Glueck & Co. v. Powell

61 S.W.2d 406, 227 Mo. App. 1226, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 83
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 22, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 61 S.W.2d 406 (Glueck & Co. v. Powell) 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
Glueck & Co. v. Powell, 61 S.W.2d 406, 227 Mo. App. 1226, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 83 (Mo. Ct. App. 1933).

Opinion

BLAND, J.

This is an appeal from an order refusing to set aside an involuntary nonsuit. The action arose in the justice court and is to replevin an electric refrigerator of the value of $278.

The facts show that T. C. Mitchell, Jr., and his brother, B. G-. Mitchell, were partners, developing real estate in Kansas City; that T. C. Mitchell, Jr., owmed an apartment building in said city, which he and his brother were operating; that on or about February 16, 1929, T. C. Mitchell, Jr., directed plaintiff to deliver the refrigerator in question to said apartment house. This refrigerator was ordered and delivered under an oral contract made about a year before, in which plaintiff and the said T. C. Mitchell, Jr., agreed that Mitchell, from time to time, might order electric refrigerators from plaintiff and place them in any of the apartments that might be vacant. Electric refrigerators in the apartments made the latter more attractive to tenants and those who wanted the use of a refrigerator would pay five dollars per month more in rent for an apartment equipped with one. Mitchell would place a refrigerator in a vacant apartment and if the tenant, who afterwards rented it, desired a refrigerator it would be paid for, otherwise it would be returned to plaintiff. The understanding with plaintiff was that if Mitchell kept the refrigerator it was to be paid for, but if he did not keep it was to be returned and not paid for. In other words, according to plaintiff’s testimony, the refrigerator in question as well as eleven others that were ordered during the year were sent to the premises by plaintiff under a contract of “sale or return,” wherein the purchaser of the property is given the option to return it if he likes and no title passes until the option is exercised. [See 6 C. J. p. 1095.] No witness could recall whether the apartment in which the refrigerator in question was placed was ever rented.

The evidence shows that sometimes a refrigerator would be ordered from plaintiff and placed in a vacant apartment and if the new *1228 tenant did not want it, the refrigerator would be moved into another vacant apartment, etc. B. G. Mitchell testified:

“Q. Has there been a tendency in the last' three years in prospective tenants demanding electric refrigeration in apartments? A. I think it is customary where you want to hold up your rents, it is, yes, sir.”

The evidence shows that one of these refrigerators weighed 500 pounds; that two experienced men could “handle it.” “There is a unit at the top of the equipment and they can be moved separately by two men.” The only way that the refrigerator in question was attached to the realty was by means of a cord, one end of which was inserted into a socket on the back of the refrigerator and the other into a light socket on the wall.

On July 1, 1929, T. C. Mitchell, Jr., conveyed the apartment by warranty deed to one Bradshaw. On June 18, T930, Bradshaw conveyed the property by second deed of trust to secure his note for $36,200, to the defendant, Kelley, trustee for the defendant, Powell.

The warranty deed from Mitchell to Bradshaw recited that it conveyed the real estate and “all and singular, the rights, privileges, . thereto belonging, or in any wise appertaining” thereto. The deed of trust conveyed the property “with the appurtenances.” Neither deed purported to or conveyed any personal property.

On August 19, 1930, default having occurred under the deed of trust, the real estate was sold at trustee’s sale and was conveyed by trustee’s deed to the defendant, Powell.

B. G. Mitchell testified that a short time before the property was conveyed to Bradshaw, he called the office of the plaintiff and fo7d it to come and get the refrigerator in controversy, and that either just before or after the foreclosure, he told the trustee that there were two refrigerators in the apartment building that did not belong to it.

Both of the Mitchells testified that they had not purchased or accepted the refrigerator and did not claim any interest in it. Plaintiff carried “this refrigerator” as a regular open charge account against the Mitchells and the books of plaintiff, upon their face, would indicate that an outright sale of the refrigerator had been made, but this was sought to be explained bjr a witness for the plaintiff, who stated that it did not have any separate consignment accounts at the time the refrigerator in question was delivered and the matter was carried on its books as a charge account merely for the purpose of keeping a record of the transaction. All of the twelve refrigerators were paid for but the one in suit and one other. No demand was made by the plaintiff upon any one for the payment of the purchase price of the one sued for. No inquiry was ever made by plaintiff regarding it after it was delivered, nor did it attempt to ascertain whether the apartment, in which the refrigerator had *1229 been placed was leased or rented, or as to whether the refrigerator was used.

On April 23, 1930, a bill of sale was executed by T. C. Mitchell, Jr., conveying title to the refrigerator to the plaintiff. Mitchell testified that he did not have any interest in the machine at the time he gave the bill of sale. The record shows that this was given at the request of the plaintiff’s attorney, for the reason that plaintiff was unable to locate the refrigerator and the bill of sale was taken to give it “recourse on the warranty contained in that bill of sale in the event we were not successful in obtaining possession of the machines. ’ ’

It is insisted that the court erred in refusing to set aside the involuntary nonsuit.. In this connection it is urged that, because the refrigerator was not a fixture, it was not conveyed by the warranty deed from T. C. Mitchell to Bradshaw, nor by the subsequent deeds, by which defendant, Powell, obtained title to the real estate.

Whether an article becomes a fixture depends a good deal upon the relationship of the parties. As was stated in St. Louis Radiator Co. v. Carroll, 73 Mo. App. 315, 319:

“While the decisions on this subject depend much on the facts of the particular case, the principle to be extracted from them is that a fixture of the class under discussion is made up of three elements, annexation, adaption and intent. Of these in modern times the latter two are more important than the one relating to the method by which the chattel is attached to the freehold. Such annexation, though slight and easily displaced, will not prevent an article becoming a fixture which is adapted to the proper use of a building, and which was placed therein by the owner with the intent of forming a part of the special object and design for which the building was constructed. ’ ’

In Donnewald v. The Turner Real Estate Co., 44 Mo. App. 350, 354, the St. Louis Court of Appeals, quoting from a New Hampshire case said:

“ ‘Some of the excepted cases seem to have made the question depend upon the character of the fastening, whether slight or otherwise. But this is a criterion of questionable character, not sustained by the weight of decisions. More depends upon the nature of the article, and of its use as connected with the use of the freehold.’ ”

In Banner Iron Works v. Aetna Iron Works, 143 Mo. App. 1, 6, the court said:

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Bluebook (online)
61 S.W.2d 406, 227 Mo. App. 1226, 1933 Mo. App. LEXIS 83, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glueck-co-v-powell-moctapp-1933.