Hanson v. Vose

175 N.W. 113, 144 Minn. 264, 7 A.L.R. 1573, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 738
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedDecember 12, 1919
DocketNo. 21,450
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 175 N.W. 113 (Hanson v. Vose) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hanson v. Vose, 175 N.W. 113, 144 Minn. 264, 7 A.L.R. 1573, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 738 (Mich. 1919).

Opinion

Taylor, C.

Replevin to obtain possession of 19 Murphy door beds, 19 gas ranges [266]*266and two laundry stoves. The court directed a verdict for defendant, and plaintiff appealed from an order denying a new trial.

Defendant Vose, who will be designated as defendant hereafter, leased a parcel of land in the city of Minneapolis to Harold N. Falk for a term of one hundred years at a specified annual rental payable quarterly. The lease required Falk to erect a brick apartment building on the property “divided into flats and all complete and ready to live therein and to rent,” and provided for the execution of a mortgage on the building and land for a part of the cost of the building. Falk erected a building divided into 19 flats and installed a Murphy door bed and a gas range in each flat and two gas laundry stoves in the 'basement. He purchased the ranges and stoves from the Minneapolis Gas Light Company under a contract which provided for payment of the purchase price in monthly instalments, and further provided that the company retained ownership of them, with the right to take possession of and remove them in ease of default in such payments. He purchased the beds from the New England Furniture & Carpet Company under a similar contract. These contracts were duly filed in the office of the city clerk. After making the stipulated payments for a considerable time, Falk defaulted therein, and on account of such default the gas company was about to reclaim and remove the ranges and stoves, and the furniture company was about to remove the beds. Falk was also indebted to A. R. Chesnut in the sum of $4,000. He and Chesnut made an arrangement with plaintiff, by which he conveyed to plaintiff by bill of sale all his interest in the ranges, stoves and beds, and plaintiff agreed to make the remaining payments to the companies as they accrued, and to sell the ranges, stoves and beds as soon as they were fully paid for, and, after deducting his advances with interest from the proceeds, to pay the balance thereof to Chesnut to be applied on Falk’s indebtedness to Chesnut. Falk assigned to plaintiff his contract with the furniture company and that company assented thereto. Falk’s contract with the gas company was surrendered and canceled, and. in lieu thereof a new contract was executed by that company directly to plaintiff. Plaintiff made the payments to the companies as they accrued, until the amounts unpaid were reduced to the sums of $35 and $20, respectively.

In the meantime defendant had canceled Falk’s ground lease of the [267]*267land for nonpayment of rent, and took possession of the building and the ranges, stoves and beds, claiming them as a part of the realty. About five weeks later, and after an unsuccessful attempt to adjust the matter, plaintiff brought this action.

The question presented is whether the court erred in ruling as a matter of law that the ranges, stoves and beds had become a part of the realty.

While there are well settled general rules for determining whether an article, originally personal property, has become a fixture, that is, a part of the realty, it is frequently difficult to determine whether, under the peculiar facts of a particular case, a particular article has become a part of the realty or still remains personal property.

To become a fixture the article must be physically or constructively attached to the freehold. If not attached to the freehold and not an essentrial or component part of some structure or appliance which is attached to it, the article remains a chattel, although intended for permanent use on the premises. If annexed to the freehold, the manner in which it is annexed may convert it into realty regardless of other considerations, as where brick or other material has been incorporated into a permanent building, or where an article, otherwise a severable chattel, cannot be removed without leaving the freehold in a substantially worse condition than before the annexation. Usually, however, the manner of annexation is not decisive, but only one of several facts to be taken into account in determining whether the article has become realty or remains personalty as between the parties concerned. Northwestern Lumber & W Co. v. Parker, 125 Minn. 107, 145 N. W. 964.

In the present case the ranges and stoves were annexed to the building only by the ordinary plumbing fixtures, and could be unscrewed from the gas pipes and removed without injury to the building itself.. The door beds were arranged to swing back into closets when not in use. In order to receive them the closets were constructed of a greater size and with wider doors than ordinary closets. Each bed rested on a pedestal which was fastened to the floor by screws, and served as a pivot on which the bed was swung from the room into the closet or from the closet into the room. There was also an appliance for holding the bed in position which was fastened to the door casing by screws. These beds could be removed without material injury to the building. Both the ranges and [268]*268stoves and the beds were annexed to the building sufficiently to constitute them fixtures under some circumstances. So far as annexation is concerned they are in'about the same situation as the radiators and office desk held to be fixtures as between mortgager and mortgagee in Capehart v. Foster, 61 Minn. 132, 63 N. W. 257, 52 Am. St. 582.

Falk took possession of the land as lessee for a term of 100 years under a lease which required him to erect an apartment building, divide it into flats and fit them ready to rent. In completing the building he placed a gas range and door bed in each flat for the use of those who should rent the flats. These articles were adapted to the purpose for which the building was constructed, and enhanced its rental value, and were intended to be rented with the fiats as a part thereof. Under such circumstances Falk’s position was different from that of an ordinary tenant who .rents a building and installs conveniences therein for his own use, and these articles would clearly be fixtures as between him and defendant, if no rights of third parties were involved. But Falk purchased these articles under a conditional sale contract, by which they were to remain chattels with the title and right of removal in the vendors. They never became Falk’s property and he never acquired the right to make them a part of the realty. He defaulted in the stipulated payments, and, when the vendors were about to retake their property, he made an agreement with the vendors and the plaintiff, by which the plaintiff was substituted in his stead as purchaser and was to become the owner of these articles on completing the payments as provided in the contracts. Plaintiff had no interest in the real estate, either as tenant or otherwise; neither had Chesnut, for whose benefit plaintiff seems to have taken over the contracts. Plaintiff dealt with these articles as chattels, and intended that they should remain chattels. This clearly appears from the fact that if they became a part of the realty in which he had no interest, he would acquire nothing by his payments, and would be unable to carry out his contract with Uhesnut. He clearly had the right as against Falk to remove these articles from the building and the question here is whether he also had that right as against defendant.

The rule that articles so annexed to the freehold as to appear to be fixtures pass to a subsequent purchaser, Who buys the land without notice of the rights of third parties in such articles, does not aid defendant, for [269]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
175 N.W. 113, 144 Minn. 264, 7 A.L.R. 1573, 1919 Minn. LEXIS 738, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanson-v-vose-minn-1919.