Norwalk Iron Works Co. v. St. Louis County Bank

165 Mo. App. 67 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1912

NORTONI, J.

This is a suit in replevin. The finding and judgment were for defendant and plaintiff prosecutes the appeal.

A jury being waived, the trial was had before the court, and the appeal presents hut one question for consideration. The subject-matter of the controversy is a compound air compressor, which we understand to be a machine of considerable proportions, forming parcel of a stone crushing plant. It’appears plaintiff leased the machine involved here to the Shutt Improvement Company, which owned and operated a stone quarry and crushing plant at Mona, Missouri. The writing in evidence touching this transaction reveals that the Shutt Improvement Company was to pay plaintiff .$2000, in various installments, for the machine, and until the final payment was made the improvement company was to enjoy the use of the machine as though it were the owner thereof. Upon the final payment being made, the title was to vest in the Shutt Improvement Company, but until then it remained in plaintiff. The machine was duly installed in the plant of the Shutt Improvement Company and employed as parcel thereof for some time. During the interim, about $1150 of the purchase price was paid thereon. Afterwards, the Associated Quarries Company, another corporation, acquired title and all of the property of the Shutt Improvement Company, including such right as it had in the compressor. The indenture of lease, which evidenced as well a conditional sale of the compressor by plaintiff to the Shutt Improvement Company, was neither filed nor recorded in the proper office for the registration of such documents. The Associated Quarries Company became -involved, and applied to defendant hank for a loan of $10,000, to be used in liquidating its indebtedness. The bank proposed that it would loan the amount on the note of Mr. A. "W. Hoffmann and Mr. E. W. Shutt, two of the officers of the Associated Quarries C.om*71pany, provided satisfactory collateral security was giv.en. Thereupon the Associated Quarries Company executed its note for $10,000.in favor of A. W. Hoffmann, and a deed of trust on all of its property securing the same, to be used as collateral for the loan. This note and deed of trust were pledged by Mr. Hoffmann to the defendant bank as collateral security for their note of $10,000, and the money received thereon was employed by the Associated Quarries Company in its business.

The compound air compressor is a single piece of machinery, about thirteen feet in length, five feet in width and about five feet in height. Long prior to the time the Associated Quarries Company became owner of the property and prior to the deed of trust above mentioned, this machine had been installed in the crushing plant. It rested upon a concrete foundation constructed for the purpose in the main building of the plant, and was made fast thereto by bolts sunk into the concrete. Besides, it was directly attached to the boilers of the plant which operated it and was again attached to a large iron tank. Its construction was such as to attach it in another place to the building employed for receiving and holding compressed air and from which such air was taken to operate the air drills of the quarry. While the compressor thus stood as parcel of the plant, the Associated Quarries Company executed the deed of trust thereon under which defendant claims title. This deed of trust covered, first, twenty-seven acres of land on which the quarries and plant were situate, and then described and included the crushing plant, tools and equipments as follows: “Also one crushing plant complete, two crushers, two boilers, one engine, all air and steam drills, churn drills, thirty-nine quarry and dump cars and all other tools of any and all kinds and description used in connection with the crushing plant quarry; also all buildings being the entire crushing *72plant and personal property located on or near the' above described real estate and used in connection with the above described crushing plant.”

Default having been made in the payment of the $10,000 note, the deed of trust was foreclosed, in accordance with its terms, and defendant bank became the purchaser of the property at the sale. As before said, plaintiff’s lease on the compressor was not of record, and, according to the finding of the court, the bank was wholly without notice thereof at the time it made the loan and accepted the note and deed of trust as collateral therefor. Though it be true that mere possession of personal property of another, when no title or interest accompanies such possession, confers no power to mortgage the property, it is true as well that in some cases the proposition is subject to an exception in favor of those who act in good faith in reliance upon an appearance and claim of ownership. For instance, where a vendor has voluntarily placed a vendee in possession of property as though he owned it and thus put it in the power of the vendee to treat the goods as his own in dealing with others, it is just, in proper circumstances, to treat the matter as if authority were given to pass the title. In such cases, the vendor, who has trusted the vendee, should suffer the loss, if loss is to fall upon him or upon a purchaser or mortgagee, who, on the credit of the property, has parted with value to the person in possession. Secret liens upon property in matters of this kind are not favored in the law, and where the vendor has, as in this case, omitted to record his lease or mortgage, and an innocent party has advanced money on the appearance of ownership, it is just that the loss, if one ensue, should fall upon the innocent party who has rendered it possible for the other to be deceived. Therefore, says Mr. Jones in his work on mortgages, “A mortgage executed by one in possession of the property as owner, although he holds possession under *73an agreement that the legal title was not to pass to him until the chattels were paid for, such contract of conditional sale not having been filed for record, will take precedence over the secret lien of the seller under his conditional sale.” [Jones, Mortgages (5 Ed.), sec. 116.] See the following authorities in support of the proposition thus stated: Chase v. Ingalls, 122 Mass. 381; Currier v. Knapp, 117 Mass. 324; Harrington v. King, 121 Mass. 269; Albright v. Meredith, 58 Oh. St. 194.

But, it is said, though such be true, the compressor involved here is not described in the deed of trust and, therefore, defendant is certainly without title or claim thereto. It is said that, in order to avail defendant here, the compressor must be sufficiently described to enable a third party, aided by such inquiries as the instrument itself suggest, to identify the property as that mortgaged. [See Dierling v. Pettit, 140 Mo. App. 88, 119 S. W. 524.] Though such be the rule, we are fully persuaded that it is met and satisfied by the description contained in the deed of trust when considered in connection with the law touching such matters. After describing the real estate on which the crushing plant was situate, the deed of trust describes the other property covered and included thereby as follows: “Also one crushing plant complete, two crushers, two boilers, one engine, all air and steam drills, churn drills, thirty-nine quarry and dump cars and all other tools of any and all kinds and description used in connection with the crushing plant quarry; also all buildings being the entire crushing plant and personal property located on or near the above described real estate and used in connection tvith the above described crushing plant.” The deed of trust here does not purport to cover any particular piece of property single and alone and describe it, hut intends, instead, to cover the entire crushing plant and personal property used in connection with the above *74described crushing plant. Obviously, if this large machine, made fast to the earth through being bolted in the immense concrete base constructed .for that purpose, were removed and the connections severed from the boilers and the compressed air receptacle, the crushing plant would no long’er be an entire one, for to dissever the plant and destroy the permanent connections for the operation of the air and steam drills described would render it no longer the complete crushing plant so well described in the deed of trust. Furthermore, this document covers and includes all personal property located on or near the above described real estate and used in connection with the above described crushing plant. Beyond question this compressor is described and included in the language above set forth, if it be possible to render it a portion of the plant by building it into the same in a permanent manner, as it appears was done. Such heavy machines, which are built into a factory by being securely and permanently bolted to a foundation set into the earth for that purpose, and otherwise so connected with the structure of the plant as to render them appurtenances to the completed mill, are regarded as fixtures within general words of description in a mortgage including the entire plant. Especially is this true when to dissever the machine would tend to destroy the integrity of the plant when considered with respect to the purpose for which it was constructed. [See Keeler v. Keeler, 31 N. J. Eq. 181; Jones, Mortgages (5 Ed.), sec. 130.]

The compressor here involved, besides being bolted into the heavy concrete foundation constructed for that purpose, was attached directly to an engine and to the boilers which operated it and again attached to a large iron tank and attached as well to the building maintained for receiving and storing compressed air, and is used for the purpose of supplying the air drills to operate the quarry. If such a machine so built into *75the plant and attached to the various portions thereof is not thus converted into a portion of the mill itself, it would be difficult to determine when great machines so installed lose their identity as personal property and attain the status of a portion of the completed plant. The judgment should be affirmed. It is so ordered.

Reynolds, P. J., and Caulfield, J., concur.