10 Barb. 157 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1850
The plaintiff claims the articles of property mentioned in the pleadings in this cause as fixture, under his mortgage of the realty; and the defendants, Powell, Ramsdell & Moore, claim to hold them as chattels, under the execution issued to the sheriff of Orange county, and their chattel mortgage. The plaintiff’s mortgage was executed and recorded some time anterior to the mortgage, or the issuing of the execution of the defendants, and it describes the premises in the usual manner, by metes and bounds, as the piece of land in Blooming Grove, on which the cotton-mill and bleach-house stands, and including a cotton-mill and bleach house, with their appurtenances. The property in dispute consists of various articles of' machinery for carding, spinning, twisting, balling, preparing, and packing cotton yarn and cotton twine. It stands upon the floor of the mill, over the apertures or openings therein, made for the passage of the leather bands or belts by which it is moved, and is not fastened to the building otherwise, than by. such belts and bands, and, in some few instances and articles, by cleats tacked to the floor because it was out of level when placed upon it. The bands are used for motion, and not for fastening; and the cleats to give a uniform and level surface to the floor of the building. The motive power is water; the belts or bands passing over a wheel or pulley upon each separate machine, and from thence run over drums upon lines of shafting, geared in communication with the water wheel. The belts or bands are slipped off and on the pullies by hand, so as to put it in operation or arrest its motion, at the pleasure of the operator. Every machine may be easily and conveniently removed, without injury to itself or to the building in which it stands ; and, if so removed, might be used with the same effect and for the same purpose on the floor of any other building where there
Fixtures are defined to be “ chattels or articles of a personal nature which have been affixed to the land.” To make an article a fixture, “ it must not only be essential to the business of the erection, but it must be attached to it in some way; at least, it must be mechanically fitted, so as, in ordinary understanding, to make a part of the building itself.” The general rule is “that any thing of a personal nature not fixed to the freehold can not be considered as an incident to the land as between vendor and vendee.” The property in question is not actually annexed to the freehold. The mere setting down upon the floor of the building, and the leather bands slipped on to the pullies when it is in motion, do not effect a physical union. Nor do the circumstances, in my judgment, make out a constructive annexation. Bach of these machines is complete and perfect, and to
The authorities upon this branch of the law are very numerous. It has employed the minds and pens of many men of acknowledged learning and ability. Yet, whoever essays to study and make himself master of the subject, will not be surprised to find that neither the elementary writers nor the reported cases furnish any precise or certain rule to determine what a fixture is. Where so much has already been written, I do not hope to contribute any thing to the store of useful learning. I shall do no more than barely allude to a few of the leading cases, as authority for my present opinion. In Walker v. Sherman, (20 Wend. 636,) where most of the English cases are collected and commented upon, this court decided, between tenants in common, that carding, spinning, and shearing machines and looms in a woolen factory, which had passed with the estate from one owner to another, for the space of eleven years, were no part of the realty. Swift v. Thompson, (9 Conn. Rep. 63,) was a controversy in respect to cotton machinery fastened to the floor by wooden screws; and there the court held the same opiniom Gale v.
As the recorded judgment of this court, upon a question similar in all its aspects to the present, which remains, as far as I can learn, unreversed and unshaken by any subsequent decision, I must regard it as controlling the case under consideration; and I do so with no unwillingness or hesitation, because it accords with my own understanding of what the law is, and my own sense of what it should continue to be.
I am of opinion that the articles of property mentioned in the pleadings are not attached to the mill upon the mortgaged premises, in such a manner as to bring them within the denomination of fixtures.
The defendants Powell, Earns dell and Moore are entitled to a decree dissolving the injunction and. establishing their right to the machinery and property mentioned in their answer, and that they recover their costs from the plaintiff.
The plaintiff is also entitled, should he desire it, to the usual order of reference, with a view to a decree and sale of the mortgaged premises.