The plaintiff commenced this action in the court of common? pleas of Butler county to foreclose a mechanic’s lien upon property of the defendant, John D. Schraden. In his petition he; set out that he had furnished materials for the erection of a dwelling house upon a lot of land described in the petition, be*598longing to John D. Sehraden; that the materials were furnished to John Hoover, who was the principal contractor; that he had not been paid, and that he had taken the necessary steps to secure a lien upon the premises in accordance with the provisions of the statute in such case made and provided. He further averred that the defendant, the Campbell Brothers Manufacturing Company, claimed a mechanic’s lien upon the premises, and asked that they be required to set up their lien in the cause. He further averred that his was the first and best lien upon the premises for the payment of the amount due him, $1,190.97. He prayed that the amount due from said John Hoover to him may be ascertained by the court, and that he be declared to have the first lien upon the premises described in the petition for the payment of said sum; that the priority of such lien may be ascertained together with the priority of the liens of the defendants, John Hoover and the Campbell Brothers Manufacturing Company; and that an order of sale of the premises may be made and that the premises be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of the liens and other costs; and he prayed for such other relief as was proper.
An answer to this petition was filed. The cause was heard in the court of common pleas and a judgment rendered in favor of the defendant, John D. Sehraden, and dismissing the plaintiff’s petition.
Before the hearing of the cause in the common pleas court the Campbell Brothers Manufacturing Company dismissed its answer and cross petition, disclaiming any lien upon the premises, thereby leaving the cause one between the plaintiff and John D. Sehraden, as to whether or not plaintiff has a mechanic’s lien upon the premises.
Notice of appeal was given in the common pleas court and the cause was brought into this court on appeal. The defendant, John D. Sehraden, has moved the court to dismiss the appeal on the ground that the action is not appealable.
The constitution of the state as amended in September, 1913, provides that the court of appeals shall have jurisdiction on appeal in chancery cases. The Supreme Court in the case of *599Wagner v. Armstrong, 93 Ohio St. 443 [113 N. E. 397], held in the second paragraph of the syllabus:
“All partition cases were originally cognizable in courts of chancery only and must still be regarded as chancery cases and therefore appealable under such terms and procedure as may be provided by law. ’ ’
The right to a mechanic’s lien is one that is given by statute, 103 O. L. 369. This statute not only gives the method of obtaining a mechanic’s lien, but also provides the method of enforcing the same. Among other things, it provides that unless suit is begun within sixty days after a notice is received from the owner of the premises to the owner of the lien, the lien shall be void. This statute also makes the lien valid for a period of six years from the date of the filing of the affidavit, and it provides for the priorities of the several liens that may be taken, whether liens of the head contractor, sub-contractor, material-men or laborers; and by provision of Sec. 14 of the act the method of bringing an action and the kind of an action to be brought is provided.
The majority of the court are of the opinion that this action is not appealable because it was not cognizable in chancery and is not a chancery case.
Section 27 Cyc. page 17, in defining a mechanic’s lien, says:
“A mechanic’s lien is a species of lien created by statute in most of the states, which exists in favor of persons who have performed work or furnished materials in and for the erection of a building. It is not a general, but a particular lien, and is in its nature peculiar and of an equitable character, and has been said to be somewhat analogous in its aims to the equitable lien of a vendor for unpaid purchase money of lands sold.
In the same volume Cyc. on pages 317 and 318, under the title of “Nature and Form of Remedy,” this language is employed :
“The right to a mechanic’s lien being entirely statutory, not only the right itself, but the method of enforcing it must depend upon the statute, and must be pursued in strict compliance with the terms of the statutes. Sometimes the statute does not assume to prescribe any special rules of practice or procedure, *600but leaves such matters to be regulated by' the general rules governing other actions of a similar nature, and in this case the-proceeding is an ordinary civil action and not a special proceeding.” '
Again on page 321 of the same volume we find this language:
“ Under some statutes the remedy for the enforcement of a mechanic’s lien has been prescribed by an ordinary action at law, or a proceeding in a court of law, not governed by equitable principles. Such a remedy has been held to be exclusive of the jurisdiction of a court of equity in the absentee of special circumstances demanding equitable interference, but a bill will lie when such peculiar circumstances exist as to render the interposition of a court of equity proper.”
2 Jones, Liens (3 ed.) Chap. 30, Sec. 1184, lays down this proposition:
“A mechanic’s lien upon real property is wholly a creature of statute. At common law a mechanic has no lien upon a building for labor done upon it. Equity raises no lien upon it other than the grantor’s lien for purchase money. There is no common law lien of any kind upon real property. ’ ’
And in the same volume, See. 1559, the author says:
“Whether the proceedings to enforce a mechanic’s lien are legal or equitable depends, of course, upon the terms of the statutes' providing the remedy. The statutes of several states assimilate the proceedings to’ enforce such a lien to the equitable-action to foreclose a mortgage, and under such statutes the proceeding is essentially a suit in equity.”
And in Sec. 1561 of the same volume, the author says:
“A court of equity can not assume jurisdiction to enforce-a- mechanic’s lien without the aid of a statute, in the absence of a special cause for equitable interposition. This lien is a statutory right, and the remedy for its enforcement is provided by statute, and can be pursued only before the tribunals and in. the mode the statute provides.” .
Again, in Sec. 1587, the author employs this language:
“In drafting the pleadings, the pleader should have the stab ute before him ,with the view to seeing that all the essential requirements are met in the allegations of'the petition or com*601plaint. The statute which gives a mechanic a lien is in delegation of the common law, and a lien can be established only by a clear compliance with the requirements of the statute. The petition must allege everything essential to making out a case under the statute.”
The Supreme Court in thé case of Dunn v. Kanmacher, 28 Ohio St. 497, 503, 504, in passing upon the question of the ap-pealability of an action arising under the mechanic’s lien statute, which was a statute existing prior to the adoption of the act in 103 O. L. 369, employs this language in speaking of the nature of the claim of the right of action under thé mechanic’s lien:
“What was the nature of that right of action and upon what was it founded? It was their right to have the money in the hands of the board of trustees applied to the payment of their claim against Kanmacher and Stark; and that right was founded solely on the statute entitled ‘An act to create a lien in favor of mechanics, and others, in certain cases,’ passed March 11, 1843, and the act amendatory of and supplementary thereto, passed May 1, 1871. Without statutory aid, the claim of plaintiffs against the board of trustees would be wholly destitute of merit either at law or in equity; but under the statute, upon the filing with the board of trustees an attested account of the plaintiff’s demand against Kanmacher & Stark, it became the duty of the-board of trustees to retain out of subsequent payments due, or to become due, to Kanmacher & Stark, the amount of plaintiffs’ account and for their benefit.”
And, further along, the court says, page 504:
“Where a statute gives a new right, and also prescribes the remedy for its violation, the remedy so prescribed must be taken as exclusive, unless it appears from the statute that the legislature intended otherwise.”
And the conclusion of the court is:
1 ‘ Hence, in an action between the plaintiffs and the board of trustees, neither party was entitled to an appeal from the final judgment therein. ’ ’
There is no doubt that the mechanic’s lien had no existence in chancery, and has no existence whatsoever outside of the *602statute which created the right and also furnished the remedy for the enforcement of the right.
Chief Justice Nichols, in a very elaborate and well considered opinion in the eases above cited, Wagner v. Armstrong, supra, has made some very lucid and pertinent statements with reference to the case at hand. In discussing the question of whether or not an action is a chancery case, he employs- this language:
“Appealable cases, therefore, must be such cases as are now recognized as equitable in their nature; and perhaps the better way to express it would be: cases that were recognized as equitable actions before the adoption of the code of civil procedure; for while our code established under one grand division all actions whether of an equitable or a legal nature and called them civil actions, yet there was no attempt to change the nature of the remedy.”
And again, he says:
“The older authorities really throw more light on the subject than the more modern ones, and quite naturally, for before the consolidation of all remedial actions into the so-called civil actions, the line of demarcation between cases in chancery and those at law was more clearly drawn and was under consideration by the courts much more frequently than at present.”
And after quoting many authorities:
“From these authorities the doctrine may be safely laid down that a case concededly chancery in its nature and calling for an equitable remedy will continue so in spite of the fact that the law may have formally adopted the offspring of chancery. In short, once a chancery case, always a chancery case, at least for jurisdictional purposes. ’ ’
Chief Justice Nichols in giving the court’s conclusion as to the nature of chancery eases, says:
“We will not attempt to categorically and finally answer the much mooted question: What is a chancery ease ? It would be a difficult if not a dangerous thing to do, and of doubtful benefit. It ought, however, to be approached, generally speaking, not from the modern viewpoint, but rather from the old-time conception. Especially would this be so with reference to well-*603recognized equitable remedies known to the courts prior to the adoption of the code of civil procedure.
‘! This much, however, may safely be said: A chancery case is one in which, according to the usages and practices in courts of chancery prior to and at the time of the adoption of the Code of Civil Procedure, remedies were awarded in accordance with the principles of equity and not in accordance with the rules of law. And the proper definition of the term in our new constitution can*not be regarded as affected by the provisions of statutes relating to appeals, nor by the introduction bodily of equitable remedies into our statutes. ’ ’
We think it sufficient to have quoted this much from the opinion of Chief Justice Nichols, to support the conclusion which the majority of this court has reached.
A mechanic’s lien being purely a creature of the statute, and the method of enforcing the lien being provided also by statute, such action to enforce it is not a chancery case. Such a right and such a claim were unknown both in chancery and at common law, and unknown before the adoption of our code. This being true, we think it inevitably follows as a correct conclusion that under the present constitution as amended September, 1913, the action before us is not a chancery case, and is not appealable.
The motion of the defendant Schraden to dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction in this court to entertain the cause must therefore be granted.
Jones (E. H.), J., concurs.