102 Iowa 361 | Iowa | 1897
I. About three years prior to 1892, M. B. Ekert, husband of the defendant, purchased and paid for out of his own money six lots in the town of Essex, and caused the title thereto to be made to his wife, who continues to hold the same. In 1892, Mr. Ekert proceeded to erect a dwelling house on said lots to be used as a residence for himself and family, procuring the lumber for that purpose from the plaintiff, and for which there is a balance of two hundred and ninety-four dollars and forty-seven cents due to the plaintiff. In support of his claim for an equitable lien appellant relies upon Miller v. Hollingsworth, 86 Iowa, 163, and cases following the ruling therein. In that case the court says: “Giving to the averments of the petition, and especially the averment that the lumber was furnished and- used in the improvement of the defendant’s real property ‘with the full knowledge and acquiescence of the defendant,’ a liberal construction, we hold that the demurrer should have been overruled. Full knowledge and acquiescence, under such an interpretation, would imply that the defendant knew the lumber was purchased by the husband without being paid for by him; that, while it was so unpaid for, it was being used in the improvement of her real estate to the enhancement of its value; and that she acquiesced in such use with such full knowledge of those facts. It should also appear that it was not, in fact, sold to the husband in reliance upon his credit alone.” It is further said: “Of course, her want of acquiescence might be manifested by fewer facts or slighter circumstances