55 Iowa 52 | Iowa | 1880
— I. The defendant is an attorney at law, and plaintiffs state in their petition certain claims were placed in his hands, for the purpose of procuring and enforcing mechanic’s liens “thereon as and for sub-contractors, but that by reason of the want of skill, and by reason of the negligence of said defendant, and from no other cause, no notice of the filing of the claims of said parties as sub-contractors was served upon the Iowa, Minnesota & North Pacific Railway Company, its agent or trustee, nor was any attempt made by the defendant to comply with the statute requiring notice,” whereby said lien instead of being preserved was wholly lost, to the great damage of the plaintiffs.
In response to a motion for a more specific statement, the plaintiffs set out in an amended petition the claims or demands upon which it was sought to establish the lien. They are as follows:
*53 “Monroe, Iowa, Nov. 25, 1876.
“ Messrs. Field & Eberhart, please let S. Smitli have five dollars in trade, and charge the same to Iowa & Minnesota Eailroad Construction Company.
“O. Fuller, foreman?
“Fairvlew, Oct. 12, 1876.
“ I certify that I. Starge has worked one day in October, at $2.75 per day. Due $2.75.
“ 0. Fuller, foreman.”
“Monroe, Nov. 10, 1876.
of “ Paymaster please give bearer five dollars and fifty cents my pay.
“John Adams.”
There were a large number of other orders or vouchers Rimilar to the foregoing, except as to the amount, to whom payable, or by whom drawn. x
It was stated in the petition that the parties who placed the claims in the hands of defendant had furnished, on said “orders and certificates, merchandise and money to the full value of the same, and received such orders and certificates as evidence of indebtedness against said construction company, and that thereby the amounts due the laborers became, and were, assignments to said parties of the amounts due as evidenced by said orders and certificates, and that said purchasers and holders of said certificates and orders were entitled to the same rights and remedies that the parties who did the work, and received the certificates and orders, could have enforced.”
This being so, it follows the plaintiffs and others were not entitled to a lien, and, therefore, were not damaged by the failure of the defendant to give the notice required by law.
It is conceded, as we understand, by counsel for the appellant, that an action could not be maintained to enforce the contract, and that Adye v. Hanna et al., 47 Iowa, 264, is decisive as to this question. But it is insisted such a contract may be relied on as an estoppel, and a recovery therefor had.
We do not believe this is correct, and are unwilling to hold that a contract void as being against public policy has any vitality whatever. It matters not how it may be pleaded, a substantial right cannot be enforced thereunder. That which cannot be recovered in an action on the contract should* not be permitted to be done by indirection. Besides this the defendant did not affirm any fact to be true which turned out
No other questions presented by counsel in their argument need be considered.
Affirmed.