(after stating the facts). The question for determination is whether appellees are entitled to a lien on the premises for the contract price of the work done, some of the materials not being placed upon the property, or only for the value of the pipe and fixtures actually put upon the premises. The statute provides: (sections 4970-1-2, Kirby’s Digest):
“Sec. 4970. Every mechanic, builder, or other person who shall do or perforin any work upon or furnish any material * * * for any building, erection, improvement upon land * * * under and by virtue of any contract with the owner or proprietor thereof, or his agent, contractor, upon complying with the provisions of this act, shall have his work or labor done,- or materials * * * furnished, a lien upon such building, erection or improvement, and upon the land belonging to such owner or proprietor on which the same are situated, to the extent of one acre; or if such building, erection, or improvement be upon any lot of land in any town, city or village, then such lien shall be upon such building, erection or improvements and the lots or land upon which the same are situated.”
“Sec. 4971. The entire land, to the extent aforesaid, upon which any building, erection or other improvement is situated, including as well that part of said land which is not covered with such building, erection or other improvements as that part thereof which is covered with the same, shall be subject to all liens created by this act, to the extent and only to the extent, of all the right, title and interest owned therein by the owner or proprietor of such building, erection or other improvement for whose immediate use or benefit the labor was done or things furnished.”
“Sec. 4972. The lien for the things aforesaid, or work, shall attach to the buildings, erection or other improvements for which they were furnished or work was done, in preference to any prior lien existing upon said land before said buildings, erections, improvements, were erected or put thereon, and any person enforcing such lien may have such building, erection or improvement sold under execution, and the purchaser may remove the same within a reasonable time thereafter,” etc.
Appellant contends that it is only liable for the agreed value of the material furnished and the work done upon the property belonging to the owner and actually placed thereupon, and that no lien could be fixed against it for work done and the materials furnished in laying the pipe through the lands of other persons, with their consent, to reach the water main.
The premises and appurtenances passed to appellant by the conveyance thereof, and it is not disputed that the water service was installed upon the property, as already indicated, and in use when it was conveyed. It became, when constructed, an appurtenance to the property and passed with it, so far as the rights of the original owner were concerned.
In Philbrick v. Ewing, 97 Mass. 133, the court held that a pipe line running from a sink in a house across the lot upon which it was situated, and across the lot of another by his consent to a source of water supply in which he had rights, passed to the grantee of the owner of the building as appurtenant thereto, although it was not mentioned in the deed of conveyance, and that he could not after a sale enter upon the lot of the other person and take the pipe therefrom arid carry it away; saying:
“The pipe was put in by his tenant, and afterwards purchased by him from the tenant as one entire thing. It was designed for the use of tenant’s house, and for no other purpose. If it extended into the land of a third person and into a highway, it does not appear that the owner of the land objects to its continuance or authorizes defendant to remove it. We are therefore of the opinion that the whole of it, at the time of its conveyance to plaintiff, was a fixture and annexed to the house and passed by the deed. We suppose that it is a common thing in cities for the owner of a house to connect it by pipe with the pipe in the street belonging to the water company, and that such a pipe would pass by the sale of the house, although the owner of the house did not own the soil of the street. So, in case of a drain pipe connected with a common sewer, on the sale of a house the vendor could not take it away.” See also Lampman v. Milks, 21 N. Y. 505; Paine v. Chandler, 134 N. Y. 385; Mulrooney v. O’Bear, 71 S. W. (Mo.) 1019; Beatty v. Parker, 141 Mass. 523.
In. this last case, a mechanics’ lien was enforced against the property for the whole cost for putting a drain pipe therein from the house to the sewer in the street; the court saying: “The drain pipe was part of the house, and the house was built upon a street in which there was a sewer and was fitted for the use of the city water to which connection with the sewer was essential. The pipe inside of the house and outside of it was necessary to the use of the house, and a part of it and was included in the contract for building it. The house will be incomplete without the pipe, and it would pass by deed of the house as a part of it. It is immaterial whether the fee of the land in the street was or was not in the owner of the lot. It must be assumed that the pipe was rightfully laid to the séwer, even if the fee in the street was not in the respondent. The pipe did not become the property of the owner of the fee of the street, but belonged to the owner of the house, and he had an interest in the soil of the street to sustain his pipe which could pass by deed of the lot. Currier was employed by the respondent to erect the house, including the laying of the pipe.”
It will not be questioned that the owner of the fixtures and service had the right to the use of it after its construction to supply the premises with water, the purpose for which it was constructed, and that it was an improvement thereon, within the meaning of the statute. Neither will it be questioned that it will pass appurtenant to the premises upon a conveyance thereof, so far as the owner is concerned, nor that upon a sale of the premises under the mechanics’ lien law the owner’s right, title and interest therein would pass to the purchaser at such sale. Appellants, therefore, have the right to such service and improvement with the property so purchased, so far as the record here shows, it not being claimed that the adjacent owners, through whose lands the pipe extended beyond this property to the main have complained or objected to the use thereof. The purpose of the mechanics’ lien law is to secure the workmen and mechanic for the labor done and materials furnished in the improvement to the property, and it is to be liberally construed to effectuate this purpose. It was necessary to lay the line of pipe from the building to the main, in order that the service could be installed and the improvement made, and it is assumed that the pipe was rightfully laid through the lands of the adjoining owners to the water main. It did not thereby become their property, and the right to the use thereof belonged to the owner of the house upon which the improvement was made and passed to appellants under their purchase. The lien attached to the premises, building and ground upon which it was situate for the entire'value of the improvement, notwithstanding part of the pipe line was situated off the property on adjoining lands. For other cases permitting a mechanics’ lien for pipes laid in the streets and not entirely upon the premises upon which the lien was sought to be foreclosed, see Steger v. Arctic Refrig. Co., 89 Tenn. 458, 14 S. W. 1087; Wells v. Christian, 76 N. E. 518; O’Neal v. Taylor, 53 S. E. (W. Va.) 471; Nat’l Foundry & Pipe Works v. O’Connor Water Co., 52 Fed. 43.
Appellants rely strongly upon the case of Eufaula Water Co. v. Addyston Pipe Co., 8 So. 25, in support of their contention! That suit was to recover for piping materials furnished to be used in the construction of water works in the city of Eufaula and to fix a lien therefor and enforce it against a one-acre lot of the water company situated just beyond the corporate limits of the city. The lot was the site of the water company’s pumping station which forced the water into its stand pipe one-half mile distant, and the piping furnished was used in making the line between the pumping station and the standpipe, a distance of three thousand feet, and extended from a point twenty-five feet within the" lot in question outside the building thereon to the reservoir or standpipe, being for its whole length, except twenty-five feet, on land which did not belong to the water company, but in which it had an easement for the purpose of laying the pipe. The court denied the lien for the full amount of the claim. That was an attempt, however, to enforce a mechanics’ lien for materials furnished, which were used in the construction of a waterworks system for a city against a particular part of it, the lot on which was situated the pumping station, when the improvement' was not made upon the particular lot, but was an improvement of the entire water plant, and a sale of the particular part of the property against which the lien was attempted to be enforced if the purchaser were permitted to remove the property bought, would have destroyed the water supply system in which the entire city was interested. There is no analogy between that case and this, and we regard it as entitled to little weight in favor of appellant’s contention here.
The decree is affirmed.