22 Wis. 632 | Wis. | 1868
The question of the most general interest presented by the case is, whether, where a material-man had sold materials for the erection of - a building, with the understanding that they were to be used in its erection, he would be entitled to the lien given by the statute, in case the purchaser should make some other disposition of them, and procure materials for the building elsewhere. The court below held that he would. And, as between the material-man and the owner, I think the ruling was correct. It was the plain intent of the statute to allow mate
But, without examining the other points made, I think the judgment should be reversed for error in giving the third instruction asked by the plaintiff’s counsel. The building was the separate property of Juliana Huebner. There was some evidence tending to show that F. W. Huebner, her husband, dealt in lime. He testified that he had sold to thirty or forty different persons lime which he had bought of the plaintiff’s intestate. The third instruction asked by the plaintiff was as follows : “ That should the jury find that the. contract for lime was made by the plaintiff with F. W. Huebner, yet if the lime came to the use of the defendant Juliana Huebner, in said building, the plaintiff is entitled to a lien.” The plain meaning of this is, that although the lime was sold generally to F. W. Huebner on account, and without any reference to this or any other building, yet, if he allowed any portion of it to be used in his wife’s building, that would give the lien. This is not the law. How it might be in such a case if the purchaser used the material in his own building, it is not necessary to inquire. But it seems clear that one who sells materials to another generally, without reference to any building, cannot follow them with a lien into the buildings
By the Court. — Ordered accordingly.