Case Manufacturing Co. v. Garven

45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289
CourtOhio Supreme Court
DecidedJune 28, 1887
StatusPublished

This text of 45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289 (Case Manufacturing Co. v. Garven) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Case Manufacturing Co. v. Garven, 45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289 (Ohio 1887).

Opinion

Minshalu, J.

By the agreement of the parties the title to the property out of which the controversy arises in this case, was, in both instances, to remain in the vendor, until it was paid for by the purchaser. The validity of such agreements as to personalty, even as against innocent purchasers, was recognized as the law of this state at the time they were made, (Sage v. Sleutz, 23 Ohio St. 1; Sanders v. Keber, 28 Ohio St. 630; Call v. Seymour, 40 Ohio St. 670); it has been changed by statute (82 Ohio L. 238),. but the rights of the parties in [299]*299this case must be determined by the law as it existed at the time their contracts were made.

The property sold and transferred by The Case Manufacturing Company under its contract with Patton embraced the machinery employed in the manufacture of flour by the roller-system; that furnished by The Mansfield Machine Works supplied the motive power of the mill, and consisted of an engine and boiler with the usual attachments.

For the purpose of keeping them in place when in use, some of the machines were fastened to the floor with bolts, others were held in place by their own weight, and, as found by the court “all could easily have been detached, removed and set up in another building without material injury to the machines themselves or to the building.” Of the motive power, the boiler was inclosed by brick walls between which it was suspended and held in place by suitable appliances in the usual way; the engine rested upon a stone foundation imbedded in the ground, to which it was fastened by bolts passing through an iron plate — part of the engine — -into the foundation; and, as found, all could have been removed without any material injury to the machinery, or to the building, other than the removal of some weather-boarding inclosing an opening in the foundation wall through which it had been imtroduced.

All the machinery furnished by these two parties under their agreements with the mill-owner is readily distinguishable into two classes, namely, (1), that which supplied the motive power of the mill, and (2), that which was propelled by it. It is a distinction generally recognized by those who run and operate mills as well as by the courts, being founded in the general character of the machinery of each class, and the mode in which it is usually placed upon the premises for use.

The machinery furnishing the motive power is generally more closely annexed to the freehold, and of a more permanent nature, as the power furnished by it may be adapted to the propulsion of the machinery of a variety of mills without any substantial change in the motive power itself or in the building other than by substituting one kind of machinery for [300]*300another; whilst the machinery that is propelled, has more of the general character of personalty, is not as a rule so closely annexed to the freehold, and may be removed, and frequently is, from one mill to another, as any other article of personalty; and is more properly accessory to the business” carried on upon the realty than to the realty itself. Goepper v. Fortman, 14 Ohio St. 567.

PIcnce, it has generally been held in this country that articles of machinery used in a factory for manufacturing purposes, only attached to the building to keep them steady in their places, so that they may be more serviceable when in use, and that may be removed without any essential injury to the freehold or the articles themselves, are personal property and do not pass by a conveyance or mortgage of the freehold. Ewell Fix. 294. On the other hand, steam engines and boilers with their appliances, that supply the motive power of machinery, and, for purpose of use, are usually stably attached to the realty, pass by a conveyance or mortgage of the land. 1 Sch. Per. Prop. 155; Ewell Fix. 290; 1 Wash. R. P. 8.

In Teaff v. Hewitt, 1 Ohio St. 511, this distinction in the charter of the property and in the mode of its use and annexation to the realty, was taken and applied to the facts of that case. It is there said that <£ the machinery and implements in a manufacturing establishment, although useful and even essential to the business carried on, which are not permanently affixed to the ground or the structure of the building, and which can easily be removed without material injury to the building or articles themselves, and their places supplied by other articles of a similar kind, are not. fixtures, but personal property. But that portion of the machinery in such an establishment, which is firmly affixed to the earth orto the structure of the building, and which from its nature, mode of attachment, use, and the relative situation of the. party placing it there, was plainly intended to be permanent, is parcel of the freehold.” So it was there held that the carding machines of a woolen factory, attached to the building by cleats to coniine them to their proper places, and subject to removal whenever convenience or business required, were not fixtures, but chattels; whilst [301]*301the steam enginfe and boiler, used to supply the motive power, permanently fixed upon a foundation laid in the earth, were regarded as realty.

The difficulty of prescribing a rule that may be applied to cases in general* has been confessed both by courts and writers upon the subject; various tests have been adopted, none of which have been applied with anything like uniformity. It may however, be admitted that the distinction .between the motive power of a factory and the machines driven by it, is somewhat arbitrary; still it is one based uptin a physical difference, easily perceived, if not dictated by any well defined principle, and is no more illogical than many distinctions to be found in other branches of the law. That which divides all property into real and personal, is quite as wanting in anything like scientific classification; but, from its general recognition wherever the common law prevails, is found to bo very convenient in practice ; and it is such considerations that have always more or less influenced the adoption of definite rules of property.

It remains to be considered whether the result, as to either of these claims, indicated by the discussion, is to be varied by the finding of the court that all the machinery furnished by either of said parties were designed and intended for said mill, and were adapted to the same and to the said milling business, and intended by Patton when placed in said building, to be permanent and to become a part and parcel of said premises.” But that it was not the intention of either of them “ that said machinery so furnished by them, respectively, should become a part and parcel of said real estate, and become the property of the said Patton, and remain permanently attached to said mill unless they were fully paid for.”

There is no question but that the character of things which would otherwise be fixtures, may be changed to that of personalty by the agreement of the parties, and conversoly, so as to be binding upon them. And the stipulation of the vendor in each of these cases, that the title to the property furnished by it should not pass until it had been paid for by the purchaser, precludes the idea that either of them intended that [302]*302the machinery furnished by it, should become a part of the realty until payment had been made, as, to impute a different intention, would be to suppose that neither intended the benefit of a stipulation exacted with the greatest care in its own behalf.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
45 Ohio St. (N.S.) 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/case-manufacturing-co-v-garven-ohio-1887.