Upon certificates of the architect payments were made by defendant Hull November 9, 1901, $800 being the amount of the first and second estimates of work completed, and April 5, 1902, $1,200 being the amount of the third estimate. It is conceded by all parties that she had paid the sum alleged by her to complete the building, and of this no complaint is made. The April payment was made, $700 to the defendant lumber company, $340 to various material men and láborers, not including appellant Davis, and $160 to the principal contractor, Culver. The balance in the hands of Mrs. Hull is therefore the sum of $874.57, as stated in her answer.
It will be observed that the order given plaintiff was dated April 8, 1902, and notice thereof was given to Mrs. Hull April 10, 1902. On April 5th there had been paid to Culver eighty-five per cent. of. the value of the work finished on that date. What, then, were the rights of Culver as between. himself and defendant Hull, to which plaintiff succeeded under the order given him. Plainly, it was the right of Mrs. Hull to have the building completed and delivered to her free of claims and liens enforceable against her. She was under no obligation to pay any further sum to Culver until such condition of affairs was brought about. • Now, it appears that she knew that the lumber company and Davis were furnishing materials and labor for the building, and that such was necessary for its completion. It was her right, therefore, and her duty as well, to withhold all further payments until the claims for such material and labor were determined. Such is the effect of our holdings under the existing mechanic’s lien statute. Code, section 3093; Othmer v. Clifton, 69 Iowa, 656; Iowa Mtg. Co. v. Sanquist, 70 Iowa, 124; Fullerton L. Co. v. Osborn, 72 Iowa, 472, and cases cited, infra; Simonson v. Bank, 105 Iowa, 264. The rights of Mrs. Hull meas
There is no force, as we think, in the contention that at the time the order was given the claims of the lumber company and Davis, on which recovery is now sought, had not accrued, in larger part at least, and that in consequence the order was entitled to precedence!. A complete answer to this is found in the fact that at the time nothing was due, in the sense of being enforceable, to Culver. Whether anything would be due was contingent upon the showing made at final settlement. In the meantime the material and labor necessary to a completion of the building must be procured and paid for. By failing to preserve his right to a lien, and contenting himself with a simple unaccepted order, plaintiff took the chances on there being a balance due and payable to •Culver, and he cannot be heard to assert a personal claim against Mrs. Hull superior to the claims of those holding liens upon her property. The case of Cutler v. McCormick, 48 Iowa, 406, relied upon by appellant, was decided under a former statute.' Section 2133 of the Code of 1873, then in force, provided that the lien of a subcontractor could be enforced only to the extent of the balance due from the owner to the contractor at the time notice of the lien was served. Under the present statute the rights of a subcontractor are not thus limited. By properly filing his claim and serving notice, he is entitled to a lien for the full amount due him, and of this he cannot be deprived by any adjustment or arrangement between the owner and the principal contractor. See the cases above cited. The case of County v. Hinkley & Norris, 62 Iowa, 637, cited by the appellee, is not in point. It follows that the trial court was in error
It does not follow, from our present holding, that any rights which the lumber company may have under its lien are lost to it' by the irregularity in the proceedings so far had. The conclusion reached by us must have for- its result simply a remand of the case to the trial court, to the end that Culver may be brought in, and, through an adjudication against him, the rights of the- company determined, as far as dependent thereon, as against all parties to the record. Upon such adjudication being had, whatever sum is found to
It follows that the decree must be and it is reversed on both appeals, and the cause is remanded to the trial court for further proceedings in harmony with this opinion.— -Reversed.