delivered the opinion of the Court:
When this cause was heard on the former appeal, it was adjudged petitioners were entitled to a lien for the amount due them for work and labor done and materials furnished in erecting the building on the premises, as against the owner of the fee.
On the remandment of the cause to the Superior Court a decree was rendered in conformity with the opinion of this court declaring a lien in favor of petitioners on the premises, but subject to an incumbrance in favor of a defendant not made a party when the original bill was exhibited. That decree on appeal was affirmed in the Appellate Court, and petitioners again bring the case to this court.
There is no disagreement as to the facts, and the controversy now is, which has priority, the mechanic’s lien or the mortgage incumbrance? The last work done by petitioners was on the 29th of July, 1873, when the building was turned over to the owner and the work was then accepted by him as having been done in conformity with the contract, and on that day the owner became obligated to pay the balance due under the contract. On the 29th of May, 1873, the owner of the property, his wife joining with him, executed a deed of trust to Henry L. Hammond, as trustee, to secure a loan of money made by defendant Laurence to the owner of the property embraced in the deed. The original petition herein was filed on the 18th day of December, 1873, to which Hammond was made a party, but Laurence, the owner of the indebtedness secured by the trust deed,ivas not made a party until July 3, 1874, when the petition was amended by making him a party.
It is provided by our statute that no creditor shall be allowed to enforce the lien given by the mechanic’s lien law “as against or to the prejudice of any other creditor or incumbrancers, unless suit be instituted to enforce such lien within six months after the last payment for labor or materials shall have become due and payable.” The remedy given the mechanic or material-man is purely statutory, and unless enforced in the manner and within the time prescribed in the statute, he can have no lien that will prevail against other creditors. It will be observed that, although the suit was instituted against the owner, and trustee named in the deed of trust, within six months after the last payment for work done by petitioners became due, the party owning and holding such indebtedness was not made a party until long after the expiration of that period. It is insisted it was sufficient to make the trustee a party to bar the rights of the cestui que trust. A contrary construction of the section of the statute cited has been sanctioned by a number of recent decisions of this court, so that it need not now be discussed as a new question.
In Dunphy v. Riddle,
Scanlan v. Cobb,
The case of Gaytes v. Franklin Savings Bank,
The decree will be affirmed.
Decree affirmed.
