The appellant, W. P. Fuller & Company, a corporation, by this appeal seeks to have a lien declared against the property of the respondents Tagholm, Jensen, and Nelson, for the sum of $2,184.54, with interest and costs. The trial court decreed it a lien to the extent of $112.40 for extras, but denied the lien for the larger amount. The court found that, on the 21st day of April, 1909, the appellant entered into an agreement with Noyes & Dutton, who had a contract with the respondents for the construction of a building on their property, to furnish certain material to the contractors to be used in the construction of the building, at the agreed price of $2,184.54; that the appellant commenced furnishing material on the 22d day of June, and continued until the 10th day of September, 1909, when the delivery was completed; that the material was used in the construction of the building, and “that at the time such materials were delivered to be used in the construction of said building, W. P. Fuller & Company did not deliver or mail to the owners, or any of them, a duplicate statement of all such materials so delivered.” It is conceded that the appellant did not deliver or mail to the respondents a duplicate or any statement of the material de*343livered to the contractors, until the day following the last delivery of the material.
The appellant asserts the right to a lien upon three grounds: (1) That after agreeing with the contractors to furnish the material, one P. Nelson, an agent for the respondents, agreed with the appellant that the credit of the respondents should be substituted for that of the contractors; (2) that the delivery of the duplicate statement after the last delivery of the material, the respondent having actual notice that the appellant was furnishing the material, satisfies the statute, and (3) that the appellant was a subcontractor.
Upon the question of agency, the trial court held that P. Nelson had no authority to bind the respondents for the payment of the material. There is abundant evidence to support this view. Moreover, a reading of the testimony has convinced us that the first conversation he had with the agents of the appellant was after July 24, instead of before June 10, as the appellant insists. We think this is made clear from the fact that, on the former date, a considerable sum of money was paid to Dutton, one of the contractors, who on that day or the day following, abandoned the work and disappeared. Some of the appellant’s witnesses testified that, in the first conver- • sation with Nelson, when he agreed that the respondents would pay for the material, he referred to the fact that Dutton had left, and that knowing that fact the appellant would not have delivered the material except upon the credit of the respondents.
Appellant agreed with the contractors to, and did, furnish the sashes, doors, and glass for the building. The delivery began on June 22, and continued as needed until September 10, when the last material was delivered. On September 11, the appellant delivered to the respondents a duplicate statement of the materials furnished. The material was used in the construction of the building, and the evidence justifies the conclusion that the respondents knew who furnished it. Laws 1909, p. 71, § 1 (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1133), provides *344that every person furnishing material to be used in the construction of a building
“Shall, at the time such material or supplies are delivered to any person or contractor, deliver or mail to the owner, or reputed owner, of the property, on, upon or about which said materials or supplies are to be used, a duplicate statement of all such materials or supplies delivered to any contractor or person to whom any such materials or supplies have been sold or delivered, and no materialman’s lien shall be filed or enforced unless the provisions of this act have been complied with.”
Appellant’s second contention cannot be upheld without nullifying the statute. In meeting a similar contention in Finlay v. Tagholm, 60 Wash. 539, 111 Pac. 782, we said that the statute needs no construction, and “that its terms are plain and its object evident.” There is no primary obligation on the respondents. In order for the appellant to get the benefit of the statute, it must comply with its terms. In arguing for a liberal interpretation, the appellant says that “such a strict construction of the law would defeat the objects for which the law was enacted.” The statute, hoAvever, upon which the right to claim a lien must depend, says “that no materialman’s lien shall be filed or enforced unless the provisions of this act have been complied with.” The legislature has made no exception for cases where the OAvners of the property have knowledge that the material is being furnished. The appellant has cited Breneman v. Beaumont Lumber Co., 12 Tex. Civ. App. 517, 34 S. W. 198, and Wood v. Amarillo Improvement Co. (Tex.), 31 S. W. 503. These cases, however, proceed upon the theory that the provisions of a similar statute are unreasonable and in contravention of the provisions of the constitution of the state, which gives a lien and which the court holds is self-executing.
The third point urged, that the appellant is a subcontractor, is without merit. If one who furnishes the sashes, doors, and glass for a building is a subcontractor, every materialman would fall in that class, and such construction would *345nullify the plain terms of the statute. The argument that the contract to furnish the material is an entirety, and that it is difficult to comply with the statute, is one that should be addressed to another department of the state government. We are not responsible for the wisdom or the expediency of the law.
We think the learned trial court correctly resolved the questions of both fact and law, and the decree is affirmed.
Dunbar, C. J., Fullerton, Mount, and Parker, JJ., concur.