This is an action brought by the plaintiff, as subcontractor, against the contractors, joined as defendants with the owner of a.building erected by such contractors, for the erection of which building the plaintiff claimed to have furnished certain glass. The plaintiff demanded, in its complaint, personal judgment against the contractors as well as foreclosure of plaintiff’s mechanic’s lien against the building and land upon which the same rested. The contractors were not personally served with summons in the state and did not answer. Upon the trial, as
The findings of fact are quite voluminous, and exceptions are taken to some of them. In the view which we take of this case, it is unnecessary to refer to any facts except such as appear undisputed, and which are as follows: The contractors entered mto a contract, whereby the3 were to erect a business block for their codefendant, which said block was to be finished on or before December i, 1901. The contractors also entered into a contract with the plaintiff company, under which the plaintiff agreed to furnish the glass for said building. During" October and November, 1901, the plaintiff shipped to the contractors three shipments of glass; the first and largest including three large plate glass. Two plates cf this glass were broken into fragments before they reached the building, and they never entered into the construction of same. The second shipment was a small one, and the third shipment was of two plates of glass to> take the place of the two plates that were broken. It is undisputed that all of the glass so shipped, except the two plates broken, entered into the construction of the building. No dispute as to the value of said glass was raised, and it appears that the glass which went into the building was of the value of $1,090.57, and the two broken plates of the value of $588.94. The above glass not being paid for, the subcontractor, within the time fixed by statute, filed in the proper office a mechanic’s lien with the necessary statements thereto attached, under which instrument the plaintiff claimed a lien for the value of all the glass furnished to the contractors. Such lien was filed under the provisions • of sections 696 and 697 of the Revised Code of Civil Procedure. Said mechanic’s lien was dated March x, 1902, and in said, lien the plaintiff claimed a balance due of $1,679.51 without interest, claiming the above amount to be due on said March 1, 1902, which said amount, it will be noted, is the sum of the value of the glass used and that
As conclusions of law the court held there was due from the contractors to the plaintiff said sum of $1,090.57, with interest thereon from December x, 1901, and that the plaintiff was entitled to collect the said sum and interest by foreclosure of the hen and sale of the property. It will be seen that the court held against the plaintiff upon its claim of a right to a lien for the value of the glass broken, and it is from this holding that the plaintiff appeals. It will be seen that the court granted plaintiff a lien for the value of the glass, other than the broken glass, together with interest thereon from December 1, 1901; the effect of this holding of the court being to render the tender made by defendant insufficient, because the amount due, with interest from December ist, would be greater than the amount tendered, while the amount due, with interest from March ist,- would be less than the amount tendered. The court held that such tender did not stop the running of interest nor destroy the lien. It is from this part of the decree that the defendant appeals.
Did the court hold correctly, wherein it held that no lien could be claimed for material furnished for, but which did not enter into, the construction of the building? Upon this question the courts differ, and numerous authorities are to be found upon either side. Two classes of merchanic’s lien laws are in force in
Did the court err in holding that the mechanic’s lien secured interest from December 1, 1901 ? It certainly did. Without the lien filed the subcontractor would have no claim whatever against this defendant or against its property, and its rights are limited strictly to what is shown by the instrument filed, and while as against the contractors the subcontractor unquestionably could recover interest from the date such improvement was finished, yet under such lien such interest could not be recovered, first, because in the lien, as filed, there was nothing to show when the subcontractor was entitled to his money, and, further, the lien, as filed, made no- claim whatever for interest and therefore interest did not run until such lien was filed.
It will be readily seen that, computing the interest at 7 per cent.- from March 1, 1902, to- June 22, 1902, the amount secured by such lien did not exceed the sum of money tendered. The question then arises whether or not such tender destroyed the lien, and released the property therefrom. The plaintiff contends that it was incumbent upon the defendant not merely to- tender the sum that might be secured by the lien, but. that the defendant should have complied with the provisions of section 1166 of the
Was the tender sufficient in form and free of all conditions, other than such as defendant had a right to attach thereto ? Section 1164 of our Revised Civil Code' provides: “When a debtor is entitled to the performance of a condition precedent to, or concurrent with, performance. on his part, he may make his offer to depend upon the due performance of such condition/' Section 1165 of said Code provides: “A debtor, has a right to require from his creditor a written receipt for any property delivered in performance of his obligation.” Defendants contend that under section 1164, they had the right to attach, as condition of the tender, the requirement that plaintiff give to- them a satisfaction in full of the lien. Defendants’ contention would clearly be correct if there had been no- dispute as to- the amount secured by the lien and such amount had not exceeded the sum tendered. In the case of Wolff & Co. v. Can. Pac. Ry. Co., 123 Cal. 535, 56 Pac. 453, the court said: “To hold that a deposit in -bank, under section 1500, is necessary in all cases of a tender, would make section 1500 wholly inconsistent with’ sections 1504 and 1498, and would efface those sections. Section 1504 provides that an offer of payment, etc., though the title does not pass, stops the running of interest on the obligation, and has the same effect
But the plaintiff insists that the conditions attached to the tender render the tender of no effect, and in this contention we think the plaintiff is clearly right. Under the common law every tender made, in order to defeat the running of interest or to effect the incidents to the main obligation, had to be unconditional. This has been changed so that the party tendering payment has a right to insist upon a written receipt of the amount paid or (if under the law he is entitled to any other instrument of discharge, such as a discharge of lien) he is entitled to receive a written discharge to the extent of the amount paid; and in this case, if the sum tendered had been tendered without any conditions whatever, the lien would have been destroyed (if it had been tendered with the condition only that plaintiff deliver a satisfaction of said lien in the sum of the amount tendered, such lien would have been destroyed). But under the Civil Code the party has no right, any more than he would have had .under the common law, when tendering a payment, to require a receipt in full or a satisfaction in full of the lien, or, in other words, when one party is honestly claiming a greater amount to be due than the other party concedes, he cannot be put in position of running the risk of losing his lien, not only upon-the'disputed claim, but also upon the undisputed part, by failing to receive the smaller amount in full; but
The court, in the last case above ’ cited, said: “The most common and familiar illustrations of the proposition above stated are cases where the tender is made as. being all that is due, or as payment in full. It is everywhere -held that such a tender is not g'ood. The debtor has no right to 'the benefit of a tender, as having, the effect of a payment, when it is burdened with such a condition that the creditor cannot accept the money without compromising his legal right to recover the further sum which he claims to be due. This case falls within the ’same principle. By offering to pay the money only upon the condition that the plaintiff deliver up the notes (if such was the fact) the defendant insisted upon a condition the acceptance of which would at least seriously compromise the right of the plaintiff to recover any more, even though it should be true that the amount unpaid exceeded the sum tendered. The acceptance of the money and the surrender of the notes would. be at least strong evidence against her, in the nature of an admission, that the notes were thereby fully paid. The defendant should not be heard to assert that a mere offer to pay a specified sum, less than was supposéd by the other party to be due, has the effect of a payment, so as to discharge the mortgage, when the offer was burdened with such a condition. It was enough for his protection that the plaintiff would have received the money offered and have indorsed its payment on the notes, which were already overdue and still in the hands of the plaintiff. If the defendant rejected this offer, and insisted upon the surrender of the notes, the natural and only reasonable construction to be put upon his conduct was that he insisted that the tender, if accepted, should be accepted as payment of the notes in full. If that was the effect of the tender,
In the New York case the court said: “Numerous questions have been argued upon the briefs submitted, but it is necessary to refer to but two of them, as upon these the order of the general term must be affirmed. The tender made by the plaintiff was clearly bad in form. A tender 'of money in payment of a debt, to be available as a defense, or as the foundation of an action in favor of the party making the tender, must be without qualification. There is no principle by which a party is to be absolutely barred from litigating his claim for a larger sum than that paid, merely because he accepts part. The actual acceptance of the amount tendered would only extinguish a claim in case it was the whole amount due. If less than the amount due is tendered and accepted, it would only extinguish the debt pro tanto, 'and the creditor would be entitled to interest on the balance, and hold whatever security he had as indemnity for the payment of such balance. It follows that if the tender is relied on as a defense, or as the foundation of an action, the party pleading it must show it to have been absolute and free from all conditions, and such are the authorities. In Wood v. Hitchcock, 20 Wend. 47, the tender was ‘in full settlement and discharge of all demands which plaintiff held against him.’ It was held bad, and within the rule that the party making the tender shall not make a protest against his liability. To request the creditor to sign a satisfaction piece vitiates the tender. Roosevelt v. Bank, 45 Barb. 579. To demand a receipt vitiates the tender. 2 Phil. Ev. 134. To demand a receipt in full is bad. Wood v. Hitchcock, supra. See, also, Frost v. Bank, 70 N. Y. 558 [26 Am. Rep. 627]. Here the plaintiff testified as to. the tender as follows: T tendered and offered the money to him unconditionally, and in payment and extinguishment of his lien upon the iron ore mined on the farm and at Ironía station, mentioned in his chatted mortgage,' etc."
In the Iowa case the court said: “A tender at common law, to be valid, had to be unconditional. No requirement could be at
It is therefore clear that the learned trial court was correct in its rulings upon the questions raised, with the single exception that it 'should have computed the interest upon the sum secured by the lien from March 1, 1902, instead of December 1, 1901, and its decree should be modified to that extent.
As so modified, the judgment of the lower court and its order denying a new trial are affirmed, without costs in this court.