44 Iowa 57 | Iowa | 1876
The court found that the following property was affixed to and passed with the real estate:
1. The steam engine, boiler, whistle, pump, and all its attachments and belts, connecting it directly with the other machinery.
2. The fulling mill and its attachments and belts.
3. The main shaft and the pulleys thereon, and all the belts connecting it with the counter shafting.
4. The counter shafting and the dye kettle. .
5. The counter and shelving in the office.
It was found that all of the other machinery and articles in controversy were personal property and did not pass by the mortgage and sheriff’s deed.
No question is made here as to the finding of the court that the steam engine and other articles above enumerated were fixtures, and passed by the mortgage and sheriff’s deed. It is proper to observe that the boiler was walled about with one layer of brick, and that some of the other articles enumerated above were so constructed and attached to the building and land'as to be peculiarly adapted to that building, rather than to be used in woolen manufactories generally, unless by material changes in construction and adaptation.
The machinery which the court held to be personal property consisted of wool carders, condensers, breakers, spinning jacks, looms, shears, etc. Such of this machinery as was operated by steam power was so operated by means of belting connected with the main shaft or counter -shafting.
The looms are fastened to the floor by screws in the feet, some looms having two screws and some four. The carders are kept in position by their own weight, one weighing about 3,000, and the other about 1,800 pounds. The spinning jacks are fastened and held in position by cleats nailed to the floor, and by iron rod.s running up through the floor above. Other
Counsel for appellant claim that as the mortgage or trust deed conveyed the premises “with the appurtenances,” something more is conveyed than the real estate. This being the usual form of conveyance of real estate, we are unable to see how personal property can be embraced therein. Appurtenances are things belonging to another thing as principal, and which pass as incident to the principal thing. The term as used in conveyances passes nothing but the land and such things as belong thereto, and are part of the realty.
Fixtures are a species of property which are the dividing line between real and personal property, and to decide on which side of the line certain property belongs is often a vexatious question. When we compare a thing at the extremity of one class with a thing at the extremity of another the difference is obvious, but when we approach the point of ■division- difficulty arises in discovering where the distinction should be drawn. Hill on Fixtures, 16. On the question whether such machines so situated are fixtures, so that they constitute a part of the real estate, the authorities are so far from being uniform that no rule of universal application can be deduced from them, without conflicting with the doctrines found in some of the decisions upon the subject.
In New York, Ohio, Yermont, and some other States it is held that property of the character in question is personal, and does not pass by a mortgage or conveyance of the real estate. Murdock v. Gifford, 18 N. Y., 28; Walker v. Sherman, 5 Illinois, 527; Potter v. Cromwell, 40 N. Y., 287; Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio State, 511; Corwin v. Cowan, Id., 629; Hill v. Wentworth, 28 Vermont, 428; Bartlett v. Wood, 32 Id., 372; Gale v. Ward, 14 Mass., 352.
In Maine, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire and in other States, the courts hold that property of the character in ques
In all of these cases, and in all tbe others cited in argument wherever the question arises as to the character of a steam engine or water wheel, which is the propelling power of a mill or manufactory, the uniform rule is that they are held to be fixtures, and pass with the real estate. The same may be said of the stones or burrs in a grist mill, the cog wheels, gearing and shafting in a mill or manufactory, they being parts of the motive power. The court below properly held the engine, boiler, shafting, and counter shafting and belting to be fixtures, and that they passed under the mortgage foreclosure, and sheriff’s sale. With the belting or straps which propelled the looms, spinning jacks, etc., the court stopped and in substance decided that here is the dividing line; all beyond are mere chattels. The basis or reason for thus holding seems to be in the thought that there is nothing in the character of the property, or in the manner of its annexation to the building, or in its adaptation thereto indicating that it was intended as a permanent accession to the realty, and that adaptation to the business carried on in the building is not a criterion for determining the question as ■ to whether the machinery be real or personal property.
It is argued that these looms, spinning jacks, etc., are equally well adapted to any other building, that they are manufactured with a view of being used in any woolen mill in which they may be placed; that they are entire and complete machines in and of themselves; that the physical attachments are such that they may readily be removed to any other building, and that there is nothing in the character of the machines or mode of annexation to denote that they were intended as permanent accessions to the realty, and therefore, they are chattels.
In the case of Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 O. St., 511, it is said: “ The true criterion of a fixture is the united application of the following requisites:
“2. Application to the use or purpose to which that part of the realty with which it is connected is appropriated.
“ 3. The intention of the party making the annexation to make a permanent accession to the free-hold:”
In the application of the rule just stated, it was held that “the machinery in a woolen factory, consisting of carding machines,' spinning machines, power looms, etc., connected with the motive power of the engine by bands and straps, but in no wise attached to the building except by cleats or other means to confine them to their proper places for use, and subject to removal whenever convenience or business may require, without injury, are not fixtures, but chattel property.” It was held in that case that the engine and boiler were fixtures.
In Parsons v. Copeland, 38 Me., 537, it was held that the looms, carding machines, etc., belonging to a woolen factory and placed therein by the owners of the freehold, were fixtures and passed with the realty. It is said by the court that, “ It cannot be denied that the physical attachment of certain articles to the freehold is a very uncertain and unsatisfactory criterion. We have seen that it is well settled that the same attachments will not change the character of the article, when made under one species of tenancy, when under another, with much less of a permanent connection, it will cause the article to become a part of the real estate. Mill stones, the gear of the mill, and the water-wheel to which the power is applied, and the articles connected, which are universally conceded to be fixtures, and to pass with the realty, may be taken from their appropriate places without the withdrawing of a spike, a pin, or a nail, or the displacement of a cleat, their own weight often heeping them in their intended position, and no injury whatever arise to the building from which they are taken.” ******
“ But it is true, undoubtedly, that the building, the waterwheel and the gear designed for a grist mill, have peculiarities, and are often very different from the water-wheel, the gear, as well as the building intended to constitute parts, of a woolen
The three requisites laid down in the case of Teaff v. Hewitt, as constituting a fixture, it is said, must all combine. The first, being physical attachment, all the cases hold is a very uncertain and unsatisfactory criterion, and in our opinion the only value to be attached to it is, in determining the intention of the owner of the freehold in making the annexation. If it be so affixed that its removal would materially injure the building, this is evidence of an intention to make it a permanent annexation.
The second requisite, being application to the use or pitrpose to which that part of the realty with which it is connected is appropriated, is in this case fully met by the use of this machinery in a woolen mill, and without which the mill itself would be useless. '
The third requisite, being the intention of the party making the annexation to make a permanent accession to the freehold, is to our minds the controlling consideration in determining the whole question.
The character of the physical attachment, whether slight or otherwise, and the use, are mainly important in determining the intention of the party making the annexation. And herein lies the reason of the rule that many articles of prop
In our view, the court, in the case of Teaff v. Hewitt, supra, after announcing the above requisites, in applying them to the case, holds physical attachment to be the principal criterion, leaving out of view the main consideration, viz.: the intention of the party making the annexation.
It being conceded by all the cases that the engine, boiler and attachments, being the motive power, are fixtures, and that the stones or burrs of a grist mill, with the attachments, are likewise fixtures, it is not easy to understand why any dividing line should be made at the point where the belting attaches to the other machinery. Is there anything in- the whole record of this case tending to show that the machinery in question was intended to be any less permanent than the engine, shafting or belt? The fair presumption is, that the whole machinery, including that now in question, was placed in the building with the intention that they should remain there as part of the manufactory until -worn out or displaced by others. This assumption is as strong and controlling as to the carding machines, spinning jacks, etc., as it is as to the engine, shafting and belts. Our conclusion is, that all of the machinery which was propelled by the engine was part of the real estate, and passed with the foreclosure and sheriff’s deed.
It may be said that the boiler was encased in a brick wall, and by reason of being thus firmly attached, it was a fixture, and that the machines'in question were capable of removal, and this denoted an intention not to change their character from chattels to fixtures.
The ready answer to this is, that all the authorities hold that the motive power of a mill or manufactory is part of the real estate, whether firmly attached or not. Steam engines are manufactured and sold as engines, without reference to any particular building or mill where they may be placed, and are as capable of being used in buildings indiscriminately as power looms, spinning jacks, or carding machines.
Reversed.