Robertson v. Corsett

39 Mich. 777, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 415
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1878
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 39 Mich. 777 (Robertson v. Corsett) 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
Robertson v. Corsett, 39 Mich. 777, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 415 (Mich. 1878).

Opinion

Cooley, J.

The bill in each of these cases was filed to foreclose a mortgage on the undivided half of certain lands. The controversy is the same in each, and concerns the right to certain fixtures, which are claimed by complainants as a part of the real estate,.but have been removed by the defendant George Baker, as personalty.

The land consists of about two acres, with saw-mill upon it. In 1866 the land was owned by Charles S. Corsett and one Miles, and a carding machine was then put in. Some time in 1871, Miles sold his undivided half of the premises to Stephen W. Walrath, and Walrath by arrangement with Corsett put a planing and matching machine into a small building erected for. the purpose. The machine was a large one, weighing some 3500 pounds, and was fastened to the floor with bolts. The saw-mill had an upright saw, with suitable gearing and shafting and was run by water power. When the planer and matcher was put in, Corsett and Walrath entered into partnership to operate the machinery on the premises, and Corsett under the arrangement was to be owner of •one-half the planer and matcher. On December 20,1871, Walrath conveyed his undivided half to Nettie L. Williams, and took back a purchase money mortgage, which is the same mortgage being foreclosed in the second of these suits. The land in this deed and mortgage is .simply described by metes and bounds, and nothing is said of buildings or fixtures. When Nettie L. Williams purchased, a new partnership was formed under the name of Corsett, Williams & Co., composed of Charles [781]*781S. Corsett, Charles B. Williams, husband of Nettie L. Williams, and Mrs. Williams, for the purpose of running the saw-mill and other machinery on the premises. In May, 1872, Charles S. Corsett mortgaged his undivided half of the premises to John A. Robertson to secure the payment of money borrowed. This mortgage also described the land by metes and bounds, adding to the description the words “together with the mill.” This is the mortgage which is being foreclosed in the first suit. After this mortgage was given, the firm of Corsett, Williams & Co. or Corsett for them, purchased and set up on the premises a moulding machine, a tenoning machine, a morticing machine, a blind slat tenoning machine, a blind wiring machine, and other similar machinery, which the firm from that time made use of in their business. Some of these were fastened to the floor by bolts or braces, and others were not fastened at all. The firm of s Corsett, Williams & Co. also added to their power by renting and placing in the mill an engine and boiler, and in September, 1872, these were removed, and an engine and boiler purchased by Mrs. Williams were substituted.

August 1, 1875, a new copartnership was formed, consisting of Charles S. Corsett, Charles B. Williams and George Baker, to carry on business on the same premises, and by means of the machinery already enumerated. It was understood that Williams and Corsett put into the copartnership the use of the real estate and machinery, though what right Williams had to put in what belonged to his wife does not distinctly appear.

Baker put in a thousand dollars in money. At the same time, to secure Baker for any liability he might incur on behalf of the firm, or any moneys he might pay for the other partners, Williams and Corsett executed to him a bill of sale of the planer and matcher, the tenon-' ing machine, the moulding machine, and several articles which need not be particularly enumerated. Corsett and Mrs. Williams also severally conveyed to Baker undi[782]*782vided halves of the real estate, in trust to secure him for any indebtedness he might pay for them. Soon after the last partnership 'was formed, the engine was removed from the premises'and'another substituted. In May, 1876, Baker sold out his interest in the copartnership to Charles B. Williams. At that’time he claimed that $2027 was owing and secured to him' by the bill of sale given to him by Corsett and Charles B. Williams and by the deeds of trust executed by Corsett and Mrs. Williams. At length, in February, 1877, Baker went upon the premises and proceeded to ■ remove from the buildings the following articles, 'claiming all of them as personal property, the steam engine, planer and matcher, tenoning machine, moulding machine, upright shaping machine, Scroll sawing machine, three saw tables and circular saws used thereon, blind slat tenoning machine, morticing machine, blind wiring machine, slab saw, upright mulay saw, all the line and counter shafting, pulleys and belts, water-wheel and gearing and shafting connected therewith.

The complainants in these bills claim all this machinery as constituting a part of the realty, and they have obtained decrees in the court below requiring it all to be restored to the premises from which Baker removed it. The facts above set forth constitute a part only of all the facts bearing upon the controversy, but we have chosen to omit all that could have no important influence upon the result.

I. We find in the record no ground whatever for claiming the right to remove from the premises the water-wheel and gearing and shafting connected therewith, so far as they constitute parts of the saw-mill proper, or the upright mulay saw, which we suppose also belongs to the saw-mill. The saw-mill has never, so far as we are informed, been owned separate from the land, or been treated otherwise than as a part of the realty. Prima facie the saw-mill and all its appoint[783]*783ments would constitute a part of the real estate, Davenport v. Shants, 43 Vt., 546; and in this case no agreement, understanding or intent is shown that can control the prima facie case.

II. Aside from the saw-mill proper and the engine— of which we shall speak presently — we think the machinery in controversy remained personalty, and was lawfully removed as such. No single article of this machinery was made expressly for use in the building where it was placed, and not elsewhere; all of it was equally capable of beneficial use on being removed to and set up in some other building. It might therefore become a part of the real estate when affixed to it, if such was the'intent, or it might remain personal estate if an understanding to that effect was clearly indicated or fairly deducible from the circumstances. Rogers v. Brokaw, 25 N. J. Eq., 496; Blancke v. Rogers, 26 N. J. Eq., 563; Voorhees v. McGinnis, 48 N. Y., 278.

No express agreement of the parties that this machinery should become real estate, or on the other hand remain personal, is shown, though there is some evidence that as between Corsett and Eobertson it was understood that the money loaned by the latter should be expended in machinery that would be subject to the lien of Robertson’s mortgage. It does not appear that the other members of the firm of Corsett, Williams & Co. were parties to the understanding, or that Corsett himself had any definite purpose when he put in the machinery to make good his promise to Eobertson if one was made by him. It appears beyond any controversy or question that the real estate was all the time owned by individuals in undivided interests, and no understanding or agreement is shown that it should be carried into the partnership as partnership property. The firm had the use of it, and nothing more. It therefore remained individual property, and the separate interests might have been dealt with by the owners at discretion. But it is quite as manifest that the ma[784]

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Bluebook (online)
39 Mich. 777, 1878 Mich. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robertson-v-corsett-mich-1878.