Campbell v. John W. Taylor Manufacturing Co.

49 A. 1119, 62 N.J. Eq. 307, 17 Dickinson 307, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJuly 29, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 49 A. 1119 (Campbell v. John W. Taylor Manufacturing Co.) 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
Campbell v. John W. Taylor Manufacturing Co., 49 A. 1119, 62 N.J. Eq. 307, 17 Dickinson 307, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71 (N.J. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Grey, Y. C.

(orally).

I have gone over this matter since counsel have submitted it, and I think I can dispose of it now.

[308]*308The Taylor Manufacturing Company was a corporation doing business in this state, at Mount Holly, in the manufacture and production, among other things, being the greater part of its business, of power-wheels and water-wheels. Incidental to that business, which had beeir conducted for a short period of time by the Taylor Manufacturing Company, but for a very much longer period by its predecessor, the Eisdon works, the Taylor Manufacturing Company made certain purchases. It had a machine shop before these purchases were made, and it had machines and tools and the ordinary equipment of such a shop. The tools were not satisfactory, and the Taylor company replaced them by purchase from the Prentiss company. 1'hey consist of five different pieces. No. 1, the Lodge & Shipley lathe; No. 2, the Eogers bore mill; No. 3, the Sibley field drill; No. 4, the Bickford boring mill; No. 5, the Giant key-seater.

Each of these machines had its separate function and use, and when they were purchased they were forwarded by the vendor, the Prentiss company, to Mount Holly, to be set up in the machine shop of the Taylor. Manufacturing Company. Before this had been completely done as to some of the machines, the Taylor Manufacturing Company went into the hands of a receiver, and the Prentiss company then filed with the receiver its claim for payment for the price of the several machines, asserting a right to preference in payment because of an alleged mechanic’s lien claim filed by virtue of the debt created by the purchase. The receiver heard the parties, and refused it preference as a lien claim, but admitted it as a general claim, entitled to share with other general creditors of the defendant companj''. From that adjudication of the receiver the Prentiss eompanjr has taken its present appeal. On that appeal additional testimony has been taken upon the question of the lienability of the debt which the Prentiss company asserts. The amount due is not disputed, unless, possibly, upon the question of the non-delivery of a turret, one of the auxiliary portions of the Lodge & Shipley lathe, No. 1, but not apparently an essential part of the lathe proper, being rather an auxiliary appliance, affording a convenient method of operating the lathe, and not doing the work itself. It may be that some deduction may be necessary as to the non-delivery of [309]*309this turret, but as to all the rest the amount of the claim is undisputed.

The whole question of argument before this court on the appeal has been addressed to the lienability of this debt. That is placed by the appellant upon its claim that, under the first, fifth and eighth sections of the Mechanics’ Lien act, it has a right to a lien for this debt, because the appellant says.that it was contracted for the furnishings of material for the erection of fixed machinery; and it is entitled to enforce that debt by lien because it furnished materials for fixed machinery, and such a debt is a lien whether the materials were actually used on the premises in the erection of a fixed machine or not. It became a lien because the debt was incurred for that purpose.

Whether this construction of the statute, as stated by the appellant, should be accepted, need not be determined in this case, because I take it to be perfectly clear that the things furnished were‘not, within the meaning of the statute, materials for the erection of fixed machinery. The proof .is entirely clear that the five different articles furnished.were, when they left the shop of the Prentiss company and arrived at the shop of the Taylor company, each one in itself separately perfect arid entire. They were in pieces .for convenience of shipment to Mount Holly, where the separated parts of each machine were'to be re-assembled, thus making the same machine which had been in the shop of the Prentiss company before shipment. There was no use, nor intended use, of these separated parts as materials out of which fixed machinery was to be constructed, unless the completed machines are lield to be fixed machinery.

Materials, in the meaning of the statute, and in the view taken in the discussion in the case of Morris County Bank v. Rockaway Manufacturing Co., 1 McCart. 189, cited by appellant, are essentially different from the things delivered in this case.

In the Moms County Bank Case the materials claimed for were, as I gather from the report, bricks and building stuffs, which, in the condition in which théy were delivered, had no perfected function, and were simply something out of which a building might be constructed. No brick had, when delivered, any relation to any other brick, each was separate and distinct [310]*310until the construction was begun. The component parts of these machines were utterly different. Each part, before it was shipped, had been properly fitted to the other and tested as an entirety, and when the temporarily separated parts were again assembled they again constituted a perfected entirety. The separation into component parts and delivery in that condition was not as materials for purposes of construction, but as an entire and complete machine, temporarily separated for convenience of transportation and delivery. Under no construction could such a transaction be held to be a furnishing of materials. What were furnished were five different, separate and perfected machines. I shall deal with the matter, therefore, as a deliverance by the Prentiss company to the Taylor company of five different machines, each a perfect entity in itself, usable and complete for the accomplishment of certain work.

At this point some notice should be taken of the condition of things at the machine shop of the Taylor company at the time when these machines were received there. The proof is that the establishment was then in the full and active conduct of business for the manufacture of wheels, and had been - a plant for that purpose a considerable time before the purchase of these machines from the Prentiss company. These machines were not a part of the original equipment of the shop. They were not built in and incorporated into the realty as part of the original structure. When they got there the building in which the'y were to be placed had long been erected; other machines had been there, which had performed the functions which these new machines were to perform. The other machines were taken down and the new ones were to be installed in their places. They were, therefore, so far as the location and use to which they were to be put, substitutions for, and improvements upon, the previous equipment of the shop.

Each of these machines had, as stated, its own separate function, and it is claimed that even if the delivery in parcels did not constitute it “materials,” yet it must be held to be within that section of the Mechanics’ Lien law which grants a lien for the price of fixed machinery. The appellant insists that the debt was incurred for the delivery of fixed machinery, and that this must secure it a lien.

[311]*311Tlie clause- in the statute which declares that fixed machinen' for manufacturing purposes shall be considered to be a building for the purposes of the Mechanics’ Lien act, does not apply to all machinery for manufacturing purposes; otherwise the furnishing of sewing machines, washing machines and the like, which have an adjustable, movable, unfixed character, would create liens.

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Bluebook (online)
49 A. 1119, 62 N.J. Eq. 307, 17 Dickinson 307, 1901 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/campbell-v-john-w-taylor-manufacturing-co-njch-1901.