Sowden & Co. v. Craig
This text of 26 Iowa 156 (Sowden & Co. v. Craig) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
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[163]*163
The property in controversy was not, so far as the evidence shows, attached to the real estate at the time the mechanic commenced work. The record of the mortgage upon it, as chattels, was, therefore, notice to him of the rights of the plaintiffs therein. Having notice then of plaintiffs’ rights, he could not, by his own act and labor, take their property, and, by making the same fixtures upon the real estate, subordinate their rights to his. Nor would the fact that the plaintiffs had sold the property for the purpose of having the same made fixtures, and had sent their own agent or employee to aid and direct in the putting up of the machinery, operate to defeat their right. This property, it will be borne in mind, is the legitimate subject for fixtures, and is that class of property about which the law permits parties to contract so as to control, as between themselves, its character, after being affixed, making it either personal property or real estate. The mortgaging of it as personal property would, as between the parties, and those having notice thereof, make it such. Of course, a different rule would obtain, in relation to bricks, lime, boards, beams, etc., used in constructing a house; these, by such use, lose their individuality, and become absorbed in, and made a part of, rather than simply annexed to, the real estate.
• The precise point we rule in this case is, that, where the owner of real estate executes a mortgage upon chattels, which may properly be made fixtures, and subsequently affixes them to the real estate, that no person having knowledge of such facts can, by purchase of the real estate or otherwise, acquire from the mortgagor any title -to such chattels paramount to the mortgagee thereof.
What would be the rights of the parties in case the chattels were affixed before the mortgage, or where the [165]*165third party acquired his title without notice of it, we do not determine.
It may not be improper for us to state that we have given to this case the most deliberate consideration, and in the light of able and searching- arguments. We have also examined in detail the numerous cases cited by counsel in their respective briefs, but we do not deem it necessary for us to review them herein. We ground our decision upon well settled principles, and are strength? ened in our conclusion by the fact that none of the cases cited are in necessary conflict with it.
Reversed.
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26 Iowa 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sowden-co-v-craig-iowa-1868.