This action is brought to foreclose a mechanic's lien filed in pursuance of § 4135 of the General Statutes.
The defendants claim that the lien is invalid for three reasons:First. It appears that at the time the building covered by this lien was erected, the owner of the land erected a second building of the same size and construction, distant from four to six feet southerly, and a third building of substantially the same size and construction, distant from four to six feet northerly; that at the time the plaintiff agreed with the owner to furnish lumber for the construction of the building in question, he also agreed to furnish lumber for each of the two other buildings, and that these agreements were witnessed by a single writing; that between the building in question and the building to the north, there is, upon the street line in front of the open space or passway, a framework attached to each building and a door is placed therein for the use of the occupants of the building north, and of that south, of the open space; and a similar framework is placed in front of the open space or passway between the building in question and the building to the south.
At the time of the construction of the three buildings, the defendant Arick owned the piece of land extending from the northerly line of the north building to the southerly line of the south building and including the open spaces mentioned.
The defendants claim that in view of these facts the building in question is a part of a block of buildings constructed by one owner under one contract, and that this lien is invalid because the whole of the block is not included in the description.
The trial court has found that the land described in this *Page 386 lien is that covered by the building in the construction of which the materials furnished by the plaintiff were used, and such adjoining land as is reasonably necessary and convenient for the use of said building.
It is plain that the three buildings are not, in fact, one block; the certificate of lien as filed is valid.
The statute clearly creates a lien in behalf of the materialman whose materials have gone into the construction of a separate building, on the land covered by the building and so much of the land adjoining as may be necessary for its convenient use. In this case the plaintiff had a valid lien on each of the three buildings for the value of the lumber he had furnished in the construction of each. Whether or not, under the circumstances of this case, the statute authorized him, as an alternative course, to treat the materials furnished for each of the buildings as one transaction, giving him an equivalent lien on the same land, is a question we need not consider.
The trial court rightly held that the plaintiff, in view of our decision in Wilcox v. Woodruff, 61 Conn. 578, was justified in filing a separate certificate of lien for the materials used in each building.
Second. It appears that the building described in this lien is constructed with a solid partition wall dividing it so as to make two houses adapted and intended for separate use. The defendants claim that the statute requires, when a building is so constructed, that a separate certificate of lien shall be filed for the materials used in each half.
A claim of this kind was considered and its unsoundness established in Brabazon v. Allen, 41 Conn. 361.
Third. The defendants claim that this lien is invalid because the amount of material furnished for the building upon which the lien was placed was not accurately ascertained, and because it does not appear how much of the lumber charged in this lien was used in the construction of the building described therein.
The trial court finds that the amount stated in the lien was in fact the value of the materials furnished in the *Page 387 building on the land described in the lien, as nearly as the same could be ascertained. It is not essential to the validity of the lien that the amount should be stated with precise accuracy.
The court finds that the plaintiff agreed to furnish, and did furnish, the lumber used in the construction of the three buildings mentioned; that the amount and kind of lumber for each building were substantially the same; that no account was kept by the plaintiff with the defendant Arick of the identical lumber furnished in the erection of each of the said buildings. This finding is consistent with the finding included in the judgment, that the plaintiff furnished materials in the construction of the building described in this lien in pursuance of an agreement with, and with the consent of, the defendant Arick, and that the balance due the plaintiff for the materials so furnished is the sum of $1,252.70.
In the written agreement of Arick to pay for the lumber to be furnished by the plaintiff for the three buildings mentioned, he agreed, as additional security, to give his promissory note secured by mortgage, and subsequently Arick did mortgage certain land to the plaintiff, conditioned upon the payment by Arick of the amount due for the lumber furnished by the plaintiff. The trial court finds that this mortgage was given for the purpose of giving additional security to the plaintiff, and was not intended by the parties to be in substitution or waiver of the plaintiff's rights of lien upon the buildings to be constructed; and that the plaintiff has never realized anything upon said mortgage, and that the same is now worthless.
The court did not err in overruling Arick's claim, that the plaintiff waived his lien by taking the mortgage security given in pursuance of Arick's said agreement to furnish additional security.
The defendants assign error in the ruling of the trial court as to the effect of the judgment of the City Court, in the foreclosure proceedings commenced by Harry Matz and others, upon this plaintiff, who was a party defendant *Page 388 in that case and did not appeal from the City Court judgment.
They also claim that this judgment is erroneous because the court failed to fix the law-day in equitable relation to the law-day fixed by the judgment in said case of Matz v. Arick.
These exceptions cannot be sustained, for the reasons given in the case of Matz v. Arick, post, p. 388, where precisely the same questions were raised and decided.
What we have said in respect to the errors assigned in this case applies to the two other cases between the same parties (Nos. 490 and 491), consolidated with this case for the purpose of trial.
There is no error in the judgment of the Superior Court in this case, and there is no error in the judgments of the Superior Court in the other cases (Nos. 490 and 491) between the same parties.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.