117 Fla. 217 | Fla. | 1934
The legal proposition to be decided in this case is one of priorities between the vendor of a sprinkler system under a retained title contract providing for the installation of such system in an office building and the mortgagee of a mortgage on such property. It is conceded that the mortgage was already a perfected lien on the building at the time the sprinkler system was so installed. But it is appellant's contention that by reason of the provisions of the installation contract, the title to such system never passed to the mortgagor and thus was never encumbered by the mortgage, or in other words, that the sprinkler system constituted and remained a removable fixture belonging to appellant which appellant is entitled to be awarded as against any rights asserted under the mortgage.
In addition to the foregoing circumstances, appellant also relies on the fact that the mortgagee's predecessor, the trustee under a mortgage bond issue, by its solemn agreement made for the benefit of the bondholders, actually induced *218 and brought about the installation of the sprinkler system in the mortgaged building at the time it was so installed, while at the same time the Palm Beach Guaranty Company, which was given the right under the trust deed, to manage the building in which the sprinkler system was installed, had knowledge of, acquiesced in and utilized such system for the building's protection.
It was the Chancellor's view, however, as pointedly expressed by him in his final decree, that appellant, as such vendor, should be denied any rights such as it claimed in and to the sprinkler system as against the rights of the mortgagee, because the vendor had so installed and built its sprinkler system into the mortgaged building itself that it had become a permanent and integral part of the mortgaged realty and not merely attached thereto as a removable fixture which could be dismantled and taken away without substantial and material injury to the structure in which it had been set up. The Chancellor also based his decree upon a finding that part of the sprinkler system had been paid for by the owners of the mortgaged property at the time same was installed, the balance being covered by the special agreement entered into between the building's owners and the conditional vendor, Standard Motors Finance Company, Inc., appellant herein, and that by reason of this fact it could not be determined and identified what part of the sprinkler system had been paid for in full and what part constituted the balance of the system claimed by Standard Motors Finance Company, Inc.
So the Chancellor entered a final decree of foreclosure against the claimant of the sprinkler system, holding that the lien of the trust deed upon the sprinkler system was and is prior to the claim of appellant as conditional vendor thereof. The present appeal is from such final decree. *219
In our recent case of Phillips Co. v. Wagner,
In the present case the sprinkler system was described in the evidence as a construction of the following character: Large water line — determined by size of building, is brought in from main water supply to the building; as it enters the building there is a system of valves for shutting off the water in the various branches; from these valves there is run one or more branch lines throughout the building, which *220 branch lines generally have subsidiary lines running from them; at frequent intervals and in a manner designated by fire insurance companies, there are special outlets called "sprinkler heads" exposed; these sprinkler heads constitute the protective part of the system because they permit a spray of water to be released in their vicinity when excess heat from an incipient fire occurs in proximity to such sprinkler heads, thereby causing them to automatically open as they are designed to do in such event. The sprinkler system when installed may be either enclosed or exposed but is usually covered up with the exception of the sprinkler heads which from their very nature must be open and vulnerable.
The system in controversy in this case was installed as an enclosed system, the retaking possession of which would necessitate somewhat going between the walls and floors of the building in order to take out the pipes and remove the sprinkler heads. Such operation would necessarily require patching up the holes from which exposed parts were removed. The damage to the building in the operation of removal would consist principally of ripping up floor boards and tearing off some of the plaster, all of which is capable of replacement by means of comparatively simple repairs.
In Burbridge v. Therrell,
In the case now before us we approve the rule laid down by the Supreme Court of North Carolina in the case of Standard Motors Finance Co. v. Weaver* (153 S.E. Rep. 851), supra, where the court decided that one holding a mortgage on real estate had no paramount equitable claim to a sprinkler system annexed to mortgaged premises and stipulated to continue as personal property until paid for, where title thereto had been specifically retained by the seller under a contract made with the mortgagor so providing, and involved no more permanent form of installation for such sprinkler system than that disclosed by the record in this case concerning the particular system in controversy. *222
Reversed with directions to modify the final decree to conform to the holding of this opinion.
ELLIS and TERRELL, J. J., concur.
WHITFIELD, P. J., and BROWN and BUFORD, J. J., concur in the opinion and judgment.