71 Wash. 28 | Wash. | 1912
The defendant Steenstrup was engaged in the performance of a contract for the improvement of Western avenue and Pike place, in the city of Seattle. Steenstrup employed plaintiff to make certain necessary repairs on a steam shovel which had been rented and was being used by him. The repairs amounted to the sum of $324.15. After the repairs had been made, the shovel was used for a
“A most liberal construction was [there] allowed. Rent for teams, feed and hay for the same, coal and fuel for the same identical steam shovel were allowed and declared to be contemplated by the statute.. Surely repairs, labor and materials on the same steam shovel would be just as lienable. The improvement could not be efficiently prosecuted without this steam shovel, and the whole work would have been delayed had not the repairs been made.”
It is true that we so held, but it does not follow that repairs put upon the machine or horses sold to the contractor to be used in the prosecution of the work are recoverable items under the statutory bond. The public is bound upon the theory that the thing furnished or supplied has gone into and become a part of the work; or, to state the proposition in another way, if the public pays for an item, it is because title has passed to it. To the transference of title, the incidental cost of transfer, whether in labor or material, may lawfully be added. The statute means to include:
“Anything that is furnished for, and used directly in the carrying on of the work, and is entirely consumed thereby. Such things do not enter into and become a physical part of the finished structure, as materials do, as that word is generally construed; but they do become as much a part of the structure as the labor which is performed upon it.” National Surety Co. v. Bratnober Lumber Co., supra.
This is the logic of many of our decisions, more especially: Gilbert Hunt Co. v. Parry, 59 Wash. 646, 110 Pac. 541,
“The contract presupposes that the contractor has and will furnish upon his own account the necessary tools, implements and appliances with which to perform the work.” Kansas City etc. w. Youmams, 213 Mo. 151, 112 S. W. 225.
The logical consequence of this holding is that repairs put upon such machinery do not come within the protection of the law. Empire State Surety Co. v. Des Moines, 152 Iowa 531, 131 N. W. 870, 132 N. W. 837; City of Alpena etc. v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co., 159 Mich. 329, 123 N. W. 1126; City of Alpena etc. v. Title Guaranty & Surety Co., 159 Mich. 334, 123 N. W. 1127; City of Alpena etc. v. Murray Co., 159 Mich. 336, 123 N. W. 1128; United States etc. v. Kimpland, 93 Fed. 403; United States etc. v. City Trust, Safe Deposit & Surety Co., 23 App. D. C. 155; City of Philadelphia v. Malone, 214 Pa. 90, 63 Atl. 539; Beals v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 76 App. Div. 526, 78 N. Y. Supp. 584.
In United States etc. v. City Trust, Safe Deposit & Surety Co., supra, which involved the right to recover for repairs to a dredge used upon a public work, it was held:
“We regard the question as too plain to require any elaboration of argument. As well might the person who constructed the dredging machine in the first instance seek to hold the surety liable, as the person who afterwards makes repairs in order to constitute the machine what it ought to be.”
Our conclusion is that a contractor is presumed to be prepared with machinery and appliances necessary to do his work, that such items are furnished upon his credit and not upon the implied credit of the public, and that repairs, if made, will be paid out of the profits of the undertaking.
Finding no error, the judgment is affirmed.
Mount, C. J., Parker, Crow, and Gose, JJ., concur.