The plaintiff obtained judgment against the St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Company, and seeks by this suit to subject to the payment of said judgment certain property of that company alleged to be in the hands of the St. Louis & Hannibal Railroad Company. For convenience hereafter we shall designate the defendants as the Railway Company and the Railroad Company.
In 1913 the plaintiff sued in the Circuit Court of Lincoln County for damages on account of personal injuries received while a passenger on the Railway - Company. Two successive judgments obtained by plaintiff in that cause of action were reversed on appeal by the St. Louis Court of Appeals. She recovered a third judgment in September, 1929, in the sum of $12,000 and costs, which amounted to $1652.70. That judgment was affirmed by this court May 26, 1921.
The Railway Company, at the time the plaintiff’s cause of action accrued and until December, 1917, owned and operated a line of railway from Hannibal, Missouri, to Gilmore, and also a branch line from Ralls Junction to Perry, in Ralls County. In 1886 the Railway- Company executed a mortgage to secure certain bonds. This mortgage conveyed property of the Railway Company described as follows:
‘ ‘ ... the railway of the said parties of the first part now constructed and that may hereafter be constructed from the city of Hannibal in the Staté of Missouri through the counties of Marion, Ralls, Pike, Lincoln *324and St. Charles to a connection with the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway at Gilmore Springs in the County of St. Charles, a distance of eigfity-one and three-quarters miles or thereabouts. Together with all and singular the railroad, railways, rails, turn outs and side track bridges, fences, fixtures, buildings, lands for tracks, , depots, tenements, appendages and appurtenances owned or hereafter tobe acquired, by the said parties of the first part; also all railway depots or stations with the buildings and fixtures thereon erected or to be erected together with the shops, machinery and tools, rolling stock and other corporate property incident or appurtenant to its operation, and all the chartered rights, franchises and privileges of said parties of the first part and all the estate, right, title and interest, property claim and demand as well at law as in equity of the said parties of the first partió the same and every part and parcel thereof
This mortgage was foreclosed in 1917. A second mortgage was executed by the Railway Cpmpany covering the same property, in May, 1893. . The proceedings leading up to this foreclosure, the sale and approval of the same under decree, are unimportant for our purpose. In December, 1917, the Railroad Company was organized as a new corporation and, through foreclosure sale, acquired the property covered by the m'ortgage. The Railroad Company then took possession of the property and has since continued to operate the lines formerly belonging to the Railway Company. It is claimed by the plaintiff that certain property of the defendant Railway Company, not covered by the terms of the mortgage and available for the satisfaction of her judgment, was taken over by the Railroad Company and was in the possession of such company at the time judgment was rendered.
On appeal to the St. Louis Court of Appeals from one of the judgments which plaintiff obtained against the Railway Company, United States Liberty bonds of the par value of $15,146.47 were deposited as indemnity to a surety company on the Railway Company’s appeal bond. That case being reversed the Liberty bonds were released, *325and were in the hands of the Railway. Company at the time of the mortgage foreclosure.
Some time prior to May, 1916, a fine of $3000 was , imposed upon the Railway Company by the Federal District Court for certain irregularities in the computation of freight rates. This fine afterwards was remitted by President Wilson, and the $3000' returned to the Railroad Company after the foreclosure in 1920.
Also, $45,648.62 in cash of the Railway Company which was turned over to the Railroad Company on the foreclosure.
These three items of property, amounting in the aggregate to $63,795.09, were alleged by the plaintiff, and held by the trial court to be the property of the judgment defendant Railway Company. It was adjudged that the plaintiff, Mary Jackman, on account of the said property in the hands of the Railroad Company, recover the amount of the judgment, with interest from its date until the same,, and costs, should be paid. The Railroad Company appealed from that judgment.
I. The appellant in its brief sets out certain provisions in the decree of -foreclosure which, it is claimed, describes all the property of the Railway Company including the money and Liberty bonds mentioned in the plaintiff’s petition. But it is not seriously contended, and was not contended in the oral argument of the case, that any property passed to the Railroad Company which was not described in the mortgage made by the Railway Company in 1886. Nor is it seriously disputed that any property of the Railway Company not covered by the mortgage which fell into the hands of the Railroad Company is subject to the payment of the plaintiff’s judgment in this proceeding. [Johnson v. United Rys. Co., 281 Mo. 90, and Johnson v. United Rys. Co., 247 Mo. 326.]
II. It remains to determine whether the property which the plaintiff seeks to have applied to the payment of her judgment was covered by the mortgage of 1886. The entire description is set out above. After describing *326the lines of railway, side track, fences, buildings, fixtures, etc., the words: “appendages and appurtenances” are added. It is all made to apply to all such things ‘ ‘ owned and to be acquired by the said parties of the first part.”
Then follow the descriptions of railway depots, stations, buildings, fixtures erected or to be erected thereon, with the shops, machinery, tools and rolling stock, “and other corporate property incident or appurtenant to its operation. ’ ’
This requires a construction of the expressions, “appendages and appurtenances,” and property “appurtenant to its operation. ” “ Appurtenance ’ ’ is defined as an appendage; “that which belongs to something else.” [4 C. J. 1466.] The United States Supreme Court in Humphreys v. MoKissock, 140 U. S. 304, l. c. 314, used this language: “Under the term ‘appurtenances,’ as used in the mortgage in question, only such property passes as is indispensable to the use and enjoyment of the franchises of the company. It does not include property acquired simply because it may prove useful to the company and facilitate the discharge of its business. A distinction is made in such case between what is indispensable to the operation of a railway and what would be only convenient. [Bank v. Tennessee, 104 U. 8. 493-496.] ”
The Liberty bonds were treated by the Railway Company as independent of the mortgage, as liable for the payment of the plaintiff’s claim, because they were put up to indemnify a surety of its appeal bond. They certainly are not appurtenances or appendages, no:f incident to the operation of the railroad. These bonds have nothing to do with the operation of the railroad and could not be covered by those terms. The same may be said of the fine of $3000 paid by the Railway Company and released to the Railroad Company after it had acquired the lines of the Railway Company. As to the $45,000 cash which was turned over to the Railroad Company on the foreclosure of the mortgage, the trial court found that it was not described in the mortgage nor included in the foreclosure decree, nor intended to be transferred. The *327court found that certain money and other things acquired by the Railroad Company did pass by the foreclosure decree:
Sum due from agents and conductors .... $ 836.77;
Materials and supplies on hand of value of 9,975.05;
Traffic car, bills receivable, in amount of .. 870.61;
Miscellaneous Bills Receivable, and other items .............................. 6.028.22
These items, it was held, were appurtenant to the operation of the property described in the mortgage and passed by the foreclosure decree. But the $45,000 cash, not included in those items, was properly held by the trial court to be not within the terms of the mortgage. It was not indispensable to the enjoyment of the property, nor to its operation, although it might have been convenient to use in that connection. We hold, therefore, that the three items mentioned were not covered by the mortgage under the designations ‘‘ appendages, ” ‘ ‘ appurtenances, ’ ’ or “appurtenant to its operation.”
III. The appellant, however, emphasizes the closing part of the description where, after describing the specific property, rights, franchises, etc., of the mortgagor, it concludes with this expression:
“And all the estate, right, title and interest, property, claim and demand, as well at law as in equity of the said parties of the first part to the same and to every part and parcel thereof. ’ ’
Appellant spent a great deal of time in its brief in quoting definitions of “personal property,” “Personal property” is not mentioned in the description, but “property” in the clause last quoted, it is argued, includes the very personal property in dispute here; property is so general a term, so inclusive in its significance, that this particular property could not escape.
This conclusion can be reached only by detaching the clause last quoted from its context. It plainly refers to the property previously mentioned and the particular interest which the mortgagor had in that property. Notice that the word “property” is associated with “estate,” *328“right,” “title,” “interest,” “claim” and “demand,” and these words' are related to the preceding description by the words “to the same, and to every part and parcel thereof.” The same what? That, of course, means the things previously enumerated, railroad lines, depots, etc. “Property” is used there in the same way exactly as “interest,” “right” and title” are used. It is used in the same sentence and in the same connection and with the same general significance. The appellant seems to claim that because “property” has a meaning as applied to a specific thing, it may be detached from this context and construed as if it were used separately.
This is a misconception of the use of the word “property. ’ ’ Its primary meaning as defined in Webster’s Dictionary is “the exclusive right to possess, enjoy, and dispose of a thing.” Oyd. gives the primary definition as “the right and interest which a man has in lands and chattels to the exclusion of others.” [32 Cyc. 647-648.] The term is applied to the thing itself as a secondary meaning. That was distinctly held by this court in the case of St. Louis v. Hill, 116 Mo. l. c. 533, quoting from encyclopaedias and textbooks. A man has an interest and property in a house. He also has the house. When we speak of his property in a house we certainly do not 'mean the thing itself but his right to it. The primary meaning of the word property was intended in this description in the mortgage. There might be some room for dispute if the word were used alone, but it is used in connection with other words and used in such relation to the specific things, such as railway lease, depots, etc., so that it is not susceptible of any other meaning than in the sense of the “right” or “title” “to” the things described. Therefore, the money and bonds under consideration here are not described in the mortgage, did not pass by the decree, and are subject to the payment of the plaintiff’s judgment.
IV. The appellant makes the point that the plaintiff is not in position to sue this defendant because she has not proven that she has not an adequate remedy at law by execution and return, of milla bona. Execution was is*329sued, directed to the sheriff of Lincoln County. He made his return to the effect that he found nothing upon which to levy in Lincoln County. It is argued by the appellant that such a return cannot be proof of insolvency, because an execution may issue to any sheriff in the State.
It is not necessary to consider that point. The petition of the plaintiff alleged that the Railway Company was insolvent, and execution against it would have been unavailing if that is true. The law does not require the plaintiff to perform a perfectly useless act. She could sue, as here, by proof that an execution would be unavailing. [Ice & Cold Storage Co. v. Kuhlmann, 238 Mo. 685.]
The decree of foreclosure under which the appellant bought the property of the Railway Company recites that the bonded indebtedness of the Railway Company was $1,122,435.54, and judgment for that amount was rendered. That decree recited that “the Railway Company has no resources with which to provide for the payment of said indebtedness and is wholly and completely insolvent. ’ ’
The property under the decree was sold and purchased for $30,000, and the Railroad Company became the owner of it, leaving more than a million dollars of the judgment against the Railway Company unsatisfied. In this suit the appellant asserts that it acquired all the property of the Railway Company, including the sixty-three thousand odd dollars, which plaintiff seeks to subject to the payment of her judgment. The judgment ‘in this case recites a finding by the trial court to the effect that by the foreclosure sale the Railroad Company took over all the property and assets of the Railway Company, “and thereby the said St. Louis & Hannibal Railway Company was totally divested of all its, assets and property and rendered wholly insolvent and execution proof, and plaintiff was thereby precluded from enforcing the payment of her aforesaid judgment by proceedings at law.”
There was ample evidence to support that finding. The trial court had before it the findings in that fore*330closure proceeding in the Federal court, and there was no attempt here to dispute the correctness of that finding. It had the’unsatisfied judgment for over one million dollars. It had the situation of the defendant’s property, and the claim that all the property of the Railway Company passed to the Railroad Company.
Finding no error in the record, the judgment is affirmed.
All concur.