This is а suit against John A. Wright and some twenty other persons to enforce a mechanics’ lien for lumber sold and delivered to Wright and by him used in the erection of eight houses on four contiguous lots in Kansas City. The last item was delivered on June 24, 1889. In the following •July Wright conveyed the lots to Samuel Foster to secure certain indebtedness held by Charles Hicks. The circuit court gave judgment establishing the mechanics’ lien, and the defendants Foster and Hicks •only appealed. Thе chief defense urged here is that plaintiff lost its lien because it did not commence this •suit against Wright, the owner of the property, within the time prescribed by law.
The plaintiff filed two lien accounts with the clerk of the circuit court, one on the fifth and the other on the twenty-first of December, 1889. The account for lumber is the same in each, but the first omitted one house and a half of one lot on which the house stood. The second corrected this error.
The petition in this case was filed with the clerk of the circuit court on December 28,1889, and on that day the clerk issued a writ of summons for all of the defendants named in the caption of the petition. By a •clerical mistаke the name of Wright was omitted in
1. The first inquiry is: When was the lien statement filed, on the fifth or twenty-first of December, 1889? The statute makes it the duty of every person claiming such a lien to file with the clerk of the circuit court a just and true account, etc., setting forth a “true description of the property upon which the lien is intended to apply” within a designated time. It was said in Mulloy v. Lawrence,
The case is more like that of Davis v. Schuler,
2. The next inquiry is whether.this suit was, to use the lahguage of the statute, “commenced within ninety days after filing the lien.” A section of the code of civil procedure provides that “suits may be instituted in courts of record’ ’ by filing in the office of the clerk of the proper court a petition and the voluntary appearancе of the adverse party; or, “by filing such petition in such office, and suing out therein a writ of summons against the person or of attachment against the prop
This court held repeatedly, before this amendment, that filing a petition with the clerk is the commencement of a suit. Thus in Gosline v. Thompson,
But it is said there are other cases in this court asserting a different rule, and that the amendment was added to put the mattеr at rest. As asserting a different rule we are cited to Herrington v. Herrington,
Looking now to the amendment of 1889, it will be seen that it adds nothing to the law as it before stood and as it still stands. If the legislature had intended to overthrow the long and well established rule, it should have used language to indicate that intention. The time when a suit is to be deemеd commenced in a court of record is not changed by this amendment. There is nothing in the language used to indicate a change.
“To sue out” often means “to petition for and take out, or to apply for and obtаin; as to sue out a writ in chancery, to sue out a pardon for a criminal”— Webster. The expression is doubtless used in that sense when applied to the commencement of a suit in those jurisdictions where the first step is the issuing of a writ, followed by filing a declaration, petition or bill. In such cases the suit is founded on the writ. But under our practice filing a petition is the first step, and is of. itself a demand for a writ of summons, unless the clerk is otherwise directed. It is not even nеces
The namе of Wright was not inserted in the caption of the petition, but that was a mere clerical error, and the summons might have been issued on the petition as it stood. But it is- not necessary to say more as to this error; for the petitiоn was amended by inserting the name of Wright in the caption before the expiration of ninety days, and within that time the plaintiff gave the clerk a memorandum asking for an alias writ as to Wright. That the suit was then commenced against Wright we have nо doubt. The fact that he did not enter his appearance within the ninety days is therefore immaterial. Nor is it essential to say what effect should be given to the amendment of the writ by inserting therein the name of Wright. The suit was commenсed in proper time without regard to these facts.
3. It is next insisted that the petition is fatally defective because it does not allege that the property in suit is in Kaw or Westport township. This objection is based upon cеrtain provisions in the act of 1871 (Acts of 1871, p. 28) establishing the twenty-fourth judicial circuit. That act makes Jackson county, a judicial circuit, and provides that the court shall be held at Independence and also at Kansas City. In general, the court at each place has jurisdiction throughout the county. The eighteenth section, however, pro
