72 Wash. 529 | Wash. | 1913
The appellant brought this action against the respondents, Kelleher and Whittlesey, and others,
In this court complaint is made of the procedure followed by the trial court. It is claimed that it was error to allow an objection to the sufficiency of the complaint after issue had been joined by answer, and error to take the objection under advisement until the close of the evidence. But the respondents had the right to rest their defense on an objection to the sufficiency of the complaint, if they so desired, even after answer filed, and this is all they did do in effect. The conduct of the respondents in this regard was a matter entirely without the control of the court. Moreover, no right of the appellant was affected by the action of the court. The appellant was at liberty, notwithstanding the withdrawal of the respondents, to go on with its case, and prove a cause of action against them if it could. If it succeeded in its proofs,
The complaint was clearly defective. It was alleged “that on the 14th day of September, 1911, plaintiff at the special instance and request of James Duffy and Kohler & Chase, a corporation, commenced to furnish material and perform labor, which material was used, and which labor was performed in and about the construction and alteration of a certain building or structure on the premises hereinabove described, which material was of the reasonable value, &c.,” but there was no allegation of the relation of James Duffy or Kohler & Chase to the owners of the property; that is to say, there was no allegation that they were the actual agents of the owner of the property, or were contractors, subcontractors, architects, builders or persons having charge of the construction of the building on which the lien is claimed. Persons standing in one or the other of these relations to the owner are the only persons that can lawfully bind his property for materials or labor used in the construction or alteration of a building thereon; and a complaint, if it be not subject to demurrer, must set forth that the materials and labor for which the lien is claimed were furnished either at the instance of the owner or some person bearing this statutory relationship to the owner. Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1129; Canal Lum. Co. v. Kong Yick Inv. Co., ante p. 437, 130 Pac. 492.
The defects in the complaint, however, were amendable, and we have searched the evidence for the purpose of ascertaining whether or not the proofs offered at the trial supplied the defects, but the evidence on this question is as much barren as the complaint. The proofs were directed to a showing of the value of the materials furnished, and there is not even an indirect reference to the matter now under in
Crow, C. J., Main, Morris, and Ellis, JJ., concur.