Frigidaire Sales Corp. v. Katz

29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 595, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1628
CourtCourt of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County
DecidedDecember 8, 1931
StatusPublished

This text of 29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 595 (Frigidaire Sales Corp. v. Katz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Common Pleas of Ohio, Hamilton County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frigidaire Sales Corp. v. Katz, 29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 595, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1628 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1931).

Opinion

Matthews, J.

This is an action in replevin in which the parties have waived a jury, and the case is now before the court for decision upon a stipulation of counsel as to certain facts, and upon the evidence introduced at the trial, and the law applicable thereto.

[596]*596The plaintiff sold certain Frigidaire cabinets, coils, and compressors to Augustus M. Sosa under a contract containing a chattel mortgage feature, in which it was provided thqt the mortgagee, who is the plaintiff, was to install the equipment, which was a refrigeration system, in such a way that the conduits or tubing should become a part of the building, and that the title thereto should pass to the purchaser, but that the other articles sold, to-wit, the cabinets, coils and compressors should remain personal property and should be connected with any pipes, tubing or conduit built into the building only by a coupling which screws on and off, and should not be attached to or built into any part of the building or to any framework in such manner as to interfere with ready inspection service, repair, removal, replacement or removal without injury to the premises, and the chattel mortgage purports to give the plaintiff a lien upon said chattels with the right to enter and remove the same upon default, which default had taken place prior to the institution of this action. The chattel mortgage was duly filed in the recorder’s office.

At the time this property was sold to Sosa, he was the lessee of certain real estate upon which there was an apartment building, known as The LaFontaine Apartments, and this refrigeration system was installed in said apartment building. The cabinets were placed in the various apartments, and the compressors were located in the basement.. The compressors were connected with the boxes by two pipes, one-quarter and one-half inch in diameter, running up through the floors, and in the rooms on the outside of the walls of the building with branch pipes at the several floors to the refrigerators or boxes located in the apartments. The compressors and boxes are attached to the pipes by means of a coupling, and the compressors rest upon the floor of the basement without being attached at all; so that the compressors and the boxes can be removed without any damage to the building. There is no claim made to the tubing.

The lease under which Sosa had possession of the LaFontaine Apartments provided for a term of ten years with the right to renew for an additional five years, and contained a privilege of purchase under terms requiring [597]*597him to pay two hundred and fifty ($250.00) dollars per month upon the privilege of purchase. The lease bound him not to commit waste, and at the end of said term to deliver up the premises in as good order and condition as they were at the time of the signing of the lease, reasonable use and ordinary wear and tear excepted. There was also an unfilled supplemental agreement between the lessor and the lessee providing that the lease would make no alterations or additions in or to said premises, or in any way remodel the improvements thereon or thereof, or remove or destroy any improvements then existing on said premises without the* written consent of the lessor.

The court will make no further mention of the supplemental agreement for the reason that it is substantially a' statement of what the law would be in the absence of such an agreement and certainly did not prevent the lessee from repairing or replacing existing epuipment necessary to the enjoyment of the premises for the purpose for which they were leased; and the evidence clearly shows that the new system is superior to the old and one that was clearly adapted to the uses of the building. The lessee repairing the building or completing it according to original design did not commit waste or otherwise violate the rights of the lessor.

The defendant Louis B. Katz is the lessor, and the defendant Esther Stern is the receiver appointed in an action filed in this court by Louis H. Katz to forfeit the lease, which motion is still pending, no final decree having been as yet entered. The lessee is not a party to this action.

At the time the lease was executed there was a refrigeration system consisting of separate units installed in each apartment in refrigerator rooms located one above another in such a way that they could all be connected by tubing with a central plant in the basement. The evidence shows that the building was designed in that way so that a central system could be installed eventually. The old system proved to be imperfect and inadequate and it was because of that condition and to prevent tenants moving out that the lessee purchased the refrigeration system from the plaintiff. The lessor knew, or course, that a refrigeration system was necessary in the proper op[598]*598eration of the leased premises, and' also knew before this refrigeration system was purchased that the original system was not giving satisfaction. Whether he knew in advance of sufficient facts to constitute knowledge that it was the purpose of the lessee to replace the defective system by a new system, the court finds it is not necessary to decide. He certainly knew something had to be done.

Prior to the installation of the new system, and prior to the execution of the lease to Sosa the owner had placed a real estate mortgage upon the premises, and that mortgage remains unsatisfied in part at least.

The question presented by this state of the evidence is whether or not the plaintiff, basing its right upon a chattel mortgage upon those articles, has shown a right to the immediate possession thereof. A determination of that issue necessitates- a consideration of the relative rights of a mortgagee of personal property that has been in some way connected with real estate under a contract with a lessee, and as against a lessor of said real estate, and the holder of a prior mortgage thereon.

The Ohio law on the subject of fixtures has been so recently summarized in 19 Ohio Jurisprudence that the court has been saved the labor of investigating the cases. At page 90 of that volume it is said:

“The intention of the person making the annexation has been said by some authorities to be the controlling consideration, and is generally held to be the chief test. It is not always determinative, but has a controlling influence in cases of doubt.”

And upon the effect of an agreement, the author, at page 92, says:

“There is no doubt, that where an article belonging to one person is attached to the realty of another person, the status of such article as either a fixture or a chattel may be controlled by special agreement of the parties, * * *”

and at page 93:

“Machinery other than motive power machinery may be affected by the agreement of the parties, and its character as personalty preserved, even as against third parties.”

[599]*599So in this case we assume there can be no question but what the provisions of the chattel mortgage were effective to preserve for these articles their status as personal property as between the chattel mortgagee and the lessee to whom they were sold.

As between a prior mortgagee and the chattel mortgagee, the authorities are in conflict as to their respective rights. At page 99 of the same author, it is said:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
29 Ohio N.P. (n.s.) 595, 1931 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 1628, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frigidaire-sales-corp-v-katz-ohctcomplhamilt-1931.