Monarch Laundry v. Westbrook

63 S.E. 1070, 109 Va. 382, 1909 Va. LEXIS 46
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedMarch 11, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 63 S.E. 1070 (Monarch Laundry v. Westbrook) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Monarch Laundry v. Westbrook, 63 S.E. 1070, 109 Va. 382, 1909 Va. LEXIS 46 (Va. 1909).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellants, in the oral argument, waived their assignments of error other than those which present the question, whether a reservation of title to' personal property in the shape of engines, boilers and machinery, which a vendor by written contract sells to a vendee, and installs for use in a plant for the conduct of a laundry business, the contract reserving title having been duly docketed in accordance with section 2462 of the Code of Virginia, is valid as against purchasers from the vendee (mortgagees of the realty), who purchased, as in this case, after the engine and boiler with its attachments and equipment had been installed in the laundry plant.

By the agreed statement of facts, the engine, boiler and machinery in question were installed in vendee’s plant, and the contract reserving title to same was docketed as required by statute prior to the execution and recordation of certain deeds of trust afterwards given upon the vendee’s building and con[384]*384tents, and upon which deeds of trust the rights, if any, of the appellants attacking the validity of the title reservation depend.

In certain particulars, appellants and appellee differ in. their view of the evidence, the "appellants contending that the boiler, engine and machinery were so installed in the building of the laundry company as to make them a part of the realty, while appellee contends that the engine, .boiler and their equipment, even, from á physical standpoint, and independent of other controlling questions, did not become a part of the realty, but were so installed as to be removable.

We consider it unnecessary to review at length the history, purpose and policy of the statute—sec. 3462 of the Code, supra. Suffice it to say, that previous to this statute, the law of the State was, that where a vendor agreed to sell personal property for a price to be paid at a future time, and delivered the possession, but expressly retained title to the property until payment, such an agreement constituted a conditional sale; and though by parol or by an unrecorded instrument, such reservation was valid as against vendees, creditors and subsequent purchasers with or without notice. Whereupon, the statute, now sec. 2462, supra, restricted that doctrine for the protection of innocent third parties by providing that such reservation of title should be void as to them unless recorded in such a way as to give notice.

The statute in its original form, as enacted at the legislative session of 1883-4—Acts of 1883-4, p. 2Y—provided that the notice should be given “from the time the said writing is duly admitted to record,” etc. By the present statute, supra, en-grafted in the Code of 1881, there is substituted for the requirement of the previous statute that the instrument itself be recorded as deeds of conveyance are required to be recorded, the requirement only that a memorandum of the contract containing certain information specifically prescribed should be docketed by the clerk of the court of the county or corporation, in whose office deeds and other writings were required to be recorded; and [385]*385further provides, that “the docketing and indexing of such memorandum of such contract as provided for shall have the same effect as to creditors of and purchasers for value without notice from the vendee as if said contract were recorded according to the provisions of chap. 109 of the Code of Virginia.”

Section 2465 of the same chapter of the Code, under the caption “contracts, deeds, etc., that are void as to creditors and purchasers unless recorded,” provides: “Every such contract in writing and every deed conveying any such estate or term, and every deed of gift, or deed of trust, or mortgage conveying real estate or goods and chattels, and every, bill of sale or contract for the sale of goods and chattels * ■ * * shall be void as to subsequent purchasers for valuable consideration without notice, and creditors, until and except from the time that it is duly admitted to record in the county or corporation wherein the property embraced in such contract,- deed or bill of sale may be,” etc.

This whole chapter of the Code treats the matter of the recordation of documents as to realty and personalty in one category and provides for their recordation, and in the light of the entire chapter there is no room for doubt that it was intended by the legislature that the docketing or recordation of a contract of sale of personal property, reserving title thereto until . the purchase money is fully paid, as provided by sec. 2462 of the Code should constitute notice to third parties.

But it is argued for appellants that while this view of the statute may be correct and appellee has complied with its terms, such machinery as is involved in this controversy was never intended to come within the purview of the statute; that while this machinery was personal properly when sold, it became, as a part of the plant of the laundry company, real estate, and by its nature it was intended to remain where placed as a part of a general scheme; and that, as said in Kirkland v. Brune, 31 Gratt. 127: “The act manifestly refers to such property and such 'goods and. chattels’ as are visible, tangible and movable.”

[386]*386It is very true that the statute refers to- “such goods and chattels as are visible, tangible and removable,” but that the engine, boiler, etc., here in question, because put into and made to form a part, however important, of a laundry plant, ceased to be visible, tangible and movable personal property within the purview of the statute in a non sequitur.

In Kirkland v. Brune, supra, and Bank v. Holland, 99 Va. 505, 39 S. E. 126, 86 Am. St. Rep. 898, 55 L. R. A. 155, relied on for appellants, the court was dealing in the one case with choses in action, “invisible and intangible,” and in the other with a gift of like property, while here the subject of the controversy is visible, tangible, movable, personal chattels, such as are objects of the senses, deliverable in specie. We are unable to appreciate the force of the argument of the learned counsel for appellants, that under the review of the history of the statute and the reasoning of the opinion in Bank v. Holland, supra, the doctrine of ejusdem generis applies to this case, and the terms of the statute are to be confined to “movable personal property of the same class or kind of chattels to which a slave belonged,” i. e., such as could and would likely be moved from county to county and without the vendor finding it out within a year, referring to séc. 2414 of the Code. But if it could be conceded that this view is correct, it would not avail appellants in this case. Besides, being a matter-of common knowledge that so-' called stationary engines and boilers of the class involved here are movable, and are frequently removed from place to place, the evidence, as we shall presently see, is conclusive on that point.

The definition of the word “movable” is, “that which may be lifted, carried, drawn, turned or conveyed, or in any way made to change place or position.”

The assertion is made that the machinery furnished by appellee constitutes appellant’s laundry plant, the inference being that the security of the subsequent creditors secured on the realty would be destroyed; but there is nothing in the record [387]*387■warranting this assertion or inference.

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Bluebook (online)
63 S.E. 1070, 109 Va. 382, 1909 Va. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monarch-laundry-v-westbrook-va-1909.