1 Wash. 467 | Wash. | 1890
The opinion of the court was delivered by
Plaintiff sought to foreclose a lien for mate
In the notice of claim of lien the defendant corporation was described as “ Installment Building and Loan Association,” whereas, in fact, its true name was “ Installment Building and Loan Company.” The notice of claim of lien is attacked on the ground of this variance between it and the pleadings and proofs. We do not think that the variance was material. The corporation itself was making the improvement and could not have been misled by the slight error in stating its name. The case might be different if the property of the corporation was sought to be charged for an improvement for which it had hot contracted.
The defendant demanded a trial by jury upon the issues raised by its answer and the reply thereto. This was refused by the court, and its action in so doing is relied upon as cause of reversal. That the foreclosure of a mechanics’ lien is properly cognizable in a court of equity is not denied, but it is contended that as the defendant had a right under our statute to interpose a legal defense, that all rights incident to such legal defense and the issues made thereon went with it, including that of a trial by jury. With this contention we cannot agree. A court of equity having once obtained jurisdiction of the cause will retain it until final determination. 1 Pom. Eq. Jur., $§ 181, 183; Rathbone v. Warren, 10 Johns. 587; Martin v. Tidwell, 36 Ga. 332. The circumstance that in the progress of the cause an issue of fact was made that would ordinarily be triable by a jury cannot change this rule. It is true, as claimed by the appellant, that a plaintiff cannot, by joining a legal with an equitable cause of acton, deprive a defendant of his right to a jury trial. But that does not aid the appellant in his
The transcript presents other questions that might be material and worthy of consideration on this appeal, but as they do not go to the jurisdiction of the court, and have not been raised or argued by counsel, we do not feel called upon to discuss them.
The judgment and decree of the superior court must be affirmed, and it will be so ordered.