The respondent is a boom company, engaged in the business of booming, sorting, and rafting saw logs and other timber products, having its principal boom at the mouth of the Humptulips river, ■on Grays Harbor. In 1901 it boomed, sorted, and made into rafts certain saw logs belonging to the appellant for which services it charged its customary rates. These logs, when made into rafts, were forwarded by the company, pursuant to orders from the appellant, to the various lumber -mills operating on Grays Harbor. Along with the rafts the company forwarded to the lumber •companies a statement of its boomage charges, and the sums so claimed were withheld by the lumber companies, in their settlement with the appellant, from the purchase price of the logs. A dispute arose between the ¡appellant and respondent as to the reasonableness of these boomage charges, and the lumber companies were .notified not to pay over to the respondent the sums with
It is first complained that the court erred in refusing to hold the complaint and notices insufficient, on the ground that the description of the logs was too indefinite and uncertain to enable them to be identified with reasonable certainty, or identified at all. The liens described the logs as being a certain number, branded in a certain way, and located at or near a certain place. The liens complied literally with the form for such liens, prescribed by the statute, and we think were sufficient, under that provision of the code which prescribes that
It is next said that the court erred in refusing to dismiss the action at the conclusion of the respondent’s case, because it then appeared that the logs sought to be levied upon had been cut into lumber and destroyed prior to the time of the commencement of the several actions, or the time of the commencement of any of them. While the evidence on this point is somewhat indefinite, we think it clearly appears that the major portion of the logs described in the liens were still intact at the time the several actions were filed. It was not necessary, of course, that the whole of them should be in existence. The lienor was entitled to foreclose upon such of them as then existed, even if it were true that a portion of the number originally liened upon had been destroyed.
The appellant next complains that the court erred in directing that the money, brought into court by the lumber companies, be paid in satisfaction of the amount found due the respondent, but we think this within the equitable powers of the court. The court, having acquired jurisdiction over the parties and the subject-matter of the controversy between the parties, could retain it for the purpose of doing justice between them, even t'o impressing a lien upon the money, withheld and paid into court, in lieu of the property upon which the respond
It is next contended that the court erred in directing a foreclosure of the liens, and directing a sale of the property covered by the liens. This contention we think must be sustained. The trial court, although it made no formal findings of fact, must have found that some of the logs described in the lien notices were in existence at the time of the trial, but we are unable to find anything in the record which supports such a finding. The evidence, to our minds, clearly shows that, at the time of the trial, the logs had been cut up into lumber and otherwise disposed of, so that identification of the logs themselves, or of their products, was impossible. In such a case it is, of course, an idle ceremony to direct a formal foreclosure, and the court erred in so doing. The fact that the logs were not in existence at the time of the trial, however, does not, as the appellant supposes, require a dismissal of the actions. Thé court, as we have said, having rightfully acquired jurisdiction of the actions, could retain it for the purpose of making a proper distribution of the money retained in lieu of the logs, and of entering a personal judgment against the appellant. It is not a case where the lien fails, but one where the conduct of the debtor and third person has made it impossible for the lienor to reap the full benefit of his rights, under the lien.
Lastly it is complained that the court erred in refusing to hold that the amount charged by the respondent for boomage services was unreasonable. On this point the evidence was conflicting, and, seemingly from the record, not unevenly balanced. Under such circustances, we do not feel that the conclusion of the trial court ought to be disturbed.
The judgment appealed from will be modified to the extent of striking therefrom all that part of it directing a foreclosure of the liens sued upon; in all other respects it will stand affirmed. Neither party will recover costs on this appeal.
Hadley, Mount, Dunbar, and Anders, JJ., concur.