74 Cal. 432 | Cal. | 1887
The appeal is from the judgment by-the defendants, who insist it should be reversed because it appears from the findings that plaintiffs did not file' their notice of lien until one hundred days after they had furnished materials for the house. But the plaintiffs were not “ original ” contractors, within the meaning of section 1187 of the Code of Civil Procedure. (Sparks v. Butte County etc., 55 Cal. 392.) As they were not original contractors, the law required them to file their lien within thirty days after the completion of the buildings (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1187), and the filing of a lien prior to its completion was premature. (Perry v. Brainard, 8 West Coast Rep. 429; Roylance v. San Luis Hotel Co., ante, p. 273.)
The code does not mean that the building, if, as in
In Harmon v. Ashmead, 68 Cal. 322, the complaint alleged that at the date of the commencement of the action the building had not been completed; that the defendant ■did not intend to complete it; and that he had notified the plaintiffs to that effect. The lien was decreed. The ■question is but incidentally referred to, but was included .in the judgment recognizing and enforcing the lien of a material-man, in Germania v. Wagner, 61 Cal. 349. In that case, the building was not completed, “but work thereon ceased July 16, 1881, and has never been resumed.”
But to uphold a lien filed before the actual completion of a building, it should distinctly appear that the original purpose was to build it in part, or that the original purpose to finish it was abandoned.
The present action was commenced June 20, 1884. The appeal is on the findings alone, and the court below found that the work of the carpenters employed in the construction of the building was completed in the month
After finding that the carpenters completed their work in January, and the dwelling-house was not completed at the commencement of the action, the court found “that neither of the plaintiffs at the time of furnishing the materials knew that it was not the intention of the defendant Sarah to complete said building and leave it in an unfinished state.”
This is not a finding that such was her intention, or that the completion was abandoned by her.
Judgment reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
McFarland, J., Temple, J., Searls, C. J., Paterson, J., Sharpstein, J., and Thornton, J., concurred.