Davis v. . Bliss

79 N.E. 851, 187 N.Y. 77, 25 Bedell 77, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 753
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 8, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by48 cases

This text of 79 N.E. 851 (Davis v. . Bliss) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Davis v. . Bliss, 79 N.E. 851, 187 N.Y. 77, 25 Bedell 77, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 753 (N.Y. 1907).

Opinion

Hiscock, J.

There is involved in this action the question whether a vendor of personal property under a conditional sale may recover in conversion for the same after default by his vendee, against a vendor under contract of real estate to which said personal property had been attached by said vendee, who was also the vendee under and had made default upon the real estate contract;

The trial court and the Appellate Division by a divided vote held that he could not. We think this decision was erroneous and must be reversed.

Plaintiffs, being manufacturers of gasoline engines, sold one to one Lyon under a written contract whereby the purchase price of $922.50 was to be paid, part upon delivery and the remainder in three installments, it being expressly agreed that the title to'such machinery should remain in said, vendors until said purchase price was paid in full, and in default of payment, or any part thereof, the vendors- were authorized to *81 take charge of and remove said property without process of law, all moneys paid being considered as having been paid for use of or damage to the machine.

Lyon at the time of delivery was in possession of certain real estate consisting of a mill, under a contract with defendant for the purchase of the same by payment to be made in installments. Said contract contained two special clauses to which reference will be made hereafter. One of these provided for payment to the extent of $1,000 by “ improvement of said property by labor, repairs and new machinery, unincumbered by mechanic’s lien, mortgage or purchase price.” The other was to the effect that all improvements, repairs or machinery placed upon the premises should become a part of the realty not to be removed without the consent of the vendor.

Lyon installed the engine in the building on the premises by placing and bolting the same upon and to a substantial foundation constructed of cement and other materials and by running an exhaust pipe from the floor of the engine room through the floor, ceiling and roof of the building, and by connecting the engine by two underground pipes with a gasoline tank set outside the building and also by belts with the shafts in the mill.

After he had paid all but part of one . of the installments upon the engine and some expenses alleged to have been contracted in his behalf by plaintiffs, lie made default in his contract and by a written instrument attempted to turn back and surrender said engine to them. He likewise had become in default upon his contract with defendant, and upon the day following the delivery of said last-mentioned instrument surrendered to her the premises with the engine still attached thereto. There having been a demand by plaintiffs for the latter and refusal by defendant, this action of conversion was ■brought.

We shall assume that under ordinary circumstances the engine would have become a part of the realty. Hpon the other hand, we regard it as too well settled to require discus *82 sion that the results which would ordinarily flow from attaching such a piece of personal property as this was to the real estate in such a manner as this was attached may be controlled by special circumstances, and the character of the article as personal property be preserved not only as against the vendee but also, in the absence of statutory provision, as ■ against the mortgagee, owner and, under certain circumstances, the subsequent grantee of the real estate.

The agreement between plaintiffs and Lyon clearly and conclusively, as matter of law, indicated the intent of -those paftie.s that the engine should remain personal property until it was paid for, and this agreement under the circumstances of this case, was binding upon defendant. (Tifft v. Horton, 53 N. Y. 377; Kerby v. Clapp, 15 App. Div. 37; Godard v. Gould & Strong, 14 Barb. 662; Ford v. Cobb., 20 N. Y. 344; Sisson v. Hibbard., 75 N. Y. 542; Phoenix Mills v. Miller, 4 N. Y. S. R. 787, 790.)

While the cases cited do not happen to have arisen between the vendor of personal property under a conditional sale and the vendor of real property under a contract of sale to the vendee of thé personal property, it is manifest that no more favorable rule should apply in favor of such a vendor of real property who, as in this case, has not advanced or lost anything on account of the annexed personal -property, than would apply in favor of a mortgagee or subsequent grantee of the premises.

Without qupting from the opinions in the cases referred to, it may be briefly stated that their reasoning is fully broad enough to cover this case.

Because, as stated, the defendant did not in any manner part with value or lose any rights on account of the engine attached to the premises, there is no opportunity for the operation of any principle of estoppel and various authorities cited in her counsel’s brief relating to cases of purchasers for value are rendered inapplicable.

We do not lose sight of the provision in her contract with Lyon, that all the machinery placed upon the premises should become a part of the realty. While it was competent to *83 make this arrangement between her and her vendee, they could not, of course, make an agreement whereby would be destroyed the superior rights of plaintiffs, they not being a party to the agreement. In fact, the other clause quoted from. defendant’s contract with Lyon to the effect that new machinery' “ unincumbered by mechanic’s liens, mortgage or purchase price,” would be accepted in payment, fairly justifies the inference that the parties to that contract contemplated the installment upon the premises of machinery which would be subject to certain rights in favor of the vendor thereof for any unpaid purchase price.

Considerable stress is placed by respondent upon the circumstance that when Lyon installed plaintiffs’ engine he took out an old one which was in the building and appropriated to his own use some small proceeds derived from the sale of the latter. It is not, however, perceived that this has any effect upon the rights of the parties to this action. The old engine was removed and the new one installed without knowledge upon the part of defendant, and, therefore, there was no consent by her to the removal of the old and the appropriation of its proceeds by Lyon in reliance upon its being replaced by the new one. If she has been wronged by what took place she has her right of action against the wrongdoer.

It doubtless is the rule that personal property may be so firmly attached to or thoroughly and substantially made a part of the realty that its character as personalty will not be preserved e.ven by special -agreement intended to accomplish that result. But that is not the present case. The evidence shows undisputedly, and the referee has found, that the engine in question could readily be. detached and removed from the building without tearing down any part of or causing any serious damage to the latter and without at all destroying or impairing the usefulness of the former. The case in this respect is more favorable to the plaintiffs than were some of those cited sitjpra,

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.E. 851, 187 N.Y. 77, 25 Bedell 77, 1907 N.Y. LEXIS 753, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/davis-v-bliss-ny-1907.