Manwaring v. Jenison

27 N.W. 899, 61 Mich. 117, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 875
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1886
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 27 N.W. 899 (Manwaring v. Jenison) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manwaring v. Jenison, 27 N.W. 899, 61 Mich. 117, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 875 (Mich. 1886).

Opinion

Morse, J.

The plaintiff brought suit against the defendant, declaring in two counts, — one in trover for the conversion of two steam-boilers, one smoke-stack, one steam-engine, one stave-cutting machine, and one machine for dressing and circling heading, and the other in trespass for taking and carrying away the same property.

The case was tried before the court without a jury. The court'found the facts to be, in substance, as follows:

1. On the twenty-eighth day of December, 1873, and for some years prior thereto, the firm of Haven, McKay & Co. were the owners of about two acres of land in the village of Grandville, Kent county, Michigan, on which they had erected a steam stave and heading mill, which they had run and operated for some time prior to that date. Said mill was always used exclusively in the business of manufacturing staves and heading. The mill building, when completed, cost about $1,500. It was a stout frame, about forty by fifty feet square, two stories high, inclosed, having a shingle roof, and was built for the express purpose of being used on said land as a stave and heading mill, and to have placed therein all the machinery hereinafter referred to. The building was well adapted to this use. After the removal of said machinery, and at the date of removal, the building was of little value, not exceeding $200. The business of running the mill had proved unprofitable, and had been abandoned, Haven, Blake & Co. having failed in business.-

The firm of Haven, McKay & Co., upon the completion of said building, placed therein the following machinery, all of which was a part of the mill, and was necessary to consti[129]*129tute such mill, and to furnish it with steam power to operate, viz.: One steam-engine, weighing between five and six tons, resting upon a solid foundation of wood, brick, and stone laid in mortar, and was securely fastened; two steam-boilers, weighing each about five tous, each resting upon a foundation laid' in brick and mortar, and both arched over with brick laid in mortar, and they could not have been taken out without taking down some portion of the building, — that is, without removing the siding from some portion of the building; one smoke-stack, connected and used with said boilers; one circle stave-cutting machine, weighing one and one-half tons; and one machine for dressing and circling heading, weighing about eight hundred pounds. Both these machines were securely bolted down upon the floor by bolts running through the floor, and through timbers below the floor, and these securely fastened The machines were connected with the main shaft by belts, and were operated by the power furnished by the engine. All this machinery was well adapted to the use the firm were putting it to. This entire machinery remained in the same position as when first placed in the mill until its removal, in March, 1880, as hereinafter stated.

On the twenty-eighth day of December, 1873, the firm of Haven, Blake & Co., composed of John Y. D. Haven, Joseph Blake, Levi Day, and Dwight Nankin, purchased of said firm of Ilaven, McKay & Co., and the same uvas conveyed to them by deed, as real estate, said property, and they immediately took possession of the same, and operated a?nd ran said mill until December, 1877.

2. While Haven, Blake & Co. so owned the property, and on January 16,1875, they procured the plaintiff and one Hiram Jenison to indorse their note for $3,000, payable to the order of said William Manwaring and Hiram Jenison. At its maturity this note, without going to protest, was renewed by the giving of a new note signed by Manwaring and Jenison, payable to the- order of Haven, Blake & Go. This new note was renewed from time to time until Decern[130]*130her 28, 1877, when Manwaring was compelled to and did Jpay the sum of $1,900 thereon.

At the time of the making of the first note Haven, Blake & Co. gave to said Manwaring and Jenison a chattel mortgage to save them harmless from loss for indorsing said note. Said mortgage was filed in the office of the clerk of the town of Wyoming, January 16, 1875, that being the place of residence of the mortgagors, and the property being also there situate. The chattel mortgage covered the property in issue in this suit, and about three hundred cords of stave and heading bolts lying in the mill-yard. The machinery is described in the mortgage as being now in use in this mill in Grandville.”

3. On the thirteenth day of January, 1876, said mortgage wa.s renewed by the filing of the following affidavit:

“ County of Kent, Township of Wyoming — ss.: I, William Manwaring, one of the mortgagees named in the mortgage given by Haven, Blake & Co. to Hiram Jenison and William Manwaring, January 16, 1875, for the sum of three thousand dollars, do hereby certify that the sum of twelve hundred and seventy-five dollars is claimed by me to be due thereupon at the date hereof, which sum constitutes the amount of interest of Hiram Jenison and William Manwaring in the property therein mentioned and described.
Wm. Manwaring.
“ Subscribed and sworn to before me this thirteenth January, 1876.
James A. Knowles, Notary Public, Kent Co., Mich.”

And also renewed again February 21, 1877, by the filing of the affidavit given below, as follows:

State of Michigan, County of Kent — ss.: Wm. Man-waring, the within mortgagee, being duly sworn, says that there is now due and unpaid on the said mortgage hereunto annexed the sum of two thousand dollars by virtue of said mortgage, and therein mentioned. Wm. Manwaring.
Sworn to and subscribed before me this fifteenth day of February, 1877.
“ Wm. H. Galloway, Justice of the Peace.”

é. The mill was closed up and stopped running, and the company became insolvent. The property in question rG[131]*131mainod in the mill, and on the thirtieth day of July, 1877, Manwaring procured a constable to advertise and sell the same; and on July 30, 1877, said constable posted his notice of sale, of which the following is a copy, which was the only notice given of said sale, to-wit:

“ CnATTEL-MORTGAGE SALE.

“By virtue of a chattel mortgage now in my hands, I shall sell to the highest bidder, at the stave-mill, in the village of Grandville, Kent Co., State of Michigan, on the eleventh day of August, 1877, at one o’clock r. m., all the personal property herein described : Two steam-boilers, one smoke-stack, one engine, one stave-cutting machine, and one machine for dressing and circling heading, and 50,000 staves, more or less.
“ July 30, 1877. James Jewell, Constable.”

At the time and place named said Jewell appeared and sold the property at auction, pursuant to the terms of the chattel mortgage, to William Manwaring, he being the highest bidder therefor. The property was bid in at the sum of $¿74.90, and Manwaring received a memorandum of his purchase from Jewell. Previous to the sale the said Jewell seized the property under the chattel mortgage by going into the mill, July 30, 1877, and announcing that he seized the property under the mortgage aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
27 N.W. 899, 61 Mich. 117, 1886 Mich. LEXIS 875, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manwaring-v-jenison-mich-1886.