Triple A Sugar Corp. v. Standard Electric Co. (In re Triple A Sugar Corp.)

13 B.R. 969, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2981
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine
DecidedSeptember 11, 1981
DocketBankruptcy No. BK 77-63ND; Adv. No. 78-62
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 13 B.R. 969 (Triple A Sugar Corp. v. Standard Electric Co. (In re Triple A Sugar Corp.)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, D. Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Triple A Sugar Corp. v. Standard Electric Co. (In re Triple A Sugar Corp.), 13 B.R. 969, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2981 (Me. 1981).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

CONRAD K. CYR, Bankruptcy Judge.

Chicago Bridge & Iron Company [CBI] asserts a lien for labor and materials furnished in the erection of two huge storage tanks for Maine Sugar Industries [MSI] on land owned by Aroostook Development Corporation [ADC] and later acquired by Triple A Sugar Corporation [Triple A], the Chapter XI debtor in possession. CBI claims a lien against the tanks, but not the land on which the tanks are situated,1 on the basis of the following language of title 10 M.R. S.A., section 3251: “If the owner of the building has no legal interest in the land on which the building is erected or to which it [971]*971is moved, the lien attaches to the building....”2 CBI contends that the tanks were the property of MSI, although the land belonged to ADC. Triple A maintains that the tanks constitute fixtures and therefore belong to the owner of the land. Consequently, says Triple A, MSI was not “the owner of the [tanks],” within the meaning of section 3251.3

On December 14, 1968, CBI entered into an agreement with MSI for the sale and assembly of two tanks at the MSI refinery site in Easton, Maine. The tanks were prefabricated to specification for use in the storage of chemicals,4 delivered as large steel sheets, and welded together at the refinery site between December 16, 1968 and April, 1969. The tanks were erected some 600 to 700 feet away from and were not connected with the refinery building itself. Piping, some of it underground, connected the tanks to a pumping and a mixing station being constructed by MSI while the erection of the tanks was in progress. The pumping station, consisting of four pumps in a small building, pumped the chemicals 200 feet from a railroad siding to the tanks for storage, and from the tanks about 300 feet to the mixing station. The mixing station, where the chemicals were weighed, mixed with water to form liquid fertilizer, and loaded onto trucks for delivery to contracting farmers, consisted of 10 vats on scales set on concrete pads.

MSI was the lessee of the land on which the tanks were erected, having conveyed the property to ADC in July, 1965 and leased it back from ADC for a twenty-five year term. ADC mortgaged the property, in July, 1965, to First National Bank of Boston, Small Business Administration, and Northern National Bank, Trustee, and again on April 4, 1969. CBI recorded its lien certificate on June 6, 1969 and filed a complaint in the Maine Superior Court to preserve and enforce its lien on June 25, 1969.

The principal difficulty the court has with the positions put forth by the parties stems from their apparent assumption that MSI, though admittedly not the record owner of the land on which the tanks were erected, had “no legal interest in the land on which the [tanks were] erected.” On the contrary, MSI had a long-term leasehold interest in the real estate. The principal thrust of section 3251, as evidenced by its opening sentence, makes clear that the “legal interest” of which the quoted language from the second sentence of section 3251 speaks was not intended to exclude leasehold interests in land on which buildings are erected.

Whoever ... furnishes labor or materials ... in erecting ... a ... building ... by virtue of a contract with or by consent of the owner [of the building], has a lien thereon and on the land on which it stands and on any interest such owner [of the building] has in the same.. . .5

The inchoate CBI lien attached to whatever interest MSI had in the tanks and in the [972]*972land, viz., the leasehold, “from the moment labor or materials [were] first provided.” Lyon v. Dunn, 402 A.2d 461, 463 (Me.1979).

We turn next to a determination of the status of these tanks as fixtures. The tanks constitute fixtures if it appears from proven facts and circumstances and by reasonable inference that MSI intended to incorporate them as a permanent part of the premises. Wedge v. Butler, 136 Me. 189,190, 6 A.2d 46 (1939). See Cumberland County Power and Light Co. v. Hotel Ambassador, 134 Me. 153, 157, 183 A. 132 (1936); Roderick v. Sanborn, 106 Me. 159, 163, 76 A. 263 (1909). The requisite intent is best determined through recourse to the three-point test articulated in Bangor-Hydro Electric Co. v. Johnson ; 6 that is, personal property is not a fixture unless

1) it is physically annexed, at least by juxtaposition, to the realty or some appurtenance thereof; 2) it is adapted to the use to which the land to which it is annexed is put, or the chattel and the real estate are united in the prosecution of a common enterprise, and 3) it was so annexed with the intention on the part of the person making the annexation to make it a permanent accession to the realty.7

Physical annexation, either actual or constructive, is an essential element in the transformation of a thing from chattel to fixture. Bangor-Hydro Electric Co. v. Johnson, 226 A.2d 371, 376, 378 (Me.1967); Hayford v. Wentworth, 97 Me. 347, 350, 54 A. 940 (1903). While minimal physical annexation may suffice, the method and extent of the annexation bear upon the intention permanently to attach, which the law deduces from external facts. Readfield Telephone & Telegraph Co. v. Cyr, 95 Me. 287, 290, 49 A. 1047 (1901). The parties agree that the tanks were united with the land, having been set upon sand platforms and connected by piping to other fixtures, such as the pumping and mixing stations. See Parsons v. Copeland, 38 Me. 537, 544 (1854). But the legal significance of the physical annexation of the tanks is seen as minimal by CBI, inasmuch as the tanks may be removable without damage to the freehold. The inevitability of injury to the freehold upon removal of the thing attached has been considered a clear indication of an intention permanently to annex, see Hayford v. Wentworth, 97 Me. 347, 350-51, 54 A. 940 (1903), whereas evidence of the unlikelihood of injury to the freehold upon removal is not conclusive evidence of lack of annexation, see id. at 353,8 54 A. 940. The physical character of the annexation is not determinative of a permanent annexation. Id. at 351, 54 A. 940. See Bangor-Hydro Electric Co. v. Johnson, 226 A.2d 371, 376 (Me.1967).

The second element of the fixture test is whether the goods are adapted to the existing use of the land, or the chattel and realty are united in the prosecution of a common enterprise. Id. at 378. The site upon which the tanks were erected was devoted to refining sugar beets grown by local farmers. The chemicals stored in the tanks were converted into liquid fertilizer for sale to beet growers upon whom the refinery was dependent for its supply of raw product. The clear purpose and actual use of the tanks [973]*973were complementary to the entire refinery enterprise.9 See note 8 supra.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 B.R. 969, 1981 Bankr. LEXIS 2981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/triple-a-sugar-corp-v-standard-electric-co-in-re-triple-a-sugar-corp-meb-1981.