68 F. 966 | 9th Cir. | 1895
The Pacific Rolling Mills Company brought a suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for a balance of $6,-731.22 against the street cable railway and power house of the James Street Construction Company, of Seattle, and the lots on which the power house was erected. The lien so claimed is for materials, furnished for and used in the construction of the street cable railway, and it consisted of rails, slot steel, bolts, plates, and shims. All the materials so furnished and used went to the construction of the cable railway in the streets, and none thereof was used in the improvement upon the lots where the power house was erected. The negotiations for the sale of the materials were opened by one C. L. Hamilton, of Seattle, who first telegraphed to the complainant for prices. He thereafter telegraphed again, instructing the complainant to send its answer to J. D. Lowman, of Seattle. The complainant wired its terms to Lowman. Negotiations were continued until they resulted in a sale of the materials from the complainant to C. L. Hamilton for a purchase price of about $13,000. Lowman was a director and was the manager of the defendant. That fact was known to the complainant, and was referred to in the correspondence. The complainant also knew that the materials were to be used in the construction of the defendant’s cable railway. It also appeared in one of Lowman’s dispatches to the complainant before the sale that he used these words: “Before contracting with Hamilton 1 had him wire you requesting answer to me to knowif youwould fill his orders. Receiving affirmative reply, I contracted same day with him, rail at fifty-five twenty-three,” etc. When the material was shipped by the complainant, it was consigned to Lowman, at Seattle, by Hamilton’s direction. The shipping receipts, with a draft attached for one-half the purchase price, to wit, $6,485.31, were mailed to the Puget Sound National Bank, at Seattle, with instructions to collect the draft on delivery of the receipts, and to take Hamilton’s note at 60 days for the other half of the purchase price. The material arrived at Seattle on August 25, 1890. Lowman and Hamilton called at the bank to get the draft and the shipping receipts. It was after banking hours, and the cashier declined to de*
On the appeal to this court, the question principally discussed is whether or not the law of the state of Washington gives to the complainant a lien which may be enforced, either against the railway or against the lots upon which the power house stands, or against both. The lien law of Washington (1 Hill’s Ann. Code, § 1663) provides as follows:
“Every person performing labor upon, or furnishing materials to be used in the construction, alteration, or repair of any mining claim, building, wharf, bridge, ditch, dike, flume, tunnel, fence, machinery, railroad, wagon-road, aqueduct to create hydraulic power, or any other structure, or who performs labor in any mine or mining claim, has a lion upon the same for the work or labor done, or materials furnished by each, respectively, (whether done or furnished at the instance of the owner of the building or other improvement, or his agent), and every contractor, sub-contractor, architect, builder, or person having charge of the construction, alteration or repair either in whole or in part, of any building or other improvement, as aforesaid, shall be held to be the agent of the owner for the purposes of this chapter.”
It was held in Kellogg v. Littell, 1 Wash. St. 408, 25 Pac. 461, that there can be no lien upon a building separate from the land whereon the same is situate; and in Railroad Co. v. Johnson, 2 Wash. St. 113, 25 Pac. 1084, it was held that unless there can be a lien upon the land there can be none upon the structure, and that no lien is given under the lien law for materials which enter into the construction of a cable railway, since the person or company constructing the same has no interest in the land; but the fee thereof is vested in the city for the public use, the railway company having only the
“The construction given to a statute of a slate lry the highest tribunal of such state is regarded as a part of the statute, and is as binding upon the courts of the United States as Hie text.”
Tinder the lien law of Washington, therefore, as expounded by the courts of that, state, a material man who furnishes material for the construction of a street railway can obtain no lien upon the structure in the streets of a city.
A question of more difficulty concerns the further contention of the appellant (hat the defendant’s power house and the lots whereon The same is constructed, and which are used in connection with the cable road, are subject to the lien. It is argued that the case of
Nor do we think that the relation of Hamilton to the defendant was such tluil, under any view of the meaning of the lien law, a lien could he created in favor of the vendor of materials sold in the manner indicated in the record in this case. If we concede that Low-man was acting- on behalf of the defendant, and that the defendant, through his agency, was to all intents the purchaser from Hamilton, still it cannot: be said that the complainant, in selling the goods to Hamilton, and in looking to him for the payment of the same, sold the same “at the instance of (he owner,” within the meaning of those words as they were; used in the statute. They sold rather at. the instance of Hamilton. Nor was Hamilton a “contractor,” such as is eon templa ted in the statute. It is true he liad a contract with Low-man, hut it was only' a contract of sale and delivery-. It: involved no labor or supervision upon Hamilton’s part. While the latter might have claimed a lien for Ms own benefit, because standing in the attitude of a vendor to the owner of the road, Ms own vendor, the complainant in this case, furnished the materials neither to the owner nor to the owner’s agent, nor to a contractor in charge of the construction of any part of the improvement. Hamilton was in,, charge of nothing connected with the construction. The correspond- *