Roos v. Fairy S. M. (Berks Co. Tr. Co.)

5 A.2d 569, 334 Pa. 305, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 634
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 23, 1939
DocketAppeal, 27
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 5 A.2d 569 (Roos v. Fairy S. M. (Berks Co. Tr. Co.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roos v. Fairy S. M. (Berks Co. Tr. Co.), 5 A.2d 569, 334 Pa. 305, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 634 (Pa. 1939).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Kephart,

The Berks Knitting Mill Company, Inc., conveyed its Belle-Terre plant to Stanley L. Bellemere late in 1929. Early in January, 1930, Bellemere applied to the Berks County Trust Company for a loan of $30,000.00, secured by a first mortgage on the property. The Berks Com *307 pany made an appraisement of the plant; it was then fully equipped and operating as a hosiery mill. Belle-mere’s mortgage for the sum of $30,000, which was executed on January 15th, described the premises as: “. . . all that certain two-story factory building and lot or lots of ground upon which the same is erected, situated on the northwest comer of North Third and Bern Streets, in the City of Beading, County of Berks and State of Pennsylvania, bounded and described ...” and contained the following clause: “Together with all and singular the buildings, rights, liberties, privileges, hereditaments and appurtenances to the same belonging, or in anywise appertaining, and the reversions, remainders, rents, issues and profits thereof.” Bellemere, January 16, 1930, conveyed the property to the Belle-Terre Hosiery Company, which assumed the mortgage, and that company, October 1, 1931, conveyed it to the Fairy Silk Mills, which likewise assumed the mortgage.

In 1932 the Fairy Silk Mills company created another mortgage on all of its property, specifying buildings and machinery, the Belle-Terre plant being included, with the Beading National Bank and Trust Company as mortgagee. This mortgage recognized the priority of the Berks mortgage. On August 25, 1934, by regular proceeding, a receiver was appointed for the Fairy Silk Mills on the petition of E. M. Boos and A. L. Loy. An offer was made to the receiver of $40,000 for all the machinery in the Belle-Terre plant, free and clear of encumbrances. The receiver petitioned the court for leave to sell on the offer thus made. The petition for sale, however, treated the Berks mortgage as not applying to the machinery, but the notice of the proposed sale, sent-to all creditors and parties in interest,, gave no indication of the supposed priority or standing of liens; it merely stated the machinery would be sold unencumbered, “the liens to be transferred to the proceeds.” The Berks Company was not represented at the hearing, and the court ordered the sale.

*308 On May 6, 1936, the Berks Company requested the court to distribute the $40,000, and make payment to it on account of its mortgage of $30,000. After several hearings the court, on further accounting, ordered distribution of the fund to the Reading Trust Company. Upon dismissal of the exceptions filed by the Berks Company, this appeal was taken.

There is no dispute as to priority of liens in respect to the land and building, but it is contended by appellant Berks Company that its mortgage covers the machinery in the Belle-Terre plant and therefore it is entitled to payment out of the proceeds from the sale thereof. It is conceded that the second mortgage is the mortgage of Fairy Mills Company, and the fact that straw-men executed it is immaterial.

The law on the subject of imposing a lien on what is in itself personal property, but which when used in or about a manufactory or similar industry is accorded a realty standing, has been stated by the Court in a number of cases. Generally speaking, at common law in Pennsylvania a mortgage lien on personal property could not be obtained by an ordinary mortgage or by a chattel mortgage, * but could be obtained where personal property was attached to real property as a fixture.

Due to the demands and requirements of our changing economic order, we early developed in this State the principle of an “industrial mortgage” which included, as part of the freehold, personal property in and about a manufactory. This principle became more important as our industrial life expanded, so that the necessary credits to sustain and finance manufactories and other *309 like industries could be obtained with some- degree of certainty that the security offered would be continued. Therefore, it was held that where premises were used in manufacturing or a similar industry, the real estate and personal property necessary to the plant as a going concern were subject to the lien of an industrial mortgage. This opened the way for persons interested in such industries to assure investors in a manufactory not only of a stable security for money loaned on the plant, but one that could not be broken down and destroyed by selling it piecemeal.

The rule removed the unwieldy and strict rule of the common law relating to chattels as applied to manufacturing establishments. Chief Justice Gibson, in Voorhis v. Freeman, 2 W. & S. 116 at 119, in reversing an earlier decision, Chaffee v. Stewart, (unreported), holding that spindles and other unattached machinery of a plant were personal property to be sold on an ordinary execution, announced the Pennsylvania rule, in a case which involved soft and chilled rolls lying loosely in an iron mill, that “Whether fast or loose all the machinery of a manufactory which is necessary to constitute it, and without which it would not be a manufactory at all, must pass for a part of the freehold,” and held that the rolls, though personal property, could only be sold on a levire facias issued on mortgage. This case was later reviewed in Commonwealth Trust Co. v. Harkins et al., 312 Pa. 402, where the mortgage lien similarly was held to include not only the building and the ground of the manufactory, but also the machinery housed therein. We said of that case in Central Lith. Co. v. Eatmor Choc. Co. (No. 1), 316 Pa. 300, at 304-305, in reference to industrial mortgages: “In Commonwealth Trust Co. v. Harkins, 312 Pa. 402, in which we considered all our preceding cases bearing on the question we are now reviewing, whether cited or not, we laid down the broad principle that all machinery in a manufacturing plant, necessary for its operation as a complete going concern, is part of *310 the freehold and bound by the lien of a mortgage thereon.”

In the Harkins case, at p. 410, the Court also stated: “building and appurtenances [a clause similar to the appurtenance clause in the mortgage now before us] . . . would include all machinery and fixtures going to make up the establishment as a completed plant,” citing Blaine v. Chambers, 1 S. & R. 169. The scope of such clause was mentioned in Voorhis v. Freeman, 2 W. & S. 116, where complaint was made that there were no words in the mortgage to describe the rolls; we said at p. 120: “Were it necessary, we would further hold that they might have passed ... by force of the word apparatus in the description of the premises.”

Appellee earnestly argues that it is the intention of the parties that controls, and it was not the intention of the first mortgagee to have its lien cover the machinery and equipment in the Belle-Terre plant, but merely the actual land and building alone. Appellee bases his argument on the Harkins case, 312 Pa. 402 at p.

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Bluebook (online)
5 A.2d 569, 334 Pa. 305, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 634, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roos-v-fairy-s-m-berks-co-tr-co-pa-1939.