The appellants brought this action to foreclose a lien for a balance alleged to be due for plumbing and materials used in the construction of a certain building. The lien notice described the premises as follows:
“That certain building or structure situate upon the following described property, to wit: Blake Island in the county of Kitsap, state of Washington.”
The defendants filed a general demurrer to the complaint. This demurrer was sustained upon the ground that the description of the premises upon which the lien was sought to be foreclosed was not sufficiently definite, it being conceded that Blake Island was composed of some four or five hundred acres of land, all of which was not owned by the defendants. Leave was thereupon granted to the plaintiffs to amend the com*271plaint. Subsequently, on February 5, 1906, plaintiffs filed with the county auditor of Kitsap county another lien notice. Thereupon the plaintiffs filed what was termed an amended complaint, setting up this last-mentioned lien notice and praying foreclosure thereof for balance alleged to be due. The respondents filed an answer denying generally all the allegations of the complaint. The cause then came on for trial. The plaintiffs offered in evidence the last-named lien notice, which showed upon its face that the last services and materials were furnished on May 13, 1905, and that the lien notice was not filed until February 5, 1906, more than eight months intervening between the date of the last labor and materials furnished and the date of the filing of the hen notice. On objection, the court excluded this evidence. The statute requires the lien notice to be filed within ninety days from the date of the cessation of labor or thg furnishing of materials. Bal. Code, § 5904 (P. C. § 6106).
Appellants contend that the notice in this case was an amended notice, and that the court should have received the same in evidence under the provisions of the same section, as follows:
“And such claim of hen may be amended in case of action brought to foreclose the same by order of the court, as pleadings may be in so far as third parties shall not be affected by such amendment.”
Conceding, without deciding, that an amendment to a hen notice may be made after the expiration of the ninety-day period, the amendment of the hen notice in this case, if the notice last filed may be said to be an amendment, was not filed or amended by order of the court. Permission to amend the complaint did not authorize the appellants to file a new hen notice or even to amend the original hen notice. If the appellants desired to amend the hen notice as well as the complaint, the application and order therefor should have been so stated. Not having done so, we think the trial court Avas *272right in treating the subsequent lien notice as an original' notice which was filed out of time, and therefore of no force.
It is not necessary to discuss other points in the case. The judgment must therefore be affirmed.
Hadley, C. J., Crow, Rudkin, and Fullerton, JJ., concur.
Dunbar and Root, JJ., took no part.