Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance v. George

79 N.W. 1028, 77 Minn. 319, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 707
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 25, 1899
DocketNos. 11,668—(209)
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 79 N.W. 1028 (Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance v. George) 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
Northwestern Mutual Life Insurance v. George, 79 N.W. 1028, 77 Minn. 319, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 707 (Mich. 1899).

Opinions

BUCK, J.

On October 6, 1892, one William H. Patterson was the owner of the real estate described in the complaint, and in the possession thereof, and he then borrowed of this plaintiff $50,000, and promised to repay plaintiff the same on October 6, 1897, with interest thereon at the rate of 5-|- per cent, per annum; and, to secure the payment of said principal sum and interest, he then duly executed a mortgage to plaintiff on said premises, which mortgage was on October 10,1892, duly recorded in the office of the register of deeds of Ramsey county, wherein said premises are situate. On said last-named day, Patterson duly conveyed said real estate to the Thurs-ton Cold Storage Company, subject to said mortgage; and said company forthwith went into possession of said premises, and continued in possession thereof until the year 1897, when it became insolvent, and made an assignment of all its property for the benefit of its creditors, and it has been ever since, and still is, insolvent.

At the time of making said loan and the execution of said mortgage there was, and at all times since there has been, situated upon said real estate, a large brick building, which had been built and arranged to be used as a cold-storage warehouse, and which then and now constitutes a considerable part of the value of said premises, and, if not used for the purposes of a cold-storage warehouse, is of considerably less value than if so used. At and prior to the execution of said mortgage the business of cold storage was carried on in said building under the natural system of refrigeration, and said building was arranged so that the cold air necessary to keep the temperature in the various rooms in said building at the proper stage was largely furnished from natural ice stored in the upper part of said building, and the air ’was conducted to various portions of said building through certain flues built in or upon the walls of said building, and extending through the floors, and in some part was furnished by packing ice and salt in flues or tubes [321]*321built in said building for that purpose. Shortly after the execution of said mortgage, and in the fall and winter of 1892, the Thurs-ton Company changed a portion of said building from the natural to an artificial system of refrigeration, known as the “brine system,” in which cold is generated by means of machinery consisting of an engine, compressor, tank, and pipes, and the use of ammonia and brine forced through pipes into coils placed in.rooms where needed; and in making said change the Thurston Company placed in said building appropriate machinery, called a “Fifteen-ton plant.” Thereafter the business of said cold storage was carried on in said building by the Thurston Company partly by the natural and partly by the artificial system of refrigeration, until the installation of the 60-ton, apparatus now in controversy.

It appeared that on March 22, 1895, the Hercules Ice-Machine Company made an agreement in writing with the Thurston Company whereby the former company would construct for and deliver to the latter company on said premises by May 1, 1895, a complete 60-ton refrigerating apparatus, for the sum of $12,327, payable in various sums and at different intervals, — the first payment due January 10,1896, and the last one due January 10,1898, — evidenced by several notes. This agreement provided that the title and ownership of the 60-ton plant and its appurtenances should remain in the Hercules Ice-Machine Company until paid for; nor was the title to said plant to vest in the Thurston Company until the apparatus proved satisfactory to the latter company, nor until it accepted said apparatus or plant. Pursuant to said agreement, the Hercules Company furnished and put into said building said 60-ton refrigerating apparatus, the work upon the same being closed some time later than May 1,1895 (the exact time not appearing); and said Thurston Company, at the request of said Hercules Company, executed and delivered to it the notes provided for in the agreement,— a portion of them prior to, and a portion after, May 1, 1895. None of said notes, nor the purchase price of said apparatus, was erer paid. On April 27,1895, the Hercules Company, for value, executed and delivered to the Old Second National Bank of Aurora, Illinois, all its interest in said agreement, including sums due and to become due, and the notes given for the purchase price of said machinery, [322]*322including the right to remove said apparatus or machinery from said building in case of default of payment on the part of said Thurston Company, as provided in said agreement. Subsequently, and on March 18,1896, said bank, for value, executed and delivered to the defendant William George all its rights in said agreement and the money due or to become due thereon, and the purchase-money notes-, and the right to remove said machinery as provided in said contract.

. Thereafter, and in March, 1896, the defendant William George entered into an agreement with the Thurston Cold-Storage Warehouse Company, wherein was recited the fact that said Hercules Ice-Machine Company had placed this 60-ton refrigerating plant in said warehouse building, and that said Thurston Company had given notes therefor, and that no part thereof had been paid, and that said Thurston Company had never accepted said refrigerating plant, and had paid no consideration therefor, and that said George had purchased all of said Hercules Company’s rights in said contract and plant, and was the owner of said notes, and that differences and controversies relating to the performance of said contract by the Hercules Ice-Machine Company and the Thurston Company had arisen; and whereas, it was understood that the title of said refrigerating Ice-Machine Company had never been devested out of the Hercules Ice-Machine Company or its assignees by virtue of anything done^ under said original agreement, it was therefore agreed that said George lease to said Thurston Company the said 60-ton plant for the term of two years from May 1,1896, to be used by it as a refrigerating plant in said cold-storage building, and not elsewhere, for a rental of $75 per month, with the privilege on the part of the Thurston Company, on or before the termination of said lease, of purchasing said plant by paying therefor the sum of $9,663.50, for which three notes were given, payable on or before May 1, 1898, with interest from May 1, 1896. The lease also contained a provision that, if there was a default in the rental payments, the lessor might enter upon the premises and take full and absolute possession of said refrigerating plant and machinery, and remove the same, and that title and ownership should remain in said George until the agreement was consummated by the purchase of said [323]*323plant. This agreement was filed in the office of the city clerk of the city of St. Paul April 25,1896.

Upon this agreement or lease the Tburston Company paid rental to tbe amount of $675, and no more, and no part of tbe three notes has been paid. Tbe defendant George, by reason of tbe default in tbe terms of tbe lease, commenced an action of claim and delivery to recover the 60-ton plant, but before doing so tendered to tbe Tburston Company and to tbe St. Paul Cold-Storage & Warehouse Company said notes; tbe latter company having succeeded to all tbe former’s rights in and to said plant, and being in possession of and operating tbe same.

As George was claiming title to tbe 60-ton plant put in by tbe ' Hercules Company, and was about to remove tbe same, tbe plaintiff, as mortgagee, brought this action to restrain such removal, and to have its mortgage adjudged a lien thereon.

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Bluebook (online)
79 N.W. 1028, 77 Minn. 319, 1899 Minn. LEXIS 707, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northwestern-mutual-life-insurance-v-george-minn-1899.