93 Iowa 218 | Iowa | 1895
I. This case is largely controlled by the conclusions in Blanding v. Railroad Co., 88 Iowa, 225, also reported in 55 N. W. Rep. 81. The relations between the railroad company and Williams & Flynn are the same in the two cases, there having been but one contract between those parties. In that case the claim of the plaintiffs was that they had a contract directly with the company, and they claimed a lien by virtue thereof. In this case the claim is not that there was a contract with the company for construction. It is unquestioned that plaintiff’s contract was with Fitzpatrick, but it is claimed that after the work was completed, and plaintiff was entitled to file a statement and preserve its Men, the company, through its secretary and agent, H. G. Fulton, requested of plaintiff not to file its Men, and promised that, if it was not filed, the company would pay the amount of its claim; and that, because of such promise, it desisted from filing
II. Plaintiff claims that the railroad is liable to it as a subcontractor. In the company’s contract with Williams & Flynn, it was to pay to the firm one-half of the aid voted to the company, by the city of Davenport, when the first ten miles of the road were graded, and, in addition ten thousand dollars of its first mortgage bonds, for each mile as graded, bridged, and tied; and six thousand) dollars in said1 bonds for every full mile ironed. Plaintiff’s right to a lien, as a subcontractor, is