It is the contention of the plaintiff that food used in a necessary boarding-house for laborers employed in the prosecution of public work provided for in a contract secured by a bond given pursuant to Section 6266, L. O. L., as amended, is included within the terms “labor and materials,” and protected by the statutory bond.
It appears that upon the trial of the case the theory of the respondents was to the contrary. There is some contention upon the part of the respondents that the trial court did not find that the board of the men engaged in the labor was necessary “for any prosecution of the work.” We do not so understand the findings. In any event, the undisputed testimony in the case is that the board of the men furnished by the subcontractor near the work was absolutely necessary *7in order to retain the laborers and obtain their assistance in the prosecution of the work.
1. Section 6266, L. O. L. as amended, was enacted to protect all persons supplying a contractor performing public work, labor or materials for any prosecution of the work provided for in the contract. The law was intended for the benefit Of the individual assisting in the furtherance of the undertaking, and also for the benefit of the public. It should be given a liberal construction in order to carry out the legislative intent: School Dist. No. 30 v. Alameda Const. Co., 87 Or. 132 (169 Pac. 507, 788); Columbia County v. Consolidated Const. Co., 83 Or. 251, 260, 268 (163 Pac. 438); Multnomah Co. v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co., 87 Or. 198, 207 (170 Pac. 525, L. R. A. 1918C, 685); Philadelphia v. Stewart, 195 Pa. St. 309 (45 Atl. 1056).
2. Our statute is practically a counterpart of the federal act of August 13, 1894, from which it was derived. Since this case was tried in the Circuit Court, a parallel case has been determined by the Supreme Court of the United States: Brogan v. National Surety Co., 246 U. S. 257 (62 L. Ed. 703, L. R. A. 1918D, 776, 38 Sup. Ct. Rep. 250). The facts in that case were these: The Standard Contracting Company undertook to deepen the channel of St. Mary’s Eiver, Michigan, located “in a comparative wilderness at some distance from any settlement. There were no hotels or boarding-houses,” and the contractor “was compelled to provide board and lodging for its laborers.” Groceries and provisions of the value of $4,613.87 furnished it by Brogan were used by the contractor in its boarding-house, and were supplied “in the prosecution of the work provided for in the contract and the bond upon which the suit is based. They were necessary to and wholly consumed in such work.” The *8number of men employed averaged eighty. They were “boarded” by the contractor under an arrangement by which the contractor was to board them and deduct therefor $22.50 per month from their wag’es. The contract and the bond executed by the National Surety Company bound the contractor to “make full payment to all persons supplying him with labor or materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in” the contract.
It was held that groceries and provisions furnished the contractor, and so consumed by the laborers, were materials used “in the prosecution” of the work within the meaning of the federal act and the bond given to secure the contract.
Without taking into consideration the extra statutory words contained in the bond in suit in the present case, those things which are necessary in the prosecution of the work provided for in the contract are protected as “labor and materials,” although such supplies a're not physically incorporated into the work. Such materials are embraced within the provisions of Section 6266, L. O. L. as amended, and are included in the bond given pursuant thereto: Brogan v. National Surety Co., 246 U. S. 257 (62 L. Ed. 703, L. R. A. 1918D, 776, 38 Sup. Ct. Rep. 250); Portland v. New England Casualty Co., 78 Or. 195, 201, 202 (152 Pac. 253); Baker City Mercantile Co. v. Idaho Cement Pipe Co., 67 Or. 372, 377, 379 (136 Pac. 23); Illinois Surety Co. v. John Davis Co., 244 U. S. 376 (61 L. Ed. 1206, 37 Sup. Ct. Rep. 614); Title Guaranty & Trust Co. v. Puget Sound Engineering Works, 163 Fed. 168, 178, 179 (89 C. C. A. 618); City Trust, Safe Deposit & Surety Co., v. United States to Use of Bryant, 147 Fed. 155, 158 (77 C. C. A. 397); United States for the Use of Standard Furniture Co. v. Aetna Indemnity Co., 40 *9Wash. 87, 91, 92 (82 Pac. 172); Pittsburg Coal Co. v. Southern Asphalt & Construction Co., 138 Tenn. 154 (196 S. W. 490, 491); City of Pendleton v. Jeffery & Bufton, 95 Or. 447 (188 Pac. 176).
Our statute is fully as broad as the federal act. If there is any difference, the Oregon act is garnished with the stronger words where provision is made for security for the payment of “labor or materials for any prosecution of the work provided for in such contracts.”
Hess & Skinner Eng. Co. v. Turney (Tex. Civ. App.), 207 S. W. 171, was an act on a contractor’s bond required by a statute like ours. The syllabus reads thus:
“Where a contractor, in constructing a bridge, in order to facilitate work, had laborers take their meals in camp instead of going into town for them, the labor in cooking such meals was labor performed in the prosecution of the work, and for such the contractor’s surety would be liable.”
It is stated in the opinion at page 175 of 207 S. W.:
“Food was essential to the laborers, and it was necessary that it be cooked. It facilitated the work to have laborers take their meals in the camp, instead of going to town for them.”
In Pacific Wood & Coal Co. v. Oswald, 179 Cal. 712 (178 Pac. 854), it was held that items furnished a subcontractor, consisting of hay and feed for horses and mules used in doing road work, are covered by a bond requiring a public contractor under such a statute to pay for materials furnished for or in doing the work, irrespective of the presence or absence of the word ‘ ‘ supplies. ’ ’ The opinion was to the same effect in the case of United States v. Lowrance, 252 Fed. 122 (164 C. C. A. 234). It is there stated:
*10“The act of Congress ‘and the surety bonds given according to its provisions should be liberally, not narrowly, construed. The typical lien laws of the states and the decisions of the courts upon them should, for the most part, be put aside.”
The following have been held nominated in such a bond: Trucking from a steamer landing on an island where the work was to be done to the particular locality of the work: American Surety Co. v. Lawrenceville Cement Co. (C. C.), 110 Fed. 717; coal supplied to a contractor and used to operate hoisting and pumping engines employed in the performance of a contract for the construction of a drydock: City etc. Trust Co. v. United States, 147 Fed. 155 (77 C. C. A. 397); drawings and patterns made for the contractor constructing a steam vessel for the United States, from which to make molds and castings; also towing in the delivery of materials, wharfage paid in connection with such delivery, and the local transfer or hauling of materials; Title Guaranty & Trust Co. v. Crane Co., 219 U. S. 24 (55 L. Ed. 72, 31 Sup. Ct. Rep. 140); use of equipment in the erection of a naval training station: United States v. Illinois Surety Co., 226 Fed. 653 (141 C. C. A. 409).
In the instant case F. A. Hadley, the subcontractor, testified in part as follows:
“A. I had about between eight and nine miles of work on the Columbia Highway, subcontracted or as a station man.
‘ ‘ Q. Now, what were your duties by way of that subcontract with Peterson and Johnson?
“A. To grade a certain portion of the Columbia Highway.
“Q. Now, how many men did you employ on the average on the work there?
*11“ A. I couldn’t say as- to how many, my payroll would show, I suppose all the way from thirty-five to as high as one hundred.
“Mr. Veness: How did you provide for the feeding of the men?
“A. With a boarding camp.
“Q. What is the necessity of a boarding camp around camps of that kind?
“A. Well, I don’t know how you would keep a bunch of men together out there in the woods unless you run a boarding-house to feed them or to hold them there. * # 19
The court remarked:
“But the mere incident of the running of the boarding-house where the men are bound to lose more or less. time by reason of inclement weather or other conditions, the boarding-house goes on just the same, the crew is kept together just the same, is kept together for the purpose of carrying out that contract, and they have to be fed while they are kept together, and even though he charged them for their board at that time and didn’t pay their wages, it would be the board of the men and a part of that work, as the furnishing of supplies is a part of that work. I am not passing on that yet, but as far as keeping the establishment open, that is one of the essentials of the business.”
Witness Hadley further stated, in effect, that the meat supplied by Frye & Company to him was all used in boarding the men; that there was no other known place for them to eat; that occasionally one of the engineers on about twenty-eight miles of the road who boarded at Astoria, four and one-half miles away from Hadley’s camp, and usually brought their lunch, would come in and get a meal and no charge was made therefor; and that one of the employees had a visitor for about two days.
The fact that a small courtesy was shown to an occasional guest in a sparsely settled civilized section of *12the country we deem of no importance, although much is attempted to be made thereof in defendants’ brief.
3. Plaintiff requested the court to find, among other things:
“That it was necessary for the prosecution of the work in question that said Hadley maintain a boarding camp at each of his construction camps, in order that the laborers could have a place convenient to said work to be fed, and except for the maintenance of such boarding camps, said Hadley would have been unable to keep said laborers together and at work upon said job; each of said construction camps being necessarily a long distance from any place where board could be secured by said laborers.”
. Error is assigned upon the refusal of the court to find as requested. The uncontradicted testimony supports the requested finding, and, if the finding made was not intended to be to the same effect, we think the substance of the request should have been embraced in the portrayal of facts. There is no evidence in the case supporting any different finding in this respect.
The meat furnished by the use plaintiff for food for the laborers, under the circumstances of the case, was absolutely necessary in any prosecution of the work provided for in the contract. It was supplied upon the faith and credit of the bond sued on, and is protected thereby. It facilitated the work to have the -laborers take their meals in camp near the construction, instead of traveling a long distance for them. The camp arrangement was practically the only way the work could have been successfully prosecuted.
We suppose it would be conceded that if the act under consideration enumerated “supplies, labor, or materials,” that meat so furnished workmen would be protected by the statute. If the statute read, “all persons supplying * # supplies, labor or materials” *13the word “supplies” would practically he a repetition and would not add to the force of the law. For good measure we quote from the note in 27 L. R. A. (N. S.) at page 601:
“The courts that have construed contractor’s bonds to public or gwasi-public corporations and officers, conditioned upon the payment of laborers and material-men, ;as valid contracts, both of indemnity to the nominal obligees and guaranties to the unnamed beneficiaries, upon which the latter can recover, when taken without explicit and direct authority from any .statute — and they greatly outnumber the tribunals which hold the opposite view — are by no means united upon the grounds of their conclusions. Some hold that the power to take such a bond is an incident to the power to construct the public work by contract, and that statutory authority for the latter is, by implication, statutory authority for the former. Others hold statutory authority unnecessary, and the bond a common-law obligation, voluntarily executed, such as any obligee may take, and the taking of which is warranted upon broad grounds of public policy. It is not at all necessary to decide upon the merits of these respective theories; suffice it to say that the weight of authority ■ appears to be that when the language of a bond is sufficiently precise and full to create an explicit obligation to pay laborers and materialmen, then, for either the one or the other reason, it is valid, and enforceable at the suit of the beneficiaries.”
The same principle is announced in several Oregon precedents: See The Home v. Selling, 91 Or. 428, 435 (179 Pac. 261), and cases there cited. See, also, 13 C. J. 705, Section 815, where a wealth of authorities are cited; annotation, L. R. A. 1917B, 1015.
The trial court erred in its conclusion of law to the effect that the meats furnished by Frye & Company did not come within the provisions of Section 6266, L. O. L., as amended by Chapter 27 of the Laws of 1913, *14and that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover from any of the defendants except F. A. Hadley. The judgment of the lower court will therefore be reversed.
The whole of the testimony in the case is contained in the record, which is complete. From the findings of fact made by the trial court, taken in the light of the undisputed testimony, the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment against the respondents as prayed for in the complaint, which will be entered: Article VII, Section 3, Constitution of Oregon.
Reversed. Judgment Rendered.