This is an action by appellee against appellants, the Winslow Gas Company and the Portville Gas Company, to foreclose a mechanic’s lien for services rendered by appellee in cleaning out and plugging a natural gas well. The complaint is in a single paragraph, to which appellants filed an ■answer in general denial. The appellant Portville Gas Company also filed a counterclaim for damages to the well, alleging that it was the owner thereof, and that appellee was employed to clean the same, and plug the water therefrom; that he performed said work so negligently and' unskilfully that the well, which was worth more than $1,000 prior thereto, was rendered of no value. On the trial of the cause a special finding of facts was requested and made, and conclusions of law stated thereon, on which judgment was rendered against both appellants for $769, which included an attorney’s fee of $75. A decree was entered foreclosing appellee’s lien, and ordering a sale of the leasehold in question in satisfaction of his judgment. Appellants filed a motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and have assigned as one of the errors on which they rely that the court erred in overruling said motion.
Appellants state in their brief that the only questions involved in this appeal are based on the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the special finding of facts. We will therefore confine our consideration
The statute providing for attorney’s fees in such actions is as follows: “In all suits brought for the enforcement of any lien under the provisions of this act, if the plaintiff or lien-holder shall recover judgment in any sum, he shall also be entitled to recover reasonable attorney’s fees, which shall be entered by the court trying the same, as a part of the judgment in said suit.” §8307 Burns 1914, Acts 1909 p. 295, §13.
As the evidence fails to sustain the finding relating to an attorney’s fee, the judgment is erroneous to that extent. However, as the erroneous part of the judgment clearly appears by the finding of the court to be $75, it may be separated from the correct amount, and the judgment affirmed, if a remittitur for the erroneous part is entered. Therefore, if, within thirty days, appellee shall enter a remittitur for $75 as of the date of the original judgment, said judgment will be affirmed at appellee’s cost; otherwise, the judgment is reversed at appellee’s cost, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.
It appearing from the certificate of It the clerk of the Pike Circuit Court, dated April 2, 1919, and filed in this court on April 4, 1919, that the appellee has entered on the judgment rendered in this cause in the Pike Circuit Court a remittitur of $75, the judgment is now affirmed at appellee’s cost in accordance with the opinion of this court heretofore rendered on March 25, 1919.