
    Kerrick, Respondent, vs. Ruggles and another, Appellants.
    
      November 25
    
    December 16, 1890.
    
    Liens, (1) Materials to be paid for in other property. (#) Land contract: Surrender to vendor. (8) Error in description: Coirection. (J) Filing of petition: Time limited.
    
    1. The lien of a material-man may be enforced although the materials were to have been paid for by the transfer of other property to him.
    2. Under a contract for the purchase of land the vendee went into possession and afterwards purchased from the plaintiff machinery which was used in the construction of a mill on the premises and became a part of the freehold with the knowledge and consent of the vendor of the land. Subsequently, by agreement between the parties to the land contract, said contract was surrendered to the vendor therein named. Meld, that said vendor took back the vendee’s interest in the land, subject to the plaintiff’s lien for the machinery.
    8. An error in the description of the premises in the petition for a lien might be corrected in the action to enforce the lien.
    4 Where the account for a portion of the materials furnished was dated March 9, but such portion was not shipped until March 10, when the other materials were purchased for the same building, the filing of a petition for a lien on September 10 was within the six months limited by sec. 8818, B. S.
    APPEAL from tbe Circuit Court for Bayfield County.
    The following statement of the case was prepared by Mr. Justice Cassoday:
    It appears from the record that October 11,1886, the defendant Buggies, by an agreement in writing, purchased from the defendant Neil-Pratt Lumber Oompanvy a certain saw-mill and planing-mill, with the store building, sheds, and houses used in operating the same, and eighty acres of land therein described, for the sum therein designated; that thereupon the said Buggies went into the immediate-possession of said premises; that March 10,1887, the plaintiff was a dealer in machinery, and sold to said Buggies the machinery described in the complaint, for which the said Buggies agreed to pay to the plaintiff $1,820; that the same has not been paid; that said machinery was used by the said Huggles in the construction of a mill upon the forty acres of land described, and that the plaintiff duly filed his petition for a lien therefor, September 10, 1881; that said machinery became, a part of the freehold of said premises, with the knowledge and consent of the said Wdl-Pratt lumber Qompcmy, that July 1, 1881, the said Buggies and the said Wdl-Pratt Lumber Qompcmy entered into a compromise and settlement between themselves whereby said agreement between them for the purchase of said mill property was given up and canceled, and the immediate possession of said mill property was surrendered and given up to the said Weil-Pratt Lumber Qompcmy.
    
    The plaintiff, within the time prescribed by law,— to wit, September 10, 1881,— commenced an action in the circuit court for Bayfield county, for the foreclosure and enforcement of a lien for said machinery. The defendants answered, and at the close of the trial the court directed a verdict to the effect that the plaintiff recover $1,820 for the personal property sold Buggies, March 10, 1881, and that the same was a lien upon the property described; and the court also found, in addition to the facts stated, that there was no evidence to sustain any of the material allegations contained,in the separate answers of the defendants, except as to the admissions therein contained, and that said allegations were wholly unsupported by the proofs, and were untrue, and that all the material allegations of the complaint were true. As conclusions of law, the court found that there was a mistake in the description of the premises as set forth in the complaint, and giving the true description thereof; that the interest of said Buggies, as owner in possession of said premises under said land contract, at the time of furnishing said machinery and of its repair, erection, and construction so as to become part of the freehold, be sold to satisfy tbe amount of tbe- plaintiff’s said lien; that tbe plaintiff was entitled to sucb lien, upon said premises and tbe machinery used in tbe repair, construction, or erection of said mill or mills, in tbe sum of $1,820, and interest from March 10, 1887, and tbe costs of tbe action. From tbe judgment entered thereon, tbe defendants appeal.
    For tbe appellants there was a brief by Tomkins, Merrill <& Smith, and oral argument by W. M. Tomkins.
    
    They contended, inter alia, that tbe transaction between tbe plaintiff and Buggies was merely an exchange of machinery for an interest in tbe mining option, and that tbe plaintiff became immediately a part owner of tbe option and entitled to certificates of tbe stock as soon as- issued. Tbe evidence to show this was competent. And, there being no sale but merely a barter, tbe plaintiff has mistaken bis remedy.
    For tbe respondent there was a brief by Gerrit T. Thorn, attorney, and Frank M. Guernsey, of counsel, and oral argument by Mr. Thorn.
    
   Oassoday, J.

Tbe machinery in question was purchased of tbe plaintiff by Buggies, March 10, 1887, to be used in tbe repair and construction of a mill upon tbe premises described. Buggies was then in tbe possession of sucb premises under bis contract of purchase from tbe Neil-Pratt Imriber Oonypany, and bis interest therein was sufficient to subject said premises to a lien in favor of tbe plaintiff by reason of tbe purchase of sucb machinery, if he was otherwise entitled. It- is true that Buggies agreed to pay for tbe machinery by transferring to tbe plaintiff certain shares in a mining option, but wholly failed to make any sucb transfer or any payment thereon whatever. But tbe plaintiff was not precluded from enforcing bis lien by the mere fact that Buggies bad so agreed. It is undisputed that tbe. plaintiff furnished tbe materials — tbe machinery -in question,- — and that tbe same, or at least a portion thereof, were so used in the repair and construction of the mill as to become a part of the freehold upon which the same was constructed. These things being so, the statute gave to the plaintiff a lien upon the interest of Ruggles in and to the mill and the land upon which the same was situated, not exceeding forty acres, which lien was by statute prior to any other lien which originated subsequently to the commencement of such repairs or construction. Sec. 3314, R. S.; Kendall Mfg. Co. v. Rundle, ante, p. 150. The plaintiff is certainly not to be barred of this statutory right by the mere fact that he would not have been entitled to it had Ruggles paid for the machinery as he had agreed. The court properly rejected the testimony of Rxiggles as to whether the plaintiff was a partner in the real estate option.

By the compromise of July 1, 1881, the Neil-Pratt lumber Company took back the interest of Ruggles in the premises subject to the plaintiff’s lien. Kendall Mfg. Co. v. Rundle, supra. It is admitted that at the time of that compromise the company knew of the improvements that had been made by Ruggles, and of course accepted them subject to such lien. The correction of the description of the premises in the petition for the lien, by the action and judgment, seems to have been competent. Sherry v. Schraage, 48 Wis. 93; Huse v. Washburn, 59 Wis. 414; Stacy v. Bryant, 73 Wis. 19.

The account for a portion of the machinery is dated March 9,1881, but it sufficiently appears from the evidence that the same wras not shipped until the next day, and both purchases were professedly made for the same mill, and hence the trial court was justified in finding that the petition was filed within the time prescribed by sec. 3318, E. S. The findings of the court are all supported by the evidence. There is no error in the record.

By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.  