21 N.Y.S. 895 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1893
It is difficult to determine whether the cause of action stated in the complaint is in trover for the conversion of the property, which the defendant detached from the sawmill building, and removed from the premises covered by the plaintiff’s mortgage, or whether it is for an injury to the plaintiff’s mortgage security. The course of the trial, and especially the charge to the jury, would indicate that the action was for conversion. The only claim the plaintiff had upon the property at the time it was removed arose out of the lien of her mortgage upon the premises on which the sawmill with its fixtures was situated. The fixtures were detached and removed prior to the, foreclosure of the mortgage; in fact, before it fell due. The plaintiff, therefore, had no such title to the fixtures as entitled her to maintain an action for their conversion. Buckout v. Swift, 27 Cal. 433; Hill v. Gwin, 51 Cal. 47; Hamilton v. Austin, 36 Hun, 143. This point is not raised by the appellant’s counsel. Their contention is that the action is to recover dam
The order appealed from should be affirmed, with costs. All concur.