The purpose of this action was to foreclose two labor lien claims. The plaintiff performed the labor covered by one of the claims, and the other claim had been assigned to him. The total amount of recovery sought was approximately $900. The trial before the court without a jury resulted in a decree allowing $35.32 and directing a foreclosure for this sum. The plaintiff, being dissatisfied with this award, prosecutes the appeal. The facts which gave rise to the controversy may be summarized as follows:
Without reviewing the evidence in detail, it may be said that we think the holding of the trial court that it was the understanding of the parties that no wages should be allowed until the mill was completed and in operation must be sustained. After a careful consideration of the record, we are in entire accord with the views of the trial judge expressed orally at the conclusion of the case, as shown in the following excerpt from his opinion:
“I am well satisfied that Mr. Pesha and Mr. Brown originally started out with the intention of contributing without compensation their services until the mill was in operation, anticipating it would be for ninety days, and it lasted too long and they got tired of it. And when they finally wound up and the business collapsed, they got together and thought it would be a good plan to put in a claim for wages, which in my judgment they never anticipated getting when they started out. There is no showing’that either party ever demanded wages, and they did not have their names in the books as employees. But when the mill was completed, then, in accordance with the understanding, their names went on the pay roll for a brief period, and they were entitled to wages.”
“Wilcox Logging & Lumber Co. does hereby.agree to give F. J. Pesha steady work at not less than five dollars per day at said company’s mill, in consideration of said F. J. Pesha being a stockholder in said company, and to be employed for duration of said F. J. Pesha and holding stock in said Wilcox Logging & Lumber Co., said stock and position transferable.”
This memorandum, as already stated, was prepared by Pesha and signed Wilcox Logging & Lumber Company, by Wilcox and by Brown. Pesha, having become dissatisfied, was desirous of getting his money out of the corporation, and apparently conceived the idea that, if he had some memorandum showing that the stock and position were transferable, it would aid him in this respect. The memorandum was made approximately three months after Pesha and Brown began work on the construction of the mill, and yet contains no recital covering the matter of wages prior to that time. It fixes no time when the employment covered by it was to be .begun, but recites that the employment was for the duration of the holding of the stock and that the stock and position were transferable. The reason for writing the memorandum and causing it to be signed, as stated by Pesha in his testimony, is as follows:
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“I wrote the contract and took it to Mr. Wilcox and asked him to sign it and I asked him if that was all right. And when I presented it to him he said what is the idea. It is understood, he said, is it not, that you and Brown are going to get steady work? I said, yes, but in case I should want to dispose of my stock I would have a position to transfer with it.”
As we view the writing, it is not inconsistent with the view that wages were not to be paid until the mill was completed and in operation.
The evidence amply sustains the holding of the trial court. The judgment will be affirmed.
Holcomb, C. J., Parker, Mackintosh, and Mitchell, J J., concur.
