Comly v. Lehmann

253 N.W. 501, 218 Iowa 644
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedMarch 13, 1934
DocketNo. 42374.
StatusPublished

This text of 253 N.W. 501 (Comly v. Lehmann) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Comly v. Lehmann, 253 N.W. 501, 218 Iowa 644 (iowa 1934).

Opinion

Kintzinger, J.

On March 8, 1926, the defendant Lehmann, as owner of the real estate, executed a note secured by a mortgage to one Claude H. Koon, who later assigned it to plaintiff herein. The note and mortgage became due in 1931, but was extended for a period of five years. On nonpayment of later interest when due, the note was declared due and this action was brought to foreclose the mortgage. When the mortgage was executed the owner was conducting a bakery business in the building on the premises. At that time the building was equipped with two bake ovens and two boilers, connected with the building.

In March, 1929, the defendant mortgagor purchased from the appellee Haller Oven Company, and installed in the mortgaged building, an elaborate oven costing $8,680 on which there is still due about $2,500. About the same time he also purchased a large boiler from the Burton Plumbing & Heating Company costing nearly $1,000 on which there is still due about $200. The old ovens and boiler in the building were removed at that time.

Separate actions were commenced to foreclose the mortgage, and for repossessing the oven and boiler sold under conditional sales contracts. These actions were, by agreement of the parties, tried together.

The new oven was built up on the concrete floor of the bakery building, and was connected with the steam boiler pipes, with the gas pipes, and with the electric power connections in the building. The oven weighed about 22,000 pounds and was built upon steel plates laid on the floor.

The boiler weighed about 2,900 pounds and was set up in a boiler room in the building, and connected with the bake oven to furnish steam for baking purposes, and with several radiators to furnish heat for the building. The front of the boiler rested on the concrete floor and the rear on a pier built under it.

The oven and boiler were sold under conditional sales contracts reserving the title and possession in the vendors until fully *646 paid. These contracts were not recorded until December, 1931. The machines in question were installed after the execution of the real estate mortgage and without the knowledge or consent of the plaintiff or the original mortgagee.

The question for determination in this case is whether or not the machines in question, after their installation, became fixtures and part of the real estate, or remained personal property subject to repossession by the vendors under their conditional sales contract.

I. The first question for consideration is whether or not, under ordinary conditions and without a conditional sales contract, the oven and boiler in question, after being installed, would constitute fixtures and become part of the real estate.

Considering first the character of the boiler, we find that it was installed in a boiler room in the basement. The front of it was set on the cement floor and the rear part on a pier built in to support it. The boiler is connected with several radiators providing heat for the building, and is also connected with the new Haller oven, to furnish steam for baking. It is also connected with other machinery, and is used in connection with the operation of the bakery business. Its removal would prevent the owner from operating the bakery without substituting another boiler. Before the present boiler was installed, there was a small boiler and some stoves in the building used for the business. These were removed on the installation of the new boiler. The pipes from the boiler are used in the bakery business and for heating the building. There are numerous pipes connected with the main pipes leading in the boiler. The boilér is too large to be taken out of the boiler room without tearing down some of the wall. The boiler cannot be taken out of the door because the building is not wide enough to turn it. The boiler might be tipped, hut if taken through the door it would be jarred to pieces. It is the law in this slate that a furnace attached to a concrete floor becomes a fixture as between vendor of the land and the seller of the furnace. Des Moines Improvement Co. v. Holland Furnace Co., 204 Iowa 274, 212 N. W. 551; Holland Furnace Co. v. Pope, 204 Iowa 737, 215 N. W. 943; Joyce Lumber Co. v. Wick, 200 Iowa 796, 205 N. W. 476; Schoeneman Lumber Co. v. Davis, 200 Iowa 873, 205 N. W. 502; West v. Farmers Mutual Ins. Co., 117 Iowa 147, 90 N. W. 523; State Security Bank v. Hoskins, 130 Iowa 339, 106 N. W. 764, 8 L. R. A. (N. S.) 376; Ilten & Taege v. Pfister, *647 202 Iowa 833, 211 N. W. 407. We believe that the boiler in question became such an integral part of the building as to become a fixture and part of the realty.

The evidence in relation to the oven shows that prior to its installation the building was used for the bakery business. At that time it was equipped with two bake ovens, a boiler, and other machines. necessary for the operation of- a bakery business. That two old ovens were removed when the new one was installed. Thé new oven was built up from and set upon a concrete foundation, and weighs 22,000 pounds. The foundation upon which it was built • 'was leveled up with cement and other material connecting the .oven .with the floor. After being installed, it was covered with wire mesh and insulating material, so that when completed it had the appearance of being part of the building. It is contended thát because the skeleton part of,the oven was built upon iron or steel, plates, without being'attached by bolts to the foundation,..and because it could be dismantled . piece by piece, it was portable -and did not become part of the building or a fixture,. ’The building itself could be dismantled and removed from its foundation in the same manner, but that would make it none, the less a part of the'realty. In view of the enormous weight of the oven, it is immaterial that the bottom -plates were not attached to the foundation by means of bolts. The force of gravity would hold'this 22,000-pound oven, in place as effectively as if: fastened with many bolts. 26 C. J. 661, section 10, .and numerous -cases cited under note 83; Thomson v. Smith, 111 Iowa 718, 83 N. W. 789, 50 L. R. A. 780, 82 Am. St. Rep. 541; Boon v. Orr, 4 G. Greene 304; Smith v. Carroll, 4 G. Greene 146.

This rule has been applied in many eases to buildings resting on timbers, blocks, ór stones. Fences merely resting, on the surface of the ground, heavy machinery (Hooven Co. v. Featherstone’s Sons, 111 F. 81, 49 C. C. A. 229.), large scales, millstones, and .large bells suspended from' a frame, furnaces, and ice boxes. 26 C. J. 661.

The evidence also shows that when this oven was installed it was too ■ large, for' the room in which it was built, and, it became necessary to remove part of the ceiling in the room so that the oven extended up through the ceiling to a point near the roof. The building itself was a frame, and it is fair to say, although the evidence is not clear on that point, that the new oven built was heavier, and more substantial, than the building itself. It was built into the building as a permanent structure for the purpose of the bakery business *648 conducted by the owner. When the oven and boiler were installed, he intended them to be permanent annexations to his real estate.

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253 N.W. 501, 218 Iowa 644, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/comly-v-lehmann-iowa-1934.