This is a suit in equity brought in the Circuit Court of Mason county on the 19tk day of December, 1892, by plaintiff *700against J. S. Spencer, the Point Pleasant Furniture Company, etc., to enforce a mechanic's lien against the property of the furniture company and for other relief.
On the 10th day of May, 1893, four of the defendants suggested the non-residence of plaintiff, and required security for costs; and, the security having been given, they demurred to plaintiff’s bill. The court sustained the demurrer, and plaintiff desiring to amend, on its motion the cause was remanded to rules for that purpose. The amended bill having been filed, and the cause again on the court docket for hearing, the same four defendants demurred to the amended bill. The court, on December 19,1893, sustained the demurrer, and the plaintiff declining to further amend, the bill and' amended bill were dismissed, with costs, and this appeal was allowed the plaintiff. The grounds of demurrer are:
First. The bill and amended bill are multifarious.
Second. Plaintiff does not, by its pleading, show itself to have a valid mechanic’s lien; has not complied with the statute, and therefore has nothing that fastens the claim to the property for its satisfaction; is a mere creditor at large, with np standing in a court of equity as a lienor against the property in question.
In our chancery practice it is usual in an amended bill to introduce supplementary matter, if necessary, without any additional designation of the bill itself. The bill is taken for what it shows itself to be, without regard to the name that may be given it. The plaintiff may, at any time before or after the appearance of the defendant, in the vacation of the court, file in the office an amended bill or supplemental bill, and have a summons b> answer it. But if the court shall be of opinon that the same was improperly filed, it will dismiss such bill, at the costs of the plaintiff. This is done on motion, not by demurrer.
The scheme of the original bill is: That'plaintiff has a mechanic’s lien on the real property of the Point Pleasant Furniture Company for one thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents, duly recorded on July 12,1892, but that the furniture company had, on the 11th day of December, 1891, by deed of trust of that date, conveyed its *701property to defendant J. P. R. B. Smith, trustee, to secure the payment of four notes — one for two* thousand eight hundred and seven dollars, to J. J. Bight; and three others, making five thousand dollars in all — payable in ten years from that date, but interest payable annually. The trustee was authorized to sell under the deed of trust for cash in default of payment of principal when due, or of interest, or on failure of the furniture company to keep the property insured to at least the amount of five thousand dollars. That the trustee, in violation of his trust, without giving the notice .required by law, and before the trust was due, vis. on the 5th day of December, 1892, sold the property, not for cash,, but on credit, to defendant James P. Hayes for nineteen-thousand three hundred dollars, a grossly inadequate price. That the property sold -was worth at least fifty thousand dollars. That although the sale was for cash, yet there was a contract and agreement between the trustee and defendant Hayesby which Hayes was to pay only a part of the purchase-money in cash, and the balance on time, thus giving Hayes,, the purchaser, an unfair advantage over the other bidders,, which ought not to have been permitted. That defendant Hayes paid but a part of the purchase-money, and has failed and refused to comply with the terms of sale. That the trustee has failed and refused to pay plaintiff’s mechanic’s lien, and the mechanic’s lien of the defendant the Moore Carving Machine Company, amounting to one thousand two hundred and sixty two dollars. Plaintiff prayed that the sale under the deed of trust might be set aside, and the property legally and properly resold; and after payment of the debts secured by the trust deed, plaintiffs’ claim should be next paid; but if the sale made by the trustee should be held to¡ be legally and properly made, that in that event the trustee should be directed to pay the mechanic’s lien next after the debts secured by the deed of trust; and for general relief. The same-allegations are repeated in the amended bill, with' the additional allegation that on. the 6th day of February, 1893, a judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff against the defendant the Point Pleasant Furniture Company for one-thousand seven hundred and seventy two dollars and thirty *702cents, being on the same account for which it had its said mechanic’s lien; and on the same day a judgment was rendered against said furniture company in favor of defendant the Moore Carving Machine Company for one thousand two hundred and ninety five dollars! and fifty five cents, the same account for which it had said mechanic’s lien. Of these judgments copies are filed as exhibits. That the trustee has, since the sale, and out of the proceeds, paid oil all the other liens, viz. the defendant Tinsley, the Bradford Milling Company, the Buss Machine Works, the Lane & Bodley Company, and Laidlaw & Dunn Company, although all their liens were subsequent to the lien of plaintiff and the lien of the Moore Machine Company, and that there is still left in the hands of the trustee the sum of three thousand and twenty six dollars and seventy five cents.
This did not have the effect to render the bill multifarious. I know of no reason why plaintiff might not properly have obtained against its debtor the furniture company a judgment 'at law for its claim, as was done in this case. Such! was its right whether the mechanic’s lien was valid or invalid. It obtained such judgment without objection. Why should it not inform the court that it had obtained a judgment at law against its debtor for such claim, which it had been and was seeking by its original bill to enforce as a mechanic’s lien? It did not and could not affect the mechanic’s lien. It did not make it better or worse, but made its pleadings correspond with the change in fact which had taken place in regard to defendant’s account. There are several reasons why it may bé permitted to obtain its judgment at law: First. The plaintiff thereby establishes the justice of its claim, and ascertains the amount; so that there can be no claim that defendant has been deprived of his right of trial by jury. Second. It is in no way inconsistent with the lien. A party who-has a vendor’s lien may also sue and obtain a judgment at law, thus making his claim also a judgment lien. Tim'd. That this may be done is contemplated by, the statute itself, for section 12 of chapter 75 of the Code (the chapter which authorizes the creation of the lien) provides that “the court of chancery may, in addition, give a personal decree in favor *703of such, creditors for the amount of their claims against any party as to whom they may be established, such decree to have the effect of and to be enforced as other decrees for money.” Section 1 of chapter 139 provides that “a decree or order requiring the payment of money shall have the effect of a judgment * * * ‘for such money/ and be embraced by the word ‘judgment/ where used in this or any of the three succeeding chapters.” And section 5 of the same chapter provides that “every judgment for money rendered in this state heretofore or hereafter against any person, shall be a lien on all real estate of or to which such person shall be possessed or entitled, at or after the date of such judgment;” and by section 7 “such lien may be enforced in a court of equity.” See Phil. Mech. Liens (3d Ed.) § 448, p. 760; Bedsole v. Peters, 79 Ala. 133. See, also, Glacius v. Black, 67 N. Y. 563. I can therefore sec no reason why the judgment obtained at law in the interim should in any degree add to or take from the mechanic’s lien, or how the bringing into the case by the amended or supplemental bill this new status of plaintiff’s claim could have the slightest effect in making its bill multifarious. It may be that the court would decline to enforce it because of its being a new lien, which did not exist when the suitwas brought; butit is the same claim which lias now passed into judgment, and that allegation does not render the bill multifarious, as may be easily shown by suppos-ingthefactandallegationto be that the judgment at law had been obtained before the institution of the suit in chancery. See Guano Co. v. Heatherly, 38 W. Va. 409 (18 S. E. Rep. 611).
The deed of trust is an older and higher valid lien on the same property. That the plaintiff concedes, but its complaint is that the trustee made a sale improperly and illegally, to plaintiff’s injury, and it asks that such salé may be set aside, and the property legally and properly sold under the direction and supervision of the court. But if the court should hold such sale by th'e trustee to be valid, then plaintiff asks that the surplus may be applied pro tanto in satisfaction of its lien. As to this, the plaintiff alleges but one state of facts, or, if two, they are not inconsistent; and it adapts its alternative prayer for relief to meet each one of two views *704that may be taken of this state of facts. If plaintiff’s view is correct, that an illegal sale bas been made, to its injury, then one prayer meets that view of the case; but if the sale is valid, or is one of which plaintiff can make no proper complaint because not injured, then its other prayer is that it may be paid out of the surplus. It is the common every day case of a bill framed with a double aspect, and it is based on one set of consistent facts, and no two contradictory or inconsistent states of facts are alleged.
Each one of these four defendants who demur is a proper party, and they have no right to complain for other people, who do not themselves complain that such other persons are not proper parties defendant. James P. Hayes is a proper party, because he was the purchaser of the property at the trustee’s sale, which plaintiff says was illegal and invalid; and which it asks to have set aside; the other three, because they are creditors by mechanics’ liens, who have been paid out of the’proceeds of such sale, whose liens are alleged to be younger and inferior in order of rightful payment to the lien of plaintiff.
This brings us to the main question discussed by counsel, does plaintiff show itself to have a valid subsisting mechanic’s lien on the.real estate in controversy? The bill must allege all the facts necessary to create the lien, for it is prarely a creation of the statute, having nothing else to stand on. This is but a special application of the universal rule that the decree pronounced must stand justified by the pleadings as well as by the proof, and here it is decided asi though all the allegations were true; for reasonable presumptions of fact, are admitted by demurrer, as well as the matters expressly alleged; but it does not admit matter of inference or argument. For example, in this case, plaintiff expressly alleges that its lien is valid; that all things required by the statute to create it were properly done and performed, averring them severally and specifically. -But this is not taken as true, for the lien itself is exhibited, and as to the construction to be put upon it, that is a question of law for the court.
A lien is said to'be the ligament which binds certain property to a certain debt or claim for its payment or satisfaction. *705At common-law it was the fact of possession in certain cases. It may be created by contract expressly or impliedly, or it may be created by statute. Prior to the first day of July, 1850, in this state, the vendor of real estate had an implied lien for the payment of the purchase-money, even after a conveyance in which no lien was retained. Since that time he only has such lien by expressly reserving it on the face of the conveyance; but as long as he retains the legal title, he has the power of reserving it, unless he expressly agree not to reserve it. “A mechanic has a lien at common-law for labor done upon a cliattle as long as he retains possession of it, but a mechanic or laborer can not retain possession of real property upon which he has performed labor.” 2 Jones Liens, § 1184.
Themechanic’slien on buildings, etc., and the land on which they are erected, as we know it, is the creature of statute, and was unknown at common-law or in equity. Phil. Mech. Liens (3d Ed.) § 1. But soon after the adoption of the federal constitution the states commenced to pass statutes creating such liens, in order to encourage the erection of buildings, and the improvement of town lots and real estate generally. Maryland came first, with the act of December 19, 1791; Pennsylvania with the act of April 1, 1803. Our first act upon the subject was passed February 21, 1843 (Acts 1842-43, p 52). See Code, 1849 (Ed. 1860) p. 567. And for labor done and material furnished see act of 1852 (page 242) local to Alexandria. The whole subject has been of gradual growth; but it has been extended, advanced and encouraged and ■methodized until it now prevails in all states; and “while each state may have its own mechanic’s lien law, which is rarely identical in every particular with that of another, yet all of them, having the same object in view, are, in their main provisions, very much alike, and in some instances mere re-enactments of each other.” See Phil. Mech. Liens, § 8 et seq.; 2 Jones Liens, § 1186 et seq. Our law on the subject is found in chapter 75 of the Code. See. Ed. 1891, p. 652. Our first case on the general subject is Laege v. Bossieux, (1859) 15 Gratt. 83, opinion by Judge Lee, where the act is given a construction plainly intended not to restrict, but to *706advance tbe remedy, applying to it tbe general principles of equity, and not confining it to tbe act, after tbe lien is once created. But our present law, in its main outlines, first took definite shape in tbe Code of 1868. See chapter 75, p. 475. Bodley v. Denmead (1866) 1 W. Va. 249, was under tbe act of February 2, 1853, which was local, being confined to tbe city of Wheeling. Under tbe general law we have Mayes v. Ruffners (1875) 8 W. Va. 384; McKnight v. Washington, Id. 666; Stouts v. Golden, 9 W. Va. 231; Manuf'g Co. v. Brockmeyer, 18 W. Va. 586; Phillips v. Roberts, 26 W. Va. 783; McGugin v. Railroad Co., 33 W. Va. 63 (10 S. E. Rep. 36); City of Wheeling v. Baer, 36 W. Va. 777 (15 S. E. Rep. 979; Richardson v. Railway Co., 37 W. Va. 641 (17 S. E. Rep. 195).
In this case, tbe plaintiff, for an agreed consideration and price, on tbe 10th day of June, 1892, furnished, delivered and placed on tbe premises of the Point Pleasant Furniture Company, in Mason county, W Va., certain machinery in tbe bill and proceedings mentioned and described, at tbe agreed price of one thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents,’ ceasing to labor, etc., on that day, and filing in tbe clerk’s office of tbe County Court of Mason county, for record, their account, on tbe 12th day of July, 1892.
By section 2 of chapter 75 it is provided, among other things, that “every mechanic * * * or other person, who shall perform any work or labor upon, or furnish any material or machinery for constructing i:' * any house * * * manufactory or other building * * * fixtures * * * or other structure by virtue of a contract with the owner or his authorized agent, shall have a lien to secure the payment of the same, upon such house or other structure, and upon ihe interest of the owner in the lot of land upon which the same may stand or to which it may be removed.” Section 4: “Every lien provided for in the second and third sections shall be discharged unless the person desiring to avail himself thereof shall, within sixty days after he ceases to labor on or furnish material or machinery for such building or other structure, file with the clerk of the County Court of the county, in which the same is situated, a just and true account of the amount due him after allow*707ing all credits, together with a description of the property intended to be covered by the lien, sufficiently accurate for identification, with the name of the owner or owners of the property, if known; which account shall be sworn to by the person claiming the lien or some person on his behalf.” The account required to be filed for record must show four things: (1) The just and true account due the lienor after allowing all credits. (2) A description of the property intended to be covered by the lien, sufficiently accurate for identification. (3) The name of the owner of the property, if known. (4) The account must be sworn to by the person claiming the lien, or by some one in his- behalf.
The account filed in this case consists of an itemized statement of the material and machinery furnished and work and, labor done, with a sworn statement thereto' attached as part thereof; and the two must be read together for our purpose as parts of one whole, called by the clerk who recorded it the “mechanic’s lien.” In this case the sworn statement says: (1) There are no credits or set-offs to said account other than are stated in the account, which is just and true, and for which defendant is debtor to plaintiff; and that there remain» unpaid, after allowing all set-offs and credits, the sum of one thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents. (2) That the property upon which the work and labor was performed and for ■which said material was furnished, as charged in the foregoing account, and upon which it is hereby intended to take a mechanic’s lien, is situate in the town of Point Pleasant, Mason county, W. Va., being two certain lots (giving ihe number and location of each) and a certain tract of land adjoining (giving its metes and bounds) “being the same lots and tract of land conveyed to the Point Pleasant Furniture Company by the Kanawha Lumber and. Furniture Company, by its deed, bearing date on the 11th. day of December, 1S91, and of record in the clerk’s office of' the County Court of said Mason county in, Deed Book No. 51,, pp. 342 and 343, to which deed reference is hereby made.” The-just and true account of the amount due, which is required to> be sworn to and filed, cao not mean only an account past due (one on which a suit can then be maintained) but it means *708•owing (tlie state of indebtedness) whether then enforceable by suit or not Under any other construction, it would be impossible for the builder to give the owner of the property any time in which to pay, and at the same time acquire his mechanic’s lien, whereas section 11 of chapter 75 treats him as a valid lienor, who, at the time of filing his lien, can give the owner any extension of time in, which to pay, short of six months. Why should he be required to swear that it is past due when it has five months to run? See Albrecht v. Lumber Co. (1890) 126 Ind. 318 (26 N. E. Rep. 157). On its face it appears to be due. Hills v. Ohlig (1888) 63 Cal. 104; Phil. Mech. Lien, §§ 282, 290. As to these two requisites, no complaint can be made that they are insufficient, or in any respect defective. But complaint is made that there is no sufficient designation of the name of the owners, and I think the objection would be well taken if the designation given in the description of the property stood alone. But it does not, and when read in connection with the account proper, it names and designates the owner in a plain and unequivocal manner; one that is obvious, and can not be misunderstood; and is at least a substantial, if not a literal compliance with the statute. In the account, proper plaintiff states that the machinery furnished "was delivered and placed on the premises of the said Point Pleasant Furniture Company, and that the extra work and labor was done in and upon said premises in the affidavit hereto attached, described;” and in the affidavit it is called “the property,” being two lots and five acres, which were conveyed to the Point Pleasant Furniture Company by deed dated December 11,1891, as above recited. The.president of the blowpipe company swore to the account in behalf of his company, and virtually said in so. many words: “This account for one thousand seven hundred and twelve dollars and fifty cents is a just and true account, due said company, after allowing all credits. The following is a description of the property intended to be covered by the lien, viz.: Lot No. 1 in tier 6, and lot No. 1 in tier 5, of the town of Point Pleasant, and a certain tract of land, estimated to contain five acres (giving the metes and bounds) being the same lots and tract of land conveyd to the Point Pleasant *709Furniture Company by the Kanawha Lumber and Furniture Company by its deed bearing date on the 11th day oí December, 1891, and of record in the clerk’s office, etc., to which deed reference is here made; which said premises described in said deed are the premises of the said Point Pleasant Furniture Company.” “Premises,” the real estate conveyed (in this case conveyed in fee simple) with reference to the deed of conveyance, is also used in describing the property. I do not see how any more positive, explicit and unequivocal designation could be made of the name of the owner. It is in this regard a substantial observance of and compliance with the requirements of the statute, that has been held to be sufficient. Mayes v. Ruffners, 8 W. Va. 384. See Hutch. W. Va. Treat. § 958, form 250. See Phil. Mech. Liens (3d. Ed.) § 345; 2 Jones, Liens, § 1400; 1 Bart. Ch. Prac. 166; 15 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law 125. Thus read, it not only designates the owner, giving him information of the amount and character of the claim intended to be fixed as a lien upon his property, but gives to all notice that he has an estate in fee simple, and the legal title to the property, showing when, how, and to ■what extent and interest he became owner. On the subject generally, see Montandon v. Deas, 14 Ala. 33; Lyon v. McGuffey, 4 Pa. St. 126; Chapin v. Paper Works, 30 Conn. 461; Rees v. Ludington, 13 Wis. 276.
Being of opinion that the plaintiff has shown a valid, subsisting méchanic’s lien on the property, it is not necessary to discuss the question whether it has also a judgment lien. This would depend on the question whether the three thousand and twenty six dollars and seventy five cents resulting from the sale under the deed of trust, and paid over by the trustee, and now in the hands of the general receiver of the court, is to be regarded as real or personal property. The general rule is that where real estate is sold under a deed of trust for the payment of the debt charged therein, the character of the property is only regarded as changed from realty to personalty, so far as may be necessaray to pay such debt, and the residue is still treated in equity as real estate. The question, however, may depend upon the provision in the deed of trust; but in this case there is none. It is silent on the *710subject; and it would be to some extent determined by tlie language of the statute, which provides that the trustee shall pay the surplus, if any, to the grantor, his heirs, personal representatives, or assigns. The owner being a corporation did not have the effect to change it into personalty, for it is authorized to hold a certain amount of real estate (see chapters 52-54, Code) and as the lien of the judgment, if any, is wholly independent of the deed of trust, is created by law as applicable to the judgment debtor’s real estate, a court of equity would regard it as still realty, if not impressed by some other act or order of the court with the character of personalty, before plaintiff’s judgment was obtained; and no such act or order directing such conversion appears in this record. So that if it were necessary to thepoint, such surplus, after paying the trust debts, would still be regarded as land. See Fowler v. Lewis’ Adm’r, 36 W. Va. 112, 150, 156 (14 S. E. Rep. 447).
From the view of the case here expressed it results that the demurrer of the defendants the Buss Machine Works, the Lane & Bodley Company, the Laidlaw & Dunn Company, and James P. Hayes to plaintiff’s amended bill should have been overruled.
' Therefore the decree of September 19,1898, sustaining the demurrer and dismissing plaintiff’s bill and amended bill is reversed, and the cause is remanded for1 further proceedings to be had therein. Reversed and remanded.