Bk. of America v. La Reine Hotel Corp.

156 A. 28, 108 N.J. Eq. 567
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 16, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 156 A. 28 (Bk. of America v. La Reine Hotel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bk. of America v. La Reine Hotel Corp., 156 A. 28, 108 N.J. Eq. 567 (N.J. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

The bill is to foreclose two mortgages, first, a real estate mortgage in the sum of $250,000, and second, a chattel mortgage in the same amount given as additional security for *Page 569 the mortgage on the realty. The property, consisting of a hotel and its equipment and furnishings, is in the custody of an insolvency receiver appointed by this court in Sparks v. LaReine Hotel Corporation, docket 76 p. 135. Numerous conditional vendor defendants filed petitions in that cause for the removal of property the subject of conditional sales agreements and in the custody of the receiver. The mortgagee in the foreclosure suit also claimed this property to be subject to both the real and chattel mortgages. There was a reference to a master who viewed the premises and took testimony on the various issues referred. It was agreed that the decision in this suit should be dispositive of the issues raised by the petitions in the other. The master reported that the chattel mortgage was invalid for the reasons set forth in conclusions which he filed. No exceptions to that finding have been filed; the court concurs and it will be confirmed.

(Since the foregoing was written, exceptions to that finding have been filed by the complainant but they will be dismissed for the reasons stated by the master in his conclusions which have been filed.)

The master also filed a report fixing the amount due on the real estate mortgage and to the various defendants on their respective encumbrances and conditional sales agreements. With respect to the subject-matter of the conditional sales agreements, there was a stipulation by the parties as to some of it which was removed. As to certain property claimed by Credit Utility Company, Incorporated, York Ice Machinery Corporation, Eastern New Jersey Power Company, Standard Weather Strip and Screen Company, Incorporated, Jacob Josef Kohn and Mundis, Incorporated, B. Altman Company and Otis Elevator Company, the master first reported that the property in controversy could be removed from the premises without material injury to the freehold and that it was not subject to the lien of the complainant's mortgage. This was immediately before the decision in FutureBuilding and Loan Association v. Mazzocchi, 107 N.J. Eq. 422. Upon the filing of the opinion in that *Page 570 cause, the master, by leave of court, withdrew his report, and later filed another report in which he found that the property of B. Altman Company, consisting of furniture, rugs and hangings, was not attached to the freehold so as to become a part thereof and was removable without material injury thereto. He also reported that the property claimed by Credit Utility Company, Incorporated, York Ice Machinery Corporation, Standard Weather Strip and Screen Company, Incorporated, Jacob Josef Kohn and Mundis, Incorporated, and Otis Elevator Company, were "a necessary part of the premises and that the same cannot be removed without material injury to the hotel building and the institution of which they form a part," and that they were subject to the lien of complainants' mortgage.

With respect to the claim of Eastern New Jersey Power Company the master reported that a portion of the property claimed could be removed without material injury to the premises and was not subject to the lien of complainants' mortgage; but that other portions of the property, namely, two electric transformers, were necessary to the operation of the defendant's building as a hotel and that "they could not be removed without material injury to the institution of which they are a part." No exceptions to the master's findings with respect to the property claimed by this defendant, other than the transformers, have been filed, and the report, save as excepted to, will be confirmed.

The complainant has excepted to the master's report as to property claimed by the defendant B. Altman Company. These furnishings clearly never lost their character of personal property. They are in no way attached to the freehold so as to become a part thereof and the chattel mortgage being invalid, the exception with respect to this finding will be overruled.

After the decision in Future Building and Loan Association v.Mazzocchi, supra, the master felt impelled to follow his interpretation of it and bases his present report, with respect to which exceptions have been filed, upon the rule of that case as he conceived it. In this he was correct, but *Page 571 I think he misinterpreted the court's opinion and that his present findings cannot be wholly sustained.

The variant views of counsel respecting the law applicable to the present controversy, reflecting, as I believe they do, confusion at the bar and some difference of opinion on the bench, have impelled me to trace the history and development of the law of fixtures in this state and the present law of conditional sales, which, in my judgment, is an outgrowth of the law of fixtures. It may be said at the outset that the issues here are controlled by the law of conditional sales and not by the law of fixtures, although some understanding of the latter must be had in order to correctly apply the former.

The ancient English rule was that all things annexed to the realty become a part of it and annexation was considered the test. The underlying principle of the law of fixtures "being but one application of the theory of accession, as it existed in the civil law" (1 Tiff. Real Prop. § 266; see, also, 1 Thom.Real Prop. § 138; Broom Max. (9th ed.) 264), the degree of annexation was unimportant. This rule was greatly relaxed by modern decisions, and the degree of annexation and the resultant injury to the freehold by detachment became of increasing importance. Broom Max., supra. The maxim of the common law is that the principal thing should not be destroyed by taking away the accessory. 1 Thom. Real Prop. § 143. In New Jersey as early as 1854 (Brearley v. Cox, 24 N.J. Law 287) it was held that "the true criterion of a fixture is the united application of the following requisites: 1, actual annexation to the realty, or something appurtenant thereto; 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 freehold," but that the question might be controlled by the agreement of the parties. In Crane v. Brigham (1855), 11 N.J. Eq. 29, it was held that as between mortgagor and mortgagee, if the thing appertains to real estate, is necessary for its enjoyment and is permanently attached to the freehold, *Page 572 it is a fixture resulting to the benefit of the mortgagee, and that the degree of physical force with which the thing is attached is not so important as the motive of the party attaching it. But the rule was differently applied as between landlord and tenant, heir and executor, grantor and grantee, and mortgagor and mortgagee. Later cases in the court of errors and appeals (Quinby v. Manhattan Cloth and Paper Co. (1873), 24 N.J. Eq. 260; Blancke v. Rogers Co. (1875), 26 N.J. Eq. 563;McMillan v. Fish (1878), 29 N.J. Eq. 610; Williamson v.New Jersey Southern Railroad Co. (

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Bluebook (online)
156 A. 28, 108 N.J. Eq. 567, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bk-of-america-v-la-reine-hotel-corp-njch-1931.