135 A. 216 | Pa. | 1926
On April 22, 1922, Tillie C. Werder, the defendant, made a royalty lease of certain coal, etc., in land owned by her in St. Clair Township, Westmoreland County, to Howard B. Payne. The lease required the lessee, inter alia, to expend not less than $50,000 for mining equipment, which in case of his default should be forfeited to the lessor as liquidated damages. One week later the lessor conveyed to the lessee, inter alia, the surface of the land over the leased coal and received a bond and mortgage thereon. It was stipulated that the conveyance should not merge with the lease. The mortgage was promptly recorded. In the lease and purchase Payne acted as agent for the Marion-Westmoreland Collieries Company. Later, in May, 1922, that company, under a conditional sales contract, obtained from the Ridgway Dynamo Engine Company, plaintiff, possession of an apparatus used in mining called a motor generator set, of the value of $4,320. This was duly installed as a part of the mining equipment in question, and set upon a concrete foundation but not otherwise attached to the real estate. The conditional sales contract, drawn and executed according to the requirements of the Act of June 7, 1915, P. L. 866, was duly recorded in the prothonotary's office on November 7, 1922. In January, 1924, Mrs. Werder obtained possession of the leased premises by a judgment in ejectment, entered because of the lessee's default; and on February 1, 1924, obtained possession of the land as purchased at sheriff's sale on a judgment entered on the said bond. Prior thereto, on November 12, 1923, the plaintiff gave notice to the conditional vendee (the lessee) of default in payment of a balance of $600 on the motor generator set and of its desire to repossess the same as provided in the contract. On March 12, 1924, plaintiff tendered defendant a bond *362 to indemnify her for any damage that might be done to the real estate in removing the motor generator set, and, on her refusal to consent to such removal, brought this writ of replevin. From judgment entered on a directed verdict for plaintiff, defendant has appealed.
As a general proposition, a motor generator set, so placed in the mine and necessary to its operation, would be a part of the real estate and pass as such: Titus v. Poland Coal Co.,
While the statute in question does not seem to have been passed upon by an appellate court, similar enactments in other jurisdictions have generally been sustained. Plaintiff was not a party to the lease of the coal and its conditional sales contract with the lessee was not nullified by the latter's prior agreement that fixtures, etc., erected by him on the premises should be forfeited to the lessor in case of his default. That would embrace his own property, but the property here in question never became his. See 24 Rawle C. L., p. 468, section 762. Neither the lease nor the mortgage was taken on the faith of the motor generator set as the conditional sales contract had not then been made nor the property delivered. It is a general rule that a mortgage so drawn as to embrace property subsequently brought upon the premises will not include that of a third party delivered to the mortgagor under a conditional sales contract. Uniform Laws Annotated, vol. 2a, p. 101, says: "Frequently the buyer of the fixture and the owner of the realty to which it is attached has, prior to the sale of fixture to him, given a mortgage on the real property, sometimes with a clause covering after-acquired property, as well as the land as it stood at the time of the delivery of the mortgage. Later, the conditional buyer has defaulted and a contest over the fixture has arisen between the conditional seller of the fixture and the real property mortgagee, who, of course, had no notice of the conditional sale at the time he took his mortgage, for the very good reason that no conditional sale had occurred. The majority of the cases have declared the conditional seller of the fixture superior, since *364
the real property mortgagee has taken no action on the faith of ownership of the fixture by his mortgagor": citing authorities. The United States Supreme Court have, in at least two cases, held the rights of the conditional vendor superior to those of the mortgagee under such circumstances. See Holt v. Henley, Trustee,
In the instant case the conditional sales contract was recorded long before the defendant repossessed herself of the coal and land, so she does not occupy the position of a bona fide purchaser without notice. Nor is she helped by the fact that the lien of the judgment entered on the bond accompanying her mortgage related back to the date of the latter, as such judgment when so entered could acquire no higher right as against the property in question than that of the mortgage.
Appellant urges that the Act of 1915 violates article III, section 7, of the state Constitution, in that it is a special law for the creation of liens or changing the method for the collection of debts. In fact, it is neither, but merely validates certain conditional sales contracts as to third parties when proper notice is given. Parties had the common law right to make such contracts, good between themselves (Isman v. Hanscom,
The judgment is affirmed.