Appellee brought this action against appellants and two other defendants to cancel liens of record, which defendants separately claimed to hold against the property of appellee, and to enjoin defendants from instituting1 any proceeding to foreclose their liens until the validity thereof should he determined in the pending action.
The following is a brief summary of the essential facts shown by the evidence and found by the court: Appellee, a college fraternity, on August 27, 1908, entered into a contract with the firm of Caldwell & Mobley to furnish all
The Foster Lumber Company agreed to furnish, for the sum of $954.30, certain materials to be used in constructing said building, and did furnish and deliver to the contractors at appellee’s building, on or before October 3, 1908, all of the materials so contracted for, which materials were used in constructing said building. The court does not find the fact, but it appears from the evidence that a part of the material furnished by the Foster Lumber Company was used in the building after December 1,-1908. On January 12, 1909, appellant company filed notice of its intention to hold a lien on appellee’s property for the sum of $954.30.
Charles H. Springer undertook to furnish to said contractors, for the sum of $600, all the stone used in the building, as required by the plans and specifications. Subsequently Springer contracted with the IToadley Stone Company to furnish the stone required in said building in consideration of the payment by Springer of a definite sum. All the stone furnished by said Hoadley Stone Company, and which was used in constructing said building was received on or
By the fourth conclusion of law the court stated that the pretended lien of appellant Foster Lumber Company was invalid, without right, and that said defendant was not entitled to have or to hold a lien against the property of appellee, and that said appellant’s notice of its intention to hold a lien, as filed and recorded, should be canceled, set aside and held for naught.
By the fifth conclusion of law the court stated the law to be the same as to the pretended lien of appellant Charles II. Springer.
Appellants separately excepted to the fourth and fifth conclusions of law, and assign the same as error.
It is obvious that the determination of this cause involves only the determination of one underlying proposition: Did appellants, at the time judgment was rendered below, have valid and enforceable liens against the property of the appellee f If they had, then the court erred as to every specification of error in the assignment. If they had not, the judgment of the court was right, and appellants were not harmed by the refusal of the court to permit them to file cross-complaints, or by any other action of the trial court.
“Furnishing the material is complete when it is sold and delivered for the purpose of erection.” Burns v. Sewell (1892), 48 Minn. 425, 51 N. W. 224, 225.
“The materialman is properly said to have ‘furnished’ the materials, when he has delivered, or has them ready for delivery, at the place where he has agreed to deliver them under the contract.” Tibbetts v. Moore (1863), 23 Cal. 208, 214.
While for some purposes, a liberal construction is to be given to the mechanics’ lien act, as in the case of laborers, it cannot be given a wider meaning than its words fairly warrant. The lien must not only be enforced, but must be acquired, as provided by the terms of .the act. Potter Mfg. Co. v. A. B. Meyer & Co. (1909), 171 Ind. 513, 516, 131 Am. St. 267. The assignments of error by the Poster Lumber Company are not well taken.
Springer contracted to furnish all the stone to be used, and to finish the stone ready for use. "We do not see any reason why he ceased to be a materialman because he furnished all the stone instead of a part of it; nor do we think material ceases to be material when it is finished and ready for use. Judge Elliott, in Farmers Loan, etc., Co. v. Canada, etc., R. Co. (1891), 127 Ind. 250, 257, 11 L. R. A. 740, defines a subcontractor as one who takes from the principal contractor a specific part of the work. We understand this to mean a specific part of the work in the actual construction of the building, and may include furnishing the materials therefor.
Judgment affirmed.