Holland Furnace Co. v. Bird

21 P.2d 825, 45 Wyo. 471, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 23
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1933
Docket1786
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 21 P.2d 825 (Holland Furnace Co. v. Bird) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holland Furnace Co. v. Bird, 21 P.2d 825, 45 Wyo. 471, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 23 (Wyo. 1933).

Opinion

*475 Riner, Justice.

The Holland Furnace Company brought a replevin action in the District Court of Uinta County to recover a warm air furnace or “heater,” as it is designated in its petition, which it had theretofore installed in the basement of a dwelling house in Evanston, Wyoming. Joseph Bird, at first the mortgagee and ultimately the owner of the premises, defended the action. Judgment was given that the plaintiff take nothing in the proceeding and that “the defendant is entitled to the possession and property in” said furnace. The plaintiff has brought the case here by direct appeal. The record discloses the following facts: On March 11, 1930, Mrs. Mima E. Brough was the owner of a dwelling house in Evanston, Wyoming, on which she had in 1920 given a regularly recorded mortgage to Joseph Bird and which, on the date first above mentioned, was still in force and the obligation secured thereby unpaid. On that date she entered into a written contract with the Holland Furnace Company, under which the latter installed in the basement of the house aforesaid a “No. 4000-B Roper Warm Air Heater,” the chattel in controversy now. The furnace was set on a cement base and held in place thereon merely by its own weight. It was connected with the building by means of a smoke pipe to the flue, pipes supplying the gas for fuel, and by cold and hot air runs, these last being covered with asbestos paper which extended a few inches therefrom upon the furnace itself, the paper being used for insulation purposes and also to make the joints in the pipes air tight. It also appears that some time in the year 1929 the Holland Furnace Company removed from the house aforesaid an old coal burning furnace and put in a gas burning furnace which was not satisfactory and which was replaced by the “4000-B Roper” heater, aforesaid. The *476 written contract aboye mentioned also provided for tbe installation of “warm air faces, stacking, boxing, regulator, and all other fittings” necessary to make the heating device work properly, for which a price of $400 was to be paid, the amount due for the heater being fixed at $360. These amounts were to be paid by Mrs. Brough in specified installments.

One of the paragraphs of the agreement between Mrs. Brough and the Holland Furnace Company read as follows :

‘ ‘ The heating and piping in basement shall remain personal property at all times and the title thereto shall remain in us until you make final payment therefor, ivhereupon title shall vest in you as buyer. If any payment is not made on the date when it becomes due, as herein provided, all the unpaid balance shall immediately become due and payable. In case default is made in any payment when due, we retain and shall have the right to remove the heater and piping in basement and retain all payments made hereunder as and for the reasonable rental thereof. No action to enforce any rights under Mechanic Lien Laws or any similar laws -shall prejudice our right to remove the heater and piping on default of payment as provided above.”

The complete installation called for by the contract appears to have been made by the Holland Furnace Company, but the only article sought by this action to be removed from the building is the heater. This change in the heating system in the house was made without the knowledge or consent of the mortgagee.

It developed in the summer of 1930 that Mrs. Brough became unable to meet either the payments due on the mortgage to Mr. Bird or those due on the furnace contract. Accordingly, on August 5th of that year, she gave him a deed to the premises, as she herself testifies, “to save him the expense of foreclosing.” Bird declined to allow the Holland Furnace Company to remove the heater *477 although the amount due thereon had not been paid. The replevin action was accordingly instituted as previously stated. It was stipulated between the .parties at the commencement of the action that it should be construed as one for replevin and that the furnace involved should remain in the premises, as now located, during the pend-ency of the action “without prejudice to the claims of either party thereto, as the same may be made” therein. Such other facts as may be necessary to an understanding of the questions presented for determination will be mentioned in connection with their discussion.

The District Court, in its judgment, found that there was no “competent proof” of the “corporate capacity of the plaintiff” and this is assigned and argued as error. Plaintiff’s petition alleged in substance that it was a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Michigan and that it had complied with and was authorized to do business under the laws of this state. The defendant’s answer merely denied this allegation. It may be conceded that plaintiff did not properly prove that it was a corporation, but that matter was not an issue in the case. This is settled by the decision of this court in Pennoyer v. Dubois State Bank, 35 Wyo. 319, 249 Pac. 795, 796, where it was said, upon cited authorities:

' ‘ The plaintiff did not prove the allegation that it was a corporation. The defendant contends that that allegation was material to plaintiff’s cause of action, and was put in issue by the general denial. The general, and what we consider the better, rule is to the contrary. ’ ’

The language of the Supreme Court of Ohio in Brady v. The National Supply Company, 64 O. St. 267, 60 N. E. 218, 219, 83 Am. St. Rep. 753, is thereafter quoted to the following effect:

*478 “To raise the issue of nul tiel corporation, the defendant must specially plead in his answer that the plaintiff is not a corporation. ’ ’

It is evident, therefore, that the finding of the trial court was without effect so far as the correct disposition of this ease was concerned.

In support of the judgment under review, it is urged that there was no reservation of title to the furnace in favor of the plaintiff and that, as it was attached to the dwelling house, it became a fixture. This is said because of the language in the contract quoted above and reading: “The heating and piping in basement shall remain personal property at all times and the title thereto shall remain in us until you make final payment therefor, whereupon title shall vest in you as buyer.” It is claimed that the word “heating” is without meaning. In Weed v. Abbott, 51 Vt. 609, quoting from an earlier decision in the same jurisdiction, the court said:

“The principle is well settled in this state and elsewhere, that when it is perfectly apparent upon the face of a written instrument that a mere clerical error has been made, and when it is apparent from the face of the instrument what the correction should be to make the instrument what it would have been if the error had not occurred, courts will correct such error by construction, that is, they will treat the instrument the same, and give it the same legal effect and operation, as though the error had not been made.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Milnes v. Milnes
2008 WY 11 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 2008)
Wagner v. First Wyoming Bank, N.A. Laramie
784 P.2d 224 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1989)
Yellowstone Sheep Co. v. Ellis
96 P.2d 895 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1939)
Omaha Loan & Building Ass'n v. Bigelow
274 N.W. 574 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1937)
Holland Furnace Co. v. Lithuanian Building & Loan Ass'n
3 N.E.2d 934 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1936)
Swift Lumber & Fuel Co. v. Elwanger
256 N.W. 875 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
21 P.2d 825, 45 Wyo. 471, 1933 Wyo. LEXIS 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holland-furnace-co-v-bird-wyo-1933.