In re J. L. Kesner Co.

219 F. 512, 135 C.C.A. 262, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1668
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 1914
DocketNo. 64
StatusPublished

This text of 219 F. 512 (In re J. L. Kesner Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re J. L. Kesner Co., 219 F. 512, 135 C.C.A. 262, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1668 (2d Cir. 1914).

Opinions

WARD, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from and a petition to revise an order of the District Court confirming the report of the referee holding certain judgment creditors of the bankrupt entitled to a lien upon the proceeds of sale of fixtures belonging to the bankrupt and directing the judgments to be paid therefrom.

The bankrupts carried on a department store in buildings covering the entire front on the west side of Sixth avenue between Twenty-Second and Twenty-Third streets, with the exception of the Twenty-[513]*513Third street corner. They occupied under 12 separate leases, each of which had more than 10 years to run at the date of adjudication. In each department they had installed at their own expense fixtures appropriate to the business therein conducted which were affixed to the floors and walls by nails, bolts, screws, etc., and were intended to be used as long as the business continued or until they wore out and were replaced.

More than four months before the petition in bankruptcy was filed judgments were recovered against Kesner & Co. by Andrew F. Jessen as administrator and by Charles M. Lamb & Co., upon which no executions were ever issued because before stay of execution had expired receivers were appointed of Kesner & Co., in an equity suit in the District Court which was subsequently displaced by these proceedings in bankruptcy.

The question to be determined is whether the fixtures are realty, being a part of the leasehold estate, as the judgment creditors contend, or personal property, as the trustee contends.

The leaseholds were chattels real by virtue of section 1430 of chapter 13, tit. 2, art. 3, Code of Civil Procedure, entitled “Sale, redemption and conveyance of real property; rights and liabilities of persons interested” — -which reads:

“See. 1:130. To what leasehold property this article applies. The expression ‘real property,’ as used in this and the succeeding article, includes leasehold property, where the lessee or his assignee is possessed, at the time of the sale, of at least five years unexnired term of: the lease, and also of the building or buildings, if any, erected thereupon.”

We do not overlook the fact that under the Decedent Estate Law leases for years are personal property. Despard v. Churchill, 53 N. Y. 192.

And the leaseholds were subject to the lieu of the judgments by virtue of section 1251 of chapter 11, tit. 1, of article 3 of the Code entitled “Docketing a judgment; effects thereof, as a lien upon real property; suspending and discharging the lien; satisfaction and assignment of a judgment” — the material part of which reads:

“Sec. 1251. Except as otherwise specially prescribed by law, and except also as in this section below provided, a judgment, hereafter rendered, which is docketed in a county clerk’s office, as prescribed in this article, binds, and is a charge upon, for ten years after filing the judgment roll, and no longer, the real property and chattels real, in that county, which the judgment debtor has at the time oC so docketing it, or which he acquires at any time after-wards, and within the ten years.”

It follows that, if the fixtures were a part of the leasehold estate, the judgments were lieris upon them and are to be paid out of the proceeds of sale which have been kept as a separate fund in the hands of the trustee to await the determination of the court.

There can be no question that between Kesner & Co., and their landlords, in the absence of any agreement to the contrary, of which there is no evidence, these are trade fixtures removable as personalty by Kesner & Co. The rule, however, between landlord and tenant is an exception. Between grantor and grantee, mortgagor and mortgagee, and in condemnation proceedings the general rule applies that [514]*514annexations to the freehold are a part of the freehold. The question to be decided is whether, as between Kesner & Co. and their judgment creditors, these fixtures were a part of the leasehold or removable as personalty.

When the owner of land who has annexed fixtures to it,' either sells or mortgages the land, the fixtures go with it, though not mentioned (Walker v. Sherman, 20 Wend. [N. Y.] 636, 655; Day v. Perkins, 2 Sandf. Ch. [N. Y.] 359); and in condemnation proceedings the rule is, the same (Matter of the Mayor, 39 App. Div. 589, 595, 57 N. Y. Supp. 657; 19 Cyc. 1059). Cowen, J., in Walker v. Sherman, said, at page 655 of 20 Wend.:

“On the whole, 1 collect from the cases cited, and others, that, as a general rule, in order to come within the operation of a deed conveying the freehold, whether by metes and bounds of a plantation, farm, or lot, etc., or in terms denoting a mill or factory, etc., nothing of a nature personal in itself will pass, unless it be brought within the denomination of a fixture by being in some way permanently, at least habitually, attached to the land or some building upon it. It need not be constantly fastened. It need not be so fixed that detaching will disturb the earth or rend any part of the building. I am not prepared to deny that a machine movable in itself would become a fixture from being connected in its operations by bands, or in any other way, with the permanent machinery, though it might be detached, and restored to its ordinary place, as easily as the chain in Farrar v. Stackpole [6 Greenl. (Me.) 154, 19 Am. Dec. 201], I think it would be a fixture notwithstanding.”

In Matter of The Mayor, Rumsey, J., said:

“But where the improvements were put upon the land by the owner, and it was evident that they were so placed there to enable him to better use his own land for the purposes for which he intended it, there could have been on his part no intention to remove these improvements, and justice did not require that the common-law rule should be limited for his protection. For that reason it has always been held that, so far as the owner is concerned, the law of fixtures would be rigorously limited, and that whatever had been put upon the premises under such circumstances that it would become a part of the freehold, or essential for the purposes for which the freehold was used, would be, so far as the owner was concerned, regarded as a fixture as between him and any person to whom he proposed to transfer the land.
“The same rule exists in proceedings to take land under the right of eminent domain, and the commissioners of estimate have no right to restrict the assessment to the simple value of the land, compelling the owner to retain the fixtures on the premises, and exempting the city from an obligation to take and pay for them as a part of the land. Schuchardt v. Mayor, 53 N. Y. 202, 208. Whatever has been put upon' the land by the owner with the intention that it should remain upon the land and was essential to the use which he made of it is, generally speaking, as between himself and his vendee, a fixture, add goes with the land when he shall sell it.”

A sale upon execution carries them exactly as "a conveyance does, there being no difference in this regard between a voluntary sale by the grantor and a forced sale by the sheriff. Farrar v. Chauffetete, 5 Denio (N. Y.) 527, 529. Mr. Ewell in his work on Fixtures says (page 275):

“The general rule undoubtedly is that all fixtures, whether actually or con.

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Schuchardt v. . Mayor, Etc., of N.Y.
53 N.Y. 202 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
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53 N.Y. 192 (New York Court of Appeals, 1873)
Globe Marble Mills Company v. . Quinn
76 N.Y. 23 (New York Court of Appeals, 1879)
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
219 F. 512, 135 C.C.A. 262, 1914 U.S. App. LEXIS 1668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-j-l-kesner-co-ca2-1914.