Guardian Life Insurance v. Swanson

3 N.E.2d 324, 286 Ill. App. 278, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 453
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedJuly 3, 1936
DocketGen. No. 38,503
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 3 N.E.2d 324 (Guardian Life Insurance v. Swanson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Guardian Life Insurance v. Swanson, 3 N.E.2d 324, 286 Ill. App. 278, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 453 (Ill. Ct. App. 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice John J. Sullivan

delivered the opinion of the court.

Frank J. Jaros (hereinafter referred to as the petitioner) filed his intervening petition in proceedings brought by the Guardian Life Insurance Company of America, plaintiff, to foreclose a first mortgage trust deed covering certain improved real estate located at Montrose and Winchester avenues, Chicago. The petition' alleged that Jaros is the owner and holder of a note executed by Fred Knapp and Helen Knapp, his wife, in the sum of $2,484, which was secured by a chattel mortgage to one Marie J. Banach conveying 20 electric refrigerators located in the premises sought to be foreclosed, and asked that an order be entered either directing delivery to him of said electric refrigorators or payment to him of the fair and reasonable value thereof.

Plaintiff filed an answer alleging that the refrigerators were “a part and parcel of the real estate” covered by its trust deed and denying that the petitioner had any right to the possession of said refrigerators or any title to same. The answer of the receiver of the property averred that the refrigerators were part of the real estate.

The order which this appeal seeks to reverse, after finding that the refrigerators in dispute were at no time affixed to or made a part of the building, that they were personal property and that they did not constitute “a part or parcel of the real estate,” decreed that Jaros is entitled to the possession of same.

Plaintiff contends that it was the intention of the parties at the time the electric refrigerators were installed that they should be and become part and parcel of the real estate; that, therefore, they are part of the real estate covered by the trust deed in question ; and that, even if such refrigerators were intended to be personal property, the petitioner, Jaros, has shown no title or right to possession whatever in this case.

The petitioner’s theory is that the refrigerators were personal property at the time of their installation in the building and retained ‘ ‘ such characteristic” ; that plaintiff did not raise as an issue nor disprove the validity of the chattel mortgage under which petitioner claims the right of possession; that plaintiff is estopped from claiming that the refrigerators became fixtures and part of the real estate; and that plaintiff, prior to the submission of this matter to the trial court, acknowledged that the electric refrigerators retained their character as personal property.

Nils Swanson was the owner of the premises in question on January 22, 1930, when he and his wife executed and delivered their trust deed on this property to secure the payment of the first mortgage loan of $101,500 from plaintiff, the negotiations for which were conducted exclusively by Elmer E. Stultz, a realtor, for the owner and by Roy L. Nelson of the Cosmopolitan State Bank for the Guardian Life Insurance Company. Stultz testified that when Nelson came to his office during the negotiations for the loan, he inquired as to Swanson’s attitude as to the installation of electric refrigerators; that he (Stultz) replied: “We contemplate and will put in ice boxes as they are demanded. We don’t want to be forced to put ice boxes in one hundred per cent as maybe some tenants will be satisfied with the ice boxes, but we will put them in according to your requirements”; that electric refrigerators were shortly thereafter installed by Swanson for the renting season as they were needed and demanded in renting the premises, complete installation taking place before the end of the year; and that, while the matter of electric refrigeration was in a more or less experimental stage in 1930, it became a vital factor in renting premises of the character involved even in that year, and is compulsory at the present time to secure desirable tenants for that particular class of property.

It does not appear to whom or when Nils Swanson and his wife conveyed their equity in this property, but it does appear that when they sold the property the electric refrigerators installed by Swanson in 1930 were not transferred separately by bill of sale as personal property to the purchaser of the real estate but were included in the conveyance of the premises by deed.

The record includes a copy of a contract for the exchange of properties, executed September 22, 1933, by one John W. Hudson, beneficiary under a trust held by Phillips State Bank and Trust Company and Fred Knapp and Helen Knapp, Ms wife, under the terms of which Hudson agreed to exchange the property in question “including 20' electric refrigerators, all fully paid for” to the Knapps for Wisconsin farm land. On November 15, 1933, Fred Knapp and Helen Knapp executed the note and chattel mortgage covering* the 20 refrigerators involved to one Marie J. Banach.

The major question presented for our determination is whether the 20 electric refrigerators installed in this bmlding are to be treated as permanent fixtures and part of the real estate or personal property, the possession of which petitioner is entitled to under his chattel mortgage. Each refrigerator, weighing about 262 pounds, stood on its own legs and was unattached to the building except by an electric cord plugged into a wall socket. That the refrigerators are readily removable without injury to the building or- to-themselves is conceded.

While it is true that parties may not by contract make personal property real or personal at will, it has been generally held that such property as refrigerators may, upon installation, be classified as chattels personal or as chattels real, according to the intention. In Commercial Credit Corp. v. Gould, 275 Mass. 48, the court said at p. 52: “This refrigerating equipment, installed as found by the judge, which could ‘be easily removed from the building without any damage whatever to it’ was not real estate as matter of law, but rather was property, the nature of which depended upon the intention of the landowner as manifested by his acts. ’ ’

The established rule in this and most other jurisdictions is that in determining whether articles of personal property installed in or annexed to a building are to be treated as fixtures and part of .the real estate or as movable personal property, the primary test is the intention of the parties at the time of the transaction and installation, and that proof of adaptability and necessity merely bears upon the question of intention. (Thuma v. Granada Hotel Co., 269 Ill. App. 484.)

The petitioner is not in the position of a vendor under a conditional sales contract who has not been paid the purchase price of the articles installed. Nor is he in the position of a chattel mortgagee who received his mortgage from the landowner to secure the purchase price of articles installed or annexed to the building. As against either a prior or subsequent mortgagee of the real estate, both the conditional vendor and holder of the purchase money chattel mortgage have been uniformly held entitled to the possession of the articles sold and not paid for by the owner of the property if they could be removed without any considerable damage. The chattel mortgage under which petitioner claims in this case was not executed until about three years after the refrigerators were purchased, installed and paid for.

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Bluebook (online)
3 N.E.2d 324, 286 Ill. App. 278, 1936 Ill. App. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guardian-life-insurance-v-swanson-illappct-1936.