Walker v. Schindel

58 Md. 360, 1882 Md. LEXIS 36
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedJuly 11, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 58 Md. 360 (Walker v. Schindel) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walker v. Schindel, 58 Md. 360, 1882 Md. LEXIS 36 (Md. 1882).

Opinion

Bartol, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an. action of trover brought by the appellee against the appellant, to recover damages for the illegal conversion by the latter of certain trade fixtures in a distillery, which are described in the declaration.

The evidence clearly shows, and it has not been denied by the appellant, that the fixtures in question were purchased by the appellee, and put into the building by him as his property, under a contract with George E. Hammerslay, the owner of the building, with whom he had formed a copartnership for the purpose - of carrying on the distillery; by which contract it was expressly stipulated that the fixtures in question were to be and remain the separate and individual property of the appellee. Nor is it denied that these facts were known to Ranney W. Hunter,' the mortgagee of Hammerslay, at the time he accepted the mortgage, and also to the appellant when he purchased the mortgaged property, and accepted the deed from Hammerslay of his interest therein. These .admissions by the appellant dispense with the necessity [365]*365of considering several of the appellant’s exceptions to the testimony offered by the appellee, for the purpose of proving the facts above enumerated.

Tiie prayer of the appellee granted by the Circuit Court, which has been omitted from the record, lias been supplied by agreement, and is as follows;

“The plaintiff prays the Court to instruct the jury, that if they find from the evidence, that the plaintiff and Hammerslay entered into copartnership, for the purpose of distilling whiskey, and that the plaintiff purchased with his own funds, the distilling apparatus sued for in this case, and that both before, and at the time they entered into said copartnership they agreed amongst themselves that the said distilling apparatus, thus furnished and paid for by the plaintiff, should remain and be his separate and individual property, and that it was -so understood and recognized by them, after they had formed the said copartnership; and further find that R. W. Hunter, both before, and at the time he took the mortgage read in evidence, from Hammerslay,' was informed, and knew that the plaintiff had purchased the said apparatus, and that the same was his individual property; and further find that the defendant, before he purchased the said mortgaged property, and also before the said sale was finally ratified, and before he received the deed from Hammerslay which was read in evidence, was informed and knew that the said apparatus was the property of the plaintiff; and further find that the plaintiff made a demand of the defendant for the said apparatus, and the defendant refused to lot the plaintiff have the same, but used it, and claimed it as his own property, then the plaintiff is entitled to recover, and the measure of damage is the value of the articles constituting the said apparatus set forth in the declaration, as found from the evidence.”

The testimony shows that the building in which the fixtures were placed, was originally a mill for grinding [366]*366grain, and that certain alterations were made in its interior, for the purpose of adapting it to the business of a distillery. The Mash-tub and three Fermenting tanks were constructed within the building, and were too large to be removed from it in their entirety. The former was placed in the third story', and set into the floor, down upon the joists, so as to make it steady, the floor having been cut away for that purpose; the mash contained therein, was stirred by a rake fastened to the roof or ceiling. The three fermenting tanks were placed on trestle work, or horses, on the second floor and passed up through the third floor through apertures cut therein, extending-feet above the level of the third floor. All the articles mentioned in the declaration are essential to the business of distilling, and are connected with one another by means of pipes and troughs, so as to constitute one complete apparatus for distilling.

At the trial below the appellant offered three prayers, which were refused, and he now assigns for error the granting of the appellee’s prayer, the rejection of the three prayers offered by himself, and he also claims a reversal of the judgment for an alleged error in overruling his objection to. certain evidence offered by the appellee.

The appellant’s prayers will first be considered.

'1st. His first prayer isvbased ujdou the construction of the agreement or articles of copartnership, under which, the prayer asserts, that the chattels or fixtures in question became partnership property. The agreement stipulates that Schindel, the appellee, contracted to “furnish the stills, boilers, fermenting and mash-tubs, and the grain and other necessary appliances in the mill connected with the business, and the hogs in the pen,” and Hammerslay agreed “to furnish the mill with the requisite machinery for grinding the grain and other work.”

[367]*367This agreement according to its true construction does not import either that the mill and machinery furnished by Hammorslay for the use of the partnership, or the distilling apparatus furnished by the appellee for the same purpose became partnership property. The parol evidence shows, as we have said, that the apparatus furnished by the appellee was to be and remain his sepa,rate, individual property.

There can be no doubt that the parol testimony offered to prove that agreement was admissible under the decisions of McCreery, vs. McCreery, 5 G. & J., 221; Bladen vs. Wells, 30 Md., 583; Creamer vs. Stephenson, 15 Md., 221, and Basshor vs. Forbes, 36 Md., 154. Other cases might be cited in support of the proposition “that proof of any collateral parol agreement, or independent fact, which does not interfere with the. terms of the written contract, though it may relate to the same subject-matter is admissible.” In this case the written agreement provides that the property in question shall be furnished by the appellee for the use of the firm; but is silent with regard to the ownership or right of property therein. The parol evidence on this subject does not contradict the writing, but merely proves a distinct collateral fact not inconsistent with the writing. There was no error in rejecting the appellant’s first prayer.

2nd. The second prayer of the appellant asserts that notwithstanding the parol agreement to the contrary, the distilling apparatus in question became and was a part of the freehold, by reason of the manner in which certain parts of it were annexed to the building, and because the mash-tub and three fermenting tanks had been constructed within the mill, and were too large to be removed from it in their entirety, and because these articles and the others mentioned in the declaration, were connected together and constituted a complete apparatus essential to the business of distilling, and because the appellant purchased [368]*368the mortgaged property for the purpose of carrying on a distillery therein, and this fact was known to the appellee, therefore the plaintiff was not entitled to recover. The last mentioned fact, that the appellant purchased the mill property with the intention of carrying on a distillery therein is wholly immaterial, and in no manner affects the appellee’s rights.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Md. 360, 1882 Md. LEXIS 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walker-v-schindel-md-1882.