In this case, the plaintiff, a furnisher of material to the main sub-contractor, sued the main contractor and his surety for a balance due by the main sub-contractor. The main contractor thereupon «ailed in warranty the main sub-contractor and the latter’s surety and the hast named surety in turn called in warranty its indemnitor. Judgment was rendered in favor of plaintiff against the main contractor and his *274surety, with like judgment over in favor of said main contractor against the main snb contractor’s surety and with like judgment over in favor of the latter surety against its indemnitor. The main con- ' tractor, the surety on his bond and the surety on the bond of the main sub-contractor each prosecutes a separate, suspensive appeal and the indemnitor prosecutes a devolutive appeal. All appeals have been consolidated in this court. No briefs in support of the suspensive appeals have been filed and the respective attorneys for these appellants, at the hearing in this court, submitted the cause without argument and with the -statement of their conviction that the judgment appealed from is correct and should be affirmed.
The indemnitor charges that the transcript -does not contain the proceedings and proof upon which plaintiff’s claim and the judgment in its favor is founded, but in fact the record' is apparently complete and the alleged deficiency does not exist. It is further claimed that there is no proof that the material which plaintiff furnished went into the 'oonstruict-ion of the building. However it is proved that such material was required for the erection of the building; that it was actually delivered there from time to time as needed during the progress of the work ■and that material of that identical .character and quality was actually used in the construction of the building; and this is -such la prima facie showing, under ouir builder’s laws, that the whole of the material was used in the construction of the building, as would cast upon the defendant, as a matter of defense, the burden of proving what part, if any, was not thus used or was diverted to other purposes.
It i-s likewise charged that the “swurn -statement” -of the claim was not in conformity with Act 134 of 1903, in that it did not disclose the character, quality or description of the material furnished. The act does not require *275such disclosure, and a sworn statement which, as in the present instance, sets out in detail the dates and amounts of the several items of debit and of credit and discloses whether the claim is for the furnishing of labor or of material or of both, evidences a compliance with the statu-' tory requirements.
April 3, 1911. Rehearing refused, Mjay 15, 1911.Phere is no error in the judgment appealed from and it is affirmed.