47 Ind. App. 483 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1911
— -Appellant was the owner of two lots in the
city of Indianapolis, upon which houses were erected by
This action was commenced by the Capitol Lumber Company to enforce a lien for material furnished in the erection of said houses. The owner was made defendant, as were also a number of other persons, firms and corporations, who, as alleged in the complaint, claimed to hold similar liens against said real estate. Among the defendants so named Avere Percy R. Chevalier, the Fox Furnace Company, the Standard Metal Company, and the Morgan Coal and Lime Company, each of whom filed a separate cross-complaint against defendant Topp and the several eodefendants, seeking to foreclose liens upon said real estate groAving out of the erection of said houses. There was a trial by the court, and a finding and judgment in favor of plaintiff on its complaint, and also in favor of each of the cross-complainants. The liens set up in the complaints and several cross-complaints were ordered foreclosed, and the property was ordered sold to satisfy said liens.
Appellant states in her brief that she is not asking a reversal of the decree entered in favor of the Capitol Lumber Company; so Ave need not consider any alleged errors Avhich arise out of the trial of issues formed on the complaint.
The same objection is urged to the cross-complaint of the Standard Metal Company. This pleading clearly shows that the material was purchased to be used iu the construction of said houses, that said cross-complainant sold said material for that purpose, and that it was actually used in the construction of said houses. The pleading is not open to the objection made, and the demurrer was properly overruled.
In the case of Miller v. Fosdick, supra, the court said: “The special findings show that the materials, consisting of lumber, for which it was sought to enforce a lien, were by the appellant sold to the defendant Carr and charged to him, and were by him purchased for use in the construction of a building, and were so used, but it is not stated that they were furnished by the appellant for the particular building on which it was sought to enforce the lien. Indeed, it is not stated that the appellant knew the particular purpose for which the lumber was purchased, or that he had any information of an intention on the part of any one to construct or to repair any building. There is no pretense that there was any personal liability of the appellee Fosdick, and in view of the failure to show that the materials were furnished for the particular building, it must be held that the finding did not show sufficient facts to subject her interest in the real estate to a lien.”
In this case, as there is no evidence tending to prove that the materials furnished by either the Fox Furnace Company or the Standard Metal Company were furnished for the buildings owned by appellant, and as there is no evi
The decree of the lower court, based on the cross-complaint of Percy R. Chevalier, is affirmed, and the decrees based on the cross-complaints of the Morgan Coal and Lime