This case presents the question whether certain machines in a paper mill were so annexed to the realty and with such an intent as to become fixtures, so that they passed to the mortgagee of the realty.
The referee in dealing with the matter has classified the machines into groups. The first group consists of machines which both the referee and the District Court found the trust, company, as mortgagee, was entitled to under its mortgage. The second group consists of what is called the second paper machine. This machine the referee awarded to the trustee in bankruptcy, but the District Court reversed the referee and awarded it to the Trust Company. 249 Fed. 260. The question involved, as to each group, is a mixed one of law and fact. The parties are practically in accord as to the law; the divergence is as to the weight to he given the evidence and the deductions to he made therefrom. The case was very fully presented and carefully considered in the court below, and, after a re-examination of the evidence and a consideration of the arguments of counsel, we are of the opinion that the findings and rulings of the District Court as to the annexation of both groups of machines to the realty were correct.
[1] If the trustee in bankruptcy, as he contends, has the rights of an attaching creditor and does not stand in the place of the mortgagor (the bankrupt), his rights in the mortgaged property did not accrue, before bankruptcy, and, if prior to that event the machines had become annexed to the mortgaged realty, the rights of the trustee in the property would not be different, whether he stood as an attaching creditor or as the bankrupt. When the District Judge in his opinion said the case is one wholly between the mortgagor and the mortgagee, and that the trustee in bankruptcy stood in no better position than the mortgagor, he meant nothing more than that, in determining the question of intention with which the machinery was annexed to the realty, *538the circumstances attending the ownership of the property at the time of the annexation could be taken into account, and that, as the property was then subject to a mortgage, it might be inferred from this fact that the mortgagor intended that the machinery should be permanently annexed rather than temporarily.
[2] The appellant takes nothing by his fifth assignment of error. If the offer of proof there set out was made, the record fails to disclose that it was excluded, or, if excluded, that an exception was taken thereto.
A¥e think the question of fees, costs, and charges was rightly determined.
The decree of the District Court is affirmed, with costs to the appellee.