Globe Automatic Sprinkler Co. v. Boester

95 S.W.2d 825, 231 Mo. App. 203, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 163
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 7, 1936
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 95 S.W.2d 825 (Globe Automatic Sprinkler Co. v. Boester) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Globe Automatic Sprinkler Co. v. Boester, 95 S.W.2d 825, 231 Mo. App. 203, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 163 (Mo. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinions

This is a suit by plaintiff, Globe Automatic Sprinkler Company, for the balance due it under a contract for the installation of a sprinkler system in certain property known variously as North Hills Country Club and Norwood Country Club, together with a prayer that in the event such balance was not paid within a time to be fixed by the court, plaintiff's vendor's lien might be foreclosed, and the property sold, and the proceeds of the sale applied to the indebtedness due plaintiff.

It appears from the stipulated facts in the case that the property in question, which is located in St. Louis County, is and was at all times owned by the intervenor, Brownstone Hills Realty Company.

On May 1, 1922, the Brownstone Hills Realty Company leased said property to one Hawke, said lease containing provisions to the effect that the lessee was not authorized to make any improvements of the property at the expense of the lessor, and that the lessor was to be under no obligation to pay for any improvements that might be made by the lessee.

Thereafter, on August 11, 1922, said lease was duly assigned by Hawke to the North Hills Trust Estate, a common-law trust, whose trustees were defendants C.F. Boester, D.S. Brown, and A.M. Sullivan.

Both the lease from the Brownstone Hills Realty Company to Hawke and the latter's written assignment of it to the North Hills Trust Estate were duly recorded in the office of the Recorder of Deeds in St. Louis County.

On July 18, 1928, plaintiff's assignor, the Consolidated Equipment Company, entered into a written contract with the trustees of the North Hills Trust Estate for the sale and installation in the clubhouse of the sprinkler system in question for the price of $9538, which sum was made payable by the purchasers upon certain stated terms. Of such contract price it appears that the principal sum of $2774.50 is now due and unpaid.

In and by the terms of said contract it was provided that title to the sprinkler system so sold and installed was reserved in the vendor *Page 207 until the payment of the entire amount due under the contract, and that in default of the purchasers thereunder the latter should pay all the costs and expenses of the vendor, including a reasonable attorney's fee, which, in the event of a pecuniary claim, was agreed to 10% of whatever amount should be involved.

As in the case of the lease and its subsequent assignment, this contract was likewise filed for record in the office of the Recorder of Deeds, and was entered in the book of "Chattel Deeds of Trust and Mortgages."

Inasmuch as the controversy in the case involves the question of whether, upon the installation of the sprinkler system in the clubhouse, the same became a fixture within contemplation of law, it is of importance to note from the stipulation of facts that the Brownstone Hills Realty Company, the owner of the property, at no time authorized the North Hills Trust Estate or its trustees to enter into a contract whereby any part of the property constituting real estate should be considered personalty, title to which should be retained by any person so as to permit the same to be removed from the real estate, nor did said Brownstone Hills Realty Company have or acquire any actual knowledge of the contract entered into between the North Hills Trust Estate, through its trustees, and plaintiff's assignor, the Consolidated Equipment Company, until the institution of this suit on September 1, 1933.

At some undesignated time subsequent to the installation of the sprinkler system the lease of the North Hills Trust Estate was forfeited by the lessor because of the former's failure to have carried out the terms and obligations of the lease, and the trustees were ousted from possession of the property.

Thereafter defendant Norwood Hills Corporation was organized and incorporated on January 13, 1933, for the purpose of taking over a leasehold upon the property, and on February 1, 1933, it entered into possession of the property, and now holds possession of the same under the terms of a lease with option to purchase which was executed as of the latter date in its favor by the Brownstone Hills Realty Company.

On April 27, 1933, the Consolidated Equipment Company assigned, transferred, and conveyed all its right, title, and interest in and to the contract in question to the plaintiff herein, and thereafter the present suit was instituted as has already been indicated.

The named defendants were the individual trustees of the North Hills Trust Estate who had entered into the contract for the purchase and installation of the sprinkler system, and the Norwood Hills Corporation, the present lessee of the property with the system installed therein. The Brownstone Hills Realty Company, the owner of the property, was for some reason not originally joined *Page 208 as a party to the suit, but subsequently, upon its own motion, was allowed and permitted to intervene in the case.

The several pleadings set up the facts of the case in much the same fashion as we have already detailed them, and, so far as this appeal is concerned, it is enough to say that they joined issue upon the question of whether the sprinkler system had been built into the clubhouse in such a manner as to become an integral part thereof and thereby to defeat plaintiff's reservation of title thereto as conditional vendor upon the theory that the removal of the same could not be accomplished without material damage to the building as it stood at the time of the installation of the system.

Upon a trial of the case the court entered up a judgment in favor of plaintiff, and against defendants Boester, Brown, and Sullivan as trustees of North Hills Trust Estate, for the aggregate sum of $3407.69, but denied plaintiff's prayer for a lien upon the property as against its owner, the Brownstone Hills Realty Company, as well as its prayer for the sale of the property in default of the payment of the judgment.

From such judgment against them the trustees took their separate appeal, and plaintiff likewise appealed from the judgment in so far as it denied its claim of a lien upon and right to sell the property. As the case is presently submitted it is only with the questions raised on plaintiff's appeal that the court is now to be concerned.

So the question here involves the right of plaintiff, a conditional vendor, to assert its recorded reservation of title to the sprinkler system as against the contention of the Brownstone Hills Realty Company, the owner and lessor of the property, that upon the installation of the system in the clubhouse under contract with the lessee the system became so much an integral part of the building as to lose its identity as personalty and become a part of the real estate.

There seems to be no reported case in this State which passes upon the rights of a conditional vendor, who, having sold an article to a lessee under an agreement with the latter that such article shall remain personalty even after its annexation to the realty, upon the lessee's subsequent default in the payment of the purchase price finds his reservation of title opposed by the owner or lessor of the property. However counsel for the respective parties agree that the legal position of the owner or lessor in such a situation is no different from that which a prior mortgagee would occupy, which is that such prior mortgagee stands in the exact shoes of his mortgagor who has contracted with the vendor that the article shall remain personalty, except when the character of the annexation of the article has been such that its severance or removal would work substantial and material damage to the structure as it stood at the time of the annexation. *Page 209 [Grinnell Co. v.

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Bluebook (online)
95 S.W.2d 825, 231 Mo. App. 203, 1936 Mo. App. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/globe-automatic-sprinkler-co-v-boester-moctapp-1936.