which is strongly relied on by the trustee in bankruptcy, that it could be removed without material injury to itself or the property has very little, if any, tendency to show that it was not so annexed to the realty, and with such intention, as to constitute it a part thereof. It seems to me that the conclusion to which the learned referee has come in regard to the machinery which constitutes the first group is correct and should be sustained. Perhaps as open to question as any of the. items in this group are the electric motors, which are compact, self-contained pieces of mechanism, readily removable. Considering, however, their intimate connection with the machinery which clearly passed to the mortgagee, they seem to me to go with it is a necessary part thereof, just as the shafting and belts transmitting power from a central steam plant to a machine, which passed, would also pass.
So far as the reported evidence shows, the only persons who testified in regard to the condition of the machine were Mr. Barton, Mr. Eastman, Mr. Maynard, and Mr. Mills. There were also- exhibits. It is not quite clear whether Mr. Barton was testifying in regard to the wet end of the machine, or to the machine as a whole. What he said was as follows:
“Q. That (referring to the second machine as compared to the first machine) is a wider machine? A. Yes. Q. But that machine has the wetting end, the same as the other machine? A. I assume so; it wasn’t set up. C¿. That is, not as yet set up? A. No sir. Q. No part of it? A. Bart of it is set up; the greater part not.”
It would seem that what the witness was referring to here was the wet end, and that a part of that had been set up, notwithstanding -the referee’s finding to the contrary. ' Later, in speaking of some changes which they (his firm) were making for the Westfield River Paper Company, he said that they would amount to about half of the machine; but that had no reference to the condition of the machine at the time to which he was testifying in the evidence already quoted. Mr. Eastman testified on direct examination as follows:
“Q. Mr. Eastman, bow much of the second machine is set up, or was set up prior to the time of the 'Westfield Kiver Baper Company’s removal? A. All the machine proper was set up, with the exception of the flow box; the apron, and the wire, with the roll which runs the wire. Q. That is, there are a large number of rolls, as I understand it, in the wet part? A. Yes. Q. That were not in place? A. The wire I should have left out, because the wire is a part of the machine proper. Q. The wire and the flow boxes were in there? A. Yes, sir. Q. Then what was set up was the frame of the wet part? A. Yes, sir; and some of the rolls. Q. And some of the rolls? A. Yes, sir. Q. And what else was set up? A. All of the press rolls, all of the drying rolls, the calenders. There was lacking in the drying system four or five wooden rolls for the felts. Q. There was testimony by Mr. Barton about table rolls. Is that it? A. Yes; table rolls or tube rolls. Q. Where were they? A. They were in the mill. Q. Whereabouts? A. In a box about fiye feet from the end of the machine.”
Mr. Maynard testified, on direct examination, that “the entire machine was completed from the wet end to< the winding part” when it was shipped to them (the old company); “the whole of it was complete, but we decided to throw out certain things and make certain changes,” and it was “not completely set up.” On cross-examination he said that the machine, as far as it went, was completely installed and attached to the foundation in the same way it would be if the entire machine had been installed; - that it lacked “the drive, the wet-end and the winding end.” In answer to the question, “The substantial part of the machine is there, as shown by the picture?” (referring to one of the exhibits), he said, “The heaviest part of the machine is installed,” by which I understand him to ha.ve meant the largest part. The testimony of Mr. Mills was that his firm sold the machine to the company, that it was complete when sold to them, that they had it changed over, that it had never been erected, that part of it, the driers, nothing but the driers as he noticed, were standing on the foundation, and that those were the only thing that attracted his attention, “because I [he] wasn’t really interested in it.” The exhibits show a large and heavy machine, several feet wide and high, and many feet long, with rolls of wood and iron and numerous other parts. It stands on steel or iron plates fastened to the foundation. It is built, in part at least, in sections; each section consisting of two heavy upright frames on opposite sides, bolted together at the top across the machine, and fastened on each side at their bases through the steel plates to the concrete foundation. The machine can be taken down section by section, but the sections are of no use independently of each other,’and when the machine is completed it is run as a unit.
The result of this examination is, briefly, to show, I think, that a substantia] part, if not the larger part, of the machine had been set permanently in position on foundations especially prepared for it, and securely bolted and fastened thereto; that the remaining parts were in the mill and near at hand, and the work of setting up and completing the machine was in progress; that the machine itself, though complete to begin with, had been changed over by throwing-out some parts and putting in others, so as to conform to what was wanted at that particular mill, and that the part annexed would be use ■ less without the rest of the machine.
As already observed, no rule has been or can he laid down as to the degree or mode of annexation required or the sufficiency of the annexation in any particular case. Something in the nature of attachment or annexation there must be. Mere intention that a machine shall be considered a part of the realty is not enough. I doubt whether the mere fact that a foundation has been prepared for a machine is sufficient in and of itself to constitute the machine a part of tile freehold, although it seems to have been so held in McFadden v. Crawford, 36 W. Va. 671, 15 S. E. 408, 32 Am. St. Rep. 894. But where, as here, a substantial part, if not the larger part of the machine, has been permanently set up, on foundations specially pre
In view of these decisions, it must be held, it seems to me, that as between mortgagor and mortgagee, if a substantial and unseparable part of a machine in process of erection has been permanently annexed to the freehold, with the intention of making the machine a part of tire realty, then the machine, taken as a whole, must be regarded as a fixture, and work done upon it in completing it must be regarded as work done upon it as a part of the realty. Though the question is not free from doubt, I incline to the view that the second paper machine was so far annexed to the realty as to come under the mortgage as a fixture.
The result is that of the $70,000 the trust company is entitled to the sum of the values of the items contained in the first and second groups in the referee’s certificate, amounting in the aggregate to $65,300, with interest on the same at the rate, if any, received while the fund lias been in the possession of the court.
So ordered.