147 Mich. 258 | Mich. | 1907
(after stating the facts). The contract for the improvement and the performance of labor thereunder do not support the asserted lien. The statute before amendment read:
“And in case the title * * * is held by husband and wife jointly, the lien given by this act shall attach to such lands and improvements, if the improvements be made in pursuance of a contract with both of them, or in pursuance of a contract with one of them by and with the knowledge and consent of the other.” Section 2, Act No. 179, Pub. Acts 1891.
The decision in Jossman v. Rice, 121 Mich. 270, in which this statute was considered, goes upon the ground that the land, the title to which was in the husband and wife jointly, was also a homestead, and it was held that the lien for improvements could not affect the land or the
We thus dispose, adversely to him, of all of appellant’s contentions excepting the one that, at the time the garnishment suit was begun, nothing was due from defendant to Lappin because the work had not been at that time accepted by the architect. Upon this point, counsel for appellant invokes the rule approved in Hanley v. Walker, 79 Mich. 607 (8 L. R. A. 207). The application of the rule here does not necessarily defeat the recovery. The question is whether there was anything due to Lap-pin from defendant at the time the writ of garnishment was served. Upon this point, defendant had the right to set up in his disclosure and defense any and every fact which would be available in a suit brought against him by Lappin. In his first disclosure, he admitted there was due from him to Lappin the sum of $326. In the second (first written) disclosure, he denies that any sum is due, because the work is not completed and accepted by the architect, and because he had received notice from Lap-pin that he owed his men, who might file and enforce liens. In this disclosure, it is asserted that the last labor was performed before the suit in garnishment was begun. It was notthen, or at any time, claimed that any part of the contract price for the work had been paid. Assuming
The judgment is affirmed.