Court Opinion

ID: 8795935
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-26 14:10:30.540984+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:03:37.776705
License: Public Domain

PER CURIAM.
[1] The power plant and generating machinery of the Interurban Company, to which the transmission line in question was annexed and with which it was physically connected, was situated upon real estate held by that company under lease for 25 years from January 1, 1909. The mortgage expressly covered this leasehold interest. Under the settled law of Michigan the Interurban Company’s interest in the real estate (being held under lease for 3 years and upwards) is governed by the laws regulating the recording of conveyances of real estate. Howell’s Mich. Stat. (2d Ed.) § 10856; Crouse v. Michell, 130 Mich. 347, 357, 90 N. W. 32, 97 Am. St. Rep. 479. The mortgage was duly recorded as a mortgage on real estate, and the record was constructive notice to subsequent purchasers of the existence and contents of the mortgage. Godfroy v. Disbrow, Walker’s Ch. (Mich.) 260. With this premise, we adopt the opinion of the District Court upon the main controversy in the case, as follows :
“The first and most important question to he determined relates to the character of the property purchased and acquired by the Stearns Company from W. F. Mayhon. Was the electrical transmission line, belonging to the Interurban Company and covered by complainants’ mortgage, real estate or personal property? If it was real estate, the other questions which have been elaborately presented and discussed become of little or no importance, because it is conceded that complainants’ mortgage was duly executed and recorded as a real estate mortgage, and, as to all subsequent creditors, purchasers, or incumbrancers, became and continued to be a valid first lien upon all the real estate then owned or afterwards acquired by the Interurban Company. Recognizing the controlling importance of this question, counsel upon both sides, with commendable zeal and industry, have collected and re*967viewed a great many cases bearing upon the valions phases oí the subject. A careful and painstaking examination of the authorities cited leads to the conclusion that an electrical transmission line, constructed, connected., and situated as was this one, must be classed as real estate and not as personal property. It was a necessary and integral part o/ the electric plant, it was physically connected with and annexed to the power plant and generating machinery, which it must be conceded were real estate. Without the transmission line the entire property would have been valueless for the purposes for which it was constructed and created. Its construction and annexation were intended to be permanent. It could not be severed from the rest of the plant or machine without not only impairing hut destroying the whole. It thus contained and combined in itself all of the elements and attributes of a fixture or appurtenance to real estate. A few of the many cases so holding are the following: Dreisbach v. Ross, 195 Pa. 278 [45 Atl. 722]; Hughes v. Lambertville Electric Light Co., 53 N. J. Eq. 435 [32 Atl. 69]; Fecht v. Drake, 2 Ariz. 239 [12 Pac. 694]; Badger Lumber Co. v. Marion Co., 48 Kan. 182 [29 Pac. 476, 15 L. R. A. 652, 30 Am. St. Rep. 301]; Keating Implement Co. v. Marshall Elec. Light Co., 74 Tex. 605 [12 S. W. 489]; Southern Elec. Supply Co. v. Rolla Elec. Light Co., 75 Mo. App. 622; Metropolitan Trust Co. v. Dolgeville Elec. Light Co. [35 Misc. Rep. 467], 71 N. Y. Supp. 1055; Tippett & Wood v. Barham, 180 Fed. 76 [103 C. C. A. 430, 37 L. R. A. (N. S.) 119]; Appeal of Des Moines Water Co., 48 Iowa, 324.
■‘It is doubtless true that some of the courts have seemingly announced a different doctrine. A review of these decisions would be of no benefit to any one. It is sufficient to say that, upon careful examination, it will be found that such cases can usually, if not always, be distinguished from the present one. In some instances the language of the court is mere dictum; in others it must be considered solely in its application to special statutes which create and contain in themselves artificial and arbitrary distinctions and definitions not found or permissible elsewhere; and in still others it is employed to negative the contention that electric light poles and wires, and similar property are a part of the real estate upon which they are situated. Readfield Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Cyr, 95 Me. 287 [49 Atl. 1047]; Dunsmiur v. Electric Light Co., 24 Wash. 104 [63 Pac. 1095]; Railway Co. v. Western Union Co., 118 Fed. 497 [55 C. C. A. 263]; Shelbyville Water Co. v. Illinois, 140 Ill. 545 [30 N. E. 678, 16 L. R. A. 505]; Union Loan & Trust Co. v. Motor Road Co. (C. C.) 51 Fed. 840; People v. Feitrier [99 App. Div. 274] 90 N. Y. Supp. 904; People v. Hendrickson, 109 N. Y. S. 402; Portland v. Telephone Co., 103 Me. 240 [68 Atl. 1040].
“Having reached the conclusion that the electrical transmission lino covered by complainants’ mortgage and afterwards conveyed to the Stearns Company was real estate, an extended discussion of the other questions presented would bo profitless, and they may be disposed of very briefly.”
[2] The transmission line having been appurtenant to an interest in real estate when the interurban Company’s mortgage attached thereto and when notice thereof was given by its recording, the effect thereof upon the rights already fixed under it was not defeated by the fact that when Mayhon sold to the Stearns Company the power and generating plant was unoperated and inoperative, and was not included in that sale, nor by the fact that the lease had been declared forfeited for nonpayment of rent, inferably after Maylion’s purchase.
The proposition that McMullin was not a good faith purchaser of the bonds in question is not sustained by the record. At the time of the conveyance by Mayhon to the Stearns Company the former was the owner of $17,500 of the bonds secured by the trust mortgage in suit, and his warranty that the property was free from incumbrance doubtless operated to give the Stearns Company an equitable title to these bonds as against Mayhon. The bonds, however, were negotiable. *968Mayhon retained their physical custody, and later, in violation of his agreement with the Stearns Company, transferred them to McMullin, who took them without notice of the Stearns claim and in good faith paid Mayhon therefor. Ifhe trustee is clearly entitled to enforce them for McMullin’s benefit.
We have considered the remaining criticisms upon the decree, and think them without merit.
The decree appealed from is in our opinion correct, and is affirmed, with costs.