Stone v. Livingston

222 Mass. 192
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 222 Mass. 192 (Stone v. Livingston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stone v. Livingston, 222 Mass. 192 (Mass. 1915).

Opinion

Pierce, J.

The plaintiff, as trustee in bankruptcy of Dennis D. O’Connell, sues the defendant in tort for the conversion of forty-nine looms and the dressing, or preparatory weaving, dyeing and finishing machinery contained in the mill of O’Connell on July 30, 1913, the day he was duly adjudicated bankrupt. On August 7, 1913, the defendant, in foreclosure of a real estate mortgage given him by O’Connell on January 8, 1913, duly sold the estate and property definitely described therein, as also the property alleged to have been converted by the sale, under the claim that it was to be treated as real estate and as such was included, though not specifically mentioned, in the mortgage.

The estate described in the mortgage was purchased in 1900 by George J. Daniels and the bankrupt Dennis D. O’Connell, and thereafter was held by them as copartners until the dissolu[193]*193tian of the firm in 1903, at which time O’Connell acquired the entire firm title. The description of the estate and property conveyed was identical in its terms to that thereafter used in the deed of Daniels to O’Connell and in the mortgage deed of O’Connell to the defendant Solomon H. Livingstone, dated January 8, 1913, and read as follows: “That certain tract or parcel of land with the buildings thereon and all the privileges and appurtenances thereto belonging situated . . . and including with the real estate hereby conveyed and as a part thereof the engine, fixed shafting, dynamo, main belt, pump, electric-light wiring, thermostats and sprinklers now on and attached to the premises, including steam piping.” The fact that the articles enumerated in the schedule following the description of the land included all property at the time of the conveyance upon the premises not in its nature realty, and the further fact that there was no machinery there for a worsted mill, leads to the conclusion that the purpose of the deeds was not to exclude a grantee’s possible claim that the effect of the conveyance was to transfer the title to other property, but on the contrary was intended to remove from the realm of discussion the articles scheduled and to place them within the conveyance. Following the purchase of the plant the firm acquired by bill of sale a conditional title to and possession of thirty-two' second hand looms not made especially for the business of the firm but such as are usually carried in stock.

These machines, each weighing from twenty-eight hundred to three thousand pounds, were fastened to the floor by lag screws to keep them stationary and to prevent them from wabbling “ all over the floor.” Lag screws are six, eight or ten inches long, one quarter of an inch to two inches in diameter, and are like ordinary screws with the exception of the head, which is made of wrought iron. The looms and other machinery in controversy could be removed without any damage to themselves or to the building in which they were contained. The looms and other machinery were necessary to the conduct of a worsted mill, but were just as suitable for use in any other mill as in the firm’s mill.

Much of the machinery other than the looms was as heavy, or heavier, than the looms, was attached in like manner to the floor, and the firm’s right thereto was acquired by conditional sale.

On January 29, 1903, Daniels, in addition to his deed of the real [194]*194estate, sold to O’Connell by bill of sale, “all the machinery and stock raw and wrought and in process — all finished goods and all personal property of every kind and description to which I have any title by virtue of the partnership.” Between January 29, 1903, and January 8, 1913, O’Connell purchased new machinery in replacement of the old, to some extent, as also sixteen new looms, ten of which were held under such rights as are conferred upon a grantee by a conditional sale. At the execution of the mortgage to the defendant at least twenty of the forty-nine looms in the mill were subject to the terms and conditions of conditional sale, as was also an undefined portion of the other machinery. None of the machinery was put into the mill after the execution of the mortgage deed to the defendant. Whether the defendant had or had not knowledge of the conditional nature of his mortgagor’s interest in the machines does not appear.

At the close of the evidence the plaintiff contended that the court ought to rule, as matter of law, that the machinery in controversy did not pass by the mortgage, and that a verdict should be directed for the plaintiff for $4,400 [the agreed value of the property in controversy] with interest from July 18,1913, the date of the entry to foreclose. The defendant contended that the court should rule as matter of law that the machinery in controversy was real estate and that a verdict should be directed for the defendant.

The presiding judge

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Bluebook (online)
222 Mass. 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-v-livingston-mass-1915.