Williams Patent Crusher & Pulverizer Co. v. Reily

180 A. 156, 118 Pa. Super. 64, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 14
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 14, 1935
DocketAppeal, 3
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 180 A. 156 (Williams Patent Crusher & Pulverizer Co. v. Reily) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams Patent Crusher & Pulverizer Co. v. Reily, 180 A. 156, 118 Pa. Super. 64, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 14 (Pa. Ct. App. 1935).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

This is a sheriff’s interpleader issue, over the title to a large stone crusher. The facts were stipulated by agreement between the parties. It was also stipulated that a verdict should be directed in favor of the defendant in the issue for $1,917, the value of the stone crusher, plus interest, leaving the legal questions involved to be determined on a rule for judgment non obstante veredicto. The court below discharged the rule and entered judgment on the verdict. The plaintiff in the issue appealed.

The following are the material relevant facts: Constructors Materials Company, a Pennsylvania corporation, (hereinafter called Constructors Company), operated a quarry and stone pulverizing plant on fifty-one acres of land owned by it near Mt. Hope, Penn Township, Lancaster County. As a part of its plant it owned and operated a No. 1 Jumbo Junior Crusher, manufactured by Williams Patent Crusher and Pulverizer Company, (hereinafter called Williams Company), the plaintiff in this issue. On November 3, 1927 Constructors Company executed a mortgage to George W. Reily, defendant in this issue, covering the tract of land used as a quarry and stone pulverizing plant, for $11,500, payable three years from date, as collateral security for the endorsement of notes and for any renewals thereof. This mortgage was recorded on November 26, 1927 in Mortgage Book No. 308, page *67 334. On September 10, 1928 Constructors Company gave Reily a second mortgage covering the same property, for $3,500, payable October 1, 1933, recorded September 11, 1928, in Mortgage Book No. 317, page 520, as collateral security for the endorsement of notes and for any renewals thereof. The No. 1 Jumbo Junior Crusher, above referred to, was a part of the machinery used in the operation of the quarry and pulverizing plant of the Constructors Company at the date of the execution and delivery to Reily of the bond and mortgage dated November 3, 1927, aforesaid, and remained so until it was removed as hereinafter stated.

On August 29, 1928 Constructors Company signed an acceptance of a written proposal submitted to it by Williams Company for the furnishing by the latter to the former, on trial, of a No. 4 Jumbo Junior Crusher, —a larger crusher than the No. 1 Jumbo Junior Crusher already installed—for $3,550, less credit of $1,350 for the No. 1 Jumbo Junior Crusher, which was to be delivered to Williams Company, leaving a net price of $2,180, to be paid as follows: One-third in cash after 30 days trial, balance in two notes of four and six months each, bearing 6% interest, with privilege of renewing four months note for same period when same comes due. The proposal was headed, ‘Contract of Sale on Trial.’ It provides, it may be stated in a general way, that Constructors Company should install the machine and operate it on trial for a period of 30 consecutive days, with the privilege of rejecting it, provided it notified Williams Company in writing of such rejection, on or before the last day of said trial period, and shipped the machine back to Williams Company; otherwise the machine was to be considered accepted; and that upon acceptance Constructors Company was to secure the deferred payments by chattel mortgage, conditional sale contract, lease or other instrument which under the laws of *68 Pennsylvania would secure Williams Company in a first lien on said machinery for such deferred payments —“Title to the machinery shall remain in [Williams Company] during the trial period and thereafter until such security shall be given, or if not given, until the machinery is paid for in full.”

Constructors Company received and installed the new No. 4 crusher at its plant aforesaid, removed the smaller No. 1 crusher and shipped it to Williams Company. It never notified the latter, in writing, of its rejection of the new and larger crusher; but it never executed and delivered to Williams Company a chattel mortgage, conditional sale contract—other than the ‘Contract of Sale on Trial’—lease or other instrument, as specified in said contract, and when such a paper was requested of it by Williams Company, it replied that its president was ill, but would execute the paper when he was able to attend to business matters. Williams Company accepted from Constructors Company three promissory notes, aggregating $2,180, in lieu of the cash payment of one-third at the end of thirty days, and two notes of four and six months, respectively, called for in the contract; none of these notes has been paid.

No copy of the ‘Contract of Sale on Trial’ was ever filed in the office of the prothonotary of Lancaster County, under the Conditional Sales Act of May 12, 1925, P. L. 603, as amended by Act of May 12, 1927, P. L. 979; nor did Reily, or his attorneys, have any notice of it until the property claim, hereinafter referred to, was filed.

On July 18, 1929 Reily entered judgment in Lancaster County against Constructors Company for $11,-500 on the bond accompanying his first mortgage, to April Term 1929, No. 731, and the same day issued a fieri facias, to August Term 1929, No. 94, Execution Docket, which writ came into the hands of the sheriff *69 of Lancaster County at twelve o’clock noon the same day, and it was so endorsed on the writ. On July 19, 1929, the sheriff levied on the real estate of Constructors Company under said writ of fieri facias. On July 29, 1929 Williams Company filed with .the sheriff a property claim for said No. 4 Jumbo Junior Crusher, of which Reily’s attorneys first had notice on August 3, 1929. On August 14, 1929—before the return day of the writ—the sheriff made an actual levy, under said writ of fieri facias, on the personal property of Constructors Company, including the said No. 4 Jumbo Junior Crusher. On August 19, 1929 Williams Company again filed with the sheriff a property claim for the above mentioned stone crusher and pulverizer. On August 21, 1929 the sheriff sold all the personal property of Constructors Company, not claimed, for $214.50. On August 23, 1929, the sheriff sold the real estate of Constructors Company for the sum of $100. Bond was filed by Williams Company and the No. 4 crusher delivered to it.

The parties proceeded in the court below on the theory that the ‘Contract of Sale on Trial’ constituted a conditional sale contract. We shall consider it from that point of view.

On its delivery and installation as a part of Constructors Company’s quarry and stone pulverizing plant, the No. 4 Jumbo Junior Crusher either became affixed to the real estate, so as to become subject to the lien of Reily’s mortgages, or it remained personal property, not subject to such liens. The recent pronouncements of the Supreme Court in Penna. Chocolate Co. v. Hershey Bros. (No. 1), 316 Pa. 292, 175 A. 694; Central Lithograph Co. v. Eatmor Chocolate Co. (No. 1), 316 Pa. 300, 175 A. 697; Central Lithograph Co. v. Eatmor Chocolate Co. (No. 2), 316 Pa. 310, 175 A. 702; and Central Lithograph Co. v. Eatmor Chocolate Co. (No. 3), 316 Pa. 312, 175 A. 701, which have greatly clarified *70

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
180 A. 156, 118 Pa. Super. 64, 1935 Pa. Super. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-patent-crusher-pulverizer-co-v-reily-pasuperct-1935.