The plaintiffs delivered to the defendants 1,300 yards of lawn to be embroidered by them at an agreed price per stitch-,.and returned to the plaintiffs in installments as the work progressed, the plaintiffs,to pay 50 per cent, of the agreed price on each delivery to them, and the remaining 50 per cent, when they should have examined the work and found it satisfactory A ' Two deliveries were made by the defendants, but the plaintiffs-failed to pay them.therefor,,, whereupon the defendants refused to continue their work and tendered back the remainder of the lawn on condition that payment be made for the work already done. ' The defendants did not pay;. and brought this action to recover possession .of -the goods; The defendants pleaded an artisan’s lien as a defence. This was; a good defence to the extent of the amount due and payable, to them on *195the delivery of the material which they had finished, at all events, and the judgment for the plaintiffs was erroneous. An artisan’s lien is lost where the material or object on which the work is to be done is by the contract to be delivered before payment and credit given (Morgan v. Congdon, 4 N. Y. 552; Blumenberg Press v. Mutual Mer. Agency, 177 id. 362). But that is not this case in respect of the 50 per cent, to be paid on delivery. It is the contract which determines ; and mere delivery of a part without payment does not affect the lien on the goods still in hand where the contract was for payment on delivery (cases supra).
The judgment should be reversed.
Woodward, Jenks, Rich and Miller", JJ., concurred.
Judgment of the Municipal Court reversed and new trial ordered, costs to abide the event.