Prior to the enactment of chapter 25 of the Acts of the Eighteenth General Assembly, a livery-stable-keeper acquired no lien as such upon property kept by him in the course of his business. McDonald & Co. v. Bennett, 45 Iowa, 456. The keeping of the horse in question commenced before that time. Eor the-keeping prior to the time when the act took effect it would seem to be clear that the defendant acquired no lien. Tlife plaintiff insists that he acquired none for the keeping afterwards. The fact appears to be that the keeping was continuous. The plaintiif’s theory is that, the contract for keeping being made at a time when the law gave no lien,
If the defendant had contracted in the outset to keep the horse during the time, which he did, it could not have been said that he was induced to make the contract by the fact that he might have a lien; and there would perhaps be some plausibility in the plaintiff’s position. But no specific time appears to have been agreed upon during which the horse was to be kept. There was, then, no executory contract to be treated as a unit, and to be governed by the law in force at the time it was made. As, then, the defendant was free to continue or discontinue keeping the horse after the act, it is not for us to say that he did not continue in reliance upon the act. In our opinion, the plaintiff’s position cannot be sustained.
One other fact ought perhaps to be mentioned in this connection. It appears that the defendant occasionally used the plaintiff’s buggy. There is certainly nothing in the nature of the contract to justify that, and the evidence does not show that the defendant had any express permission. The most that we can say is that there was evidence tending to show that at one time, when the plaintiff had, no buggy, he had occasionally used the defendant’s buggies without charge; and it is barely possible that the relation and practice of the parties were such as to justify the inference of a permission by plaintiff to defendant to use his buggy. But we do not feel called upon to determine that. The plaintiff has assigned no error which raises specifically the question of the use of the buggy, and no such question is alluded to in the argument of the plaintiff’s counsel. In our opinion the judgment of the district court must be
Affirmed.