Appellees James J. Brennan and Arthur B. Hogue, as plaintiffs below, commenced this suit to recover a money judgment and to enforce a lien against appellant Indianapolis Northern Traction Company which is alleged to be a railroad company duly incorporated and organized under the laws of this State for the purpose of constructing and operating an electric railroad extending from the city of Indianapolis, through several intervening counties, to the city of Peru, with certain lateral lines extending from the city of Kokomo, Howard county, to the city of Logansport, Cass county, and also for constructing and operating other electric traction lines from the city of Anderson, and embracing a series of other cities and towns, as mentioned in the amended complaint filed by the aforesaid parties.
The complaint is based on a working contract executed by the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company and the firm of Brennan & Nelson, contractors. By this contract that firm agreed to install and to complete what is denom*5mated as the over-head construction of the railroad in question along the portion of appellant’s line that extends from the city of Tipton to the city of Logansport. This work consists of placing poles, trolley wires and also other wires for the proper transmission of electricity as a motive power, together with all the equipment connected therewith. At the time this suit was commenced, Brennan & Hogue had acquired and succeeded to whatever rights the firm of Brennan & Nelson originally had under the contract in question. Brennan & Hogue alleged that there was due to them on the contract in suit $15,000. This included certain extra work and labor mentioned in the complaint, and they demanded judgment for that amount, together with a foreclosure of a mechanic’s lien, notice of which having previously been filed, as required by law, in the recorder’s office of the several counties through which the road extended. Other persons, in addition to appellant railroad company, were made codefendants to answer in respect to their several interests in the lien against the railroad property involved. Among these parties was appellee Jacob N. Bick. He appeared to the suit, and on September 16, 1904, filed a cross-complaint, consisting of three paragraphs, to which cross-complaint plaintiffs Brennan & Hogue and all of Bick’s codefendants were made cross-defendants. Bick was the contractor for the construction of the grade of the railroad in question under two working contracts with the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company. One of these contracts bore date of December 6, 1902, and included that part of the road’s grade designated as section 1, station 20, to section 16, station 980. This part extended from a point near the city of Kokomo to the city of Peru. The other contract, known as number two, bore date of March 1, 1903, and covered that part of the road between points mentioned as section station 1,100 and section station 1,740, all in Hamilton eounty, Indiana. Bick, by his cross-complaint, sought to recover a remainder alleged to be due to him from *6appellant Indianapolis Northern Traction Company, under contract for the construction of the railroad bridge, as well as other damages alleged to have been sustained by him. He also sought to foreclose a mechanic’s lien to secure the payment of the amount due to him.
It will lie noted that the suit was in two branches — one branch based on the complaint of Brennan & Hogue and the other founded upon the cross-complaint of Bick. Under the issues joined the two branches were tried together. The cause was submitted to the court for trial and a general finding was made, there being no request by either party for a special finding. Upon evidence given in the cause, the court found that appellees Brennan & Hogue should recover upon their complaint against the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company the sum of $5,044.88, and further found that they were entitled to be allowed the sum of $1,200 for attorney’s fees — in the aggregate $6,244.88, and that this amount was a lien upon the property described in the complaint, and a foreclosure of the lien was decreed. On the issues joined upon the cross-complaint of appellee Bick, the court found that said cross-complainant was entitled to recover from the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company the sum of $57,969.02, together with attorneys’ fees, making a total amount of $61,969.02. Of the total amount awarded in favor of Bick, the court found that he was entitled to hold and enfroce a lien to the amount of only $52,539.34 upon the property described in the cross-complaint, and that he was entitled to a foreclosure in payment of said sum of $52,539.34, but denied his right to a lien upon the remainder’, $9,429.68. Over a separate motion for a new trial by the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company, wherein it assigned statutory grounds and other reasons, the court entered its decree against said traction company in favor of the respective appellees. To review this decree appellants prosecute this appeal. The Indianapolis Northern Traction *7Company, separate and apart from its codefendants, assigns errors.
The two branches of the case herein may be said to present two questions in common with each other: (1) Whether, under the statute of the State of Indiana, appellees Brennan & Hogue and Bick could acquire any lien upon appellant company’s electric railroad. (2) Whether we will yield to the contention of counsel for said appellant, and weigh conflicting evidence given at the trial upon the issues tendered in each branch of the case.
We here state, in substance, what is averred in the three paragraphs of the amended complaint of Brennan & Hogue on which their branch of the case was tried. The first paragraph discloses that, in order for said contractors successfully to prosecute the work undertaken by them, it was necessary that the railroad company should have all poles and overhead material on hand ready for use and the grade prepared not later than March, 1903; that immediately after entering upon the performance of their contract these plaintiffs arranged to begin work on or before the aforesaid month of March, and so notified the company; that the latter did not however have its poles, grades and other material in condition for said contractors to proceed until about the first of May, 1903, at which time they were notified to have their men at work on the job; that although said contractors complied promptly with the request of the company to begin work, they were constantly impeded, hindered and interfered with in the performance of their contract by reason of the failure of the company to furnish the necessary poles and materials at the storehouse agreed upon, and by reason of the facts that the grade was not finished and that the company’s engineer capriciously required the work to be reconstructed after it had been completed in a proper manner; that because of the incomplete condition of the grade, absence of stakes, and other alleged failures on the part of the traction company to put its property in condi*8tion for the work of overhead, construction, these contractors were put to unreasonable and unnecessary expense in breaking camp from time to time and moving from one place to another in order to complete the work in fragments, instead of completing it as one continuous line; that the company’s engineer in charge of the work “fraudulently” failed to give the contractors estimates on the amount of work performed at the time prescribed by the contract, and that he did so with the intention thereby of compelling these contractors to abandon the work; that finally, on November 27, 1903, the company served notice on said contractors that on December 1, 1903, it would take possession of the uncompleted portion of the work, because the contractors had been negligent in carrying the work forward, and that on said last-mentioned date the company did take charge of and complete the work, excluding the contractors from the performance thereof; that from time to time it developed that there was much of the construction required which was not included under the terms of the contract, for which said contractors would be entitled to extra compensation; that, in view of these conditions, and in view of the necessity of promptly performing said extra work, it was mutually agreed that the performance of the working contract, requiring all orders for such extra work to be reduced to writing, and requiring the contractors to give notice in writing of the amount of extra compensation claimed, should be mutually waived, and that, in lieu thereof, the engineer in charge would from time to time give oral directions concerning such extra work, Avhieh the contractors should thereupon proceed to do, and that the company would pay a fair and reasonable price for the performance of such work; that, under the contract as modified, the engineer required much extra work to be done, and required statements of its value to be rendered from time to time to the traction company; that the entire value of the work done under the contract amounted to $11,786, of which payment to the *9amount of $5,583 had been made before the commencement of the suit; that the extra work done, for which no compensation had been received, was of the value of $2,048.60, and that said company had refused to pay any part of the balance due; that notice to hold a mechanic’s lien upon the property was filed in the offices of the recorders of Howard, Tipton and Cass counties within the time prescribed by the statute.
An additional amount of $5,000 damages is shown as resulting from the delay of the company in failing to have the material on hand, etc., whereby the cost of the work actually done, in the completion of the overhead construction, was increased to the latter amount. Judgment against the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company was demanded in the sum of $15,000, including attorneys’ fees, and a foreclosure of the lien in question.
The second paragraph of the complaint alleges substantially the same facts as the first, but does not count upon a mechanic’s lien.
The third paragraph is based upon a quantum meruit, alleging the performance of certain work and the construction of the overhead system, as shown by a bill of particulars filed, and that there is still due to the plaintiffs for this work $9,000, in addition to $2,000 attorneys’ fees. A foreclosure of the lien against the property is prayed for, as in the first paragraph of the complaint.
The three paragraphs of the cross-complaint of Bick may be summarized as follows: The first is based on the working contract of December 6, 1902. Among other things, it is averred that it was stipulated in the contract that the work in question should commence on or before the first week in March, 1903, and should be completed on or before the first day of July of the same year. It was provided that if there should be any delay on account of the failure of the traction company to procure all necessary rights of way, said contractor should have a reasonable time to complete the work *10after the necessary rights of way had been acquired. It was alleged that said contractor ivas put in possession of said rights of way, that he commenced his work in season and carried it forward vigorously until its completion on January 1, 1904; that by reason of the neglect and default of the company in procuring the rights of way and in failing to put said contractor in possession of portions thereof until the middle of November, 3903, he ivas put to additional expense in having to use picks, shovels and dynamite to explode and excavate large quantities of frozen earth; that it became necessary to and he did clear twenty-five and twenty-seven one-hundredths acres of land, which work ivas worth $20 an acre; that he grubbed twenty-two and thirty one-hundredths acres, which was reasonably worth $35 an acre, and that it became necessary for him to use, and he did use, as authorized under the contract,' certain quantities of tile of different sizes, all of Avhich facts are duly set forth in the pleading; that he performed certain other extra work, known as the “force account,” the aggregate value of which was $2,051.64, and it was necessary in the completion of the work to excavate material, classified by said contract as earth, to the amount of 134,341 cubic yards; that the ‘ ‘ overhaul” neeessaiy to be done, and which was done by him, amounted to 1,867,543 cubic yards, aggregating, at the contract price, the sum of $18,675.43; that he excavated 16,-616.3 cubic yards of material, which was classified as loose rock under the contract, the excavation of Avhich was worth $1 a cubic yard, and he excavated 75,168 cubic yards, classified under said contract as loose rock, which was worth seventy cents a cubic yard; that the total sum accruing to him by reason of doing said work is $122,851.13, a part of which has been paid, leaving a balance of $61,513.28 due and unpaid; that the partial estimates, which were made from time to time during the progress of the work as provided by the contract, were grossly erroneous, in this, that the overhaul Avas estimated at only 1,347,380 cubic yards, for which *11the contractor was allowed only $13,473.08; that the chief engineer of the traction company, during the progress of the work, was a stockholder in and an officer and employe of said company; that said engineer, in determining what was “overhaul,” within the meaning of the tests and terms agreed upon in the contract, acted erroneously, fraudulently, arbitrarily, and with great abuse of judgment and discretion ; that such engineer failed and neglected ‘ ‘ in determining the overhaul” to apply the test prescribed by the contract, but that he arbitrarily, purposely, and with intent to injure said contractor, failed to classify as overhaul that which clearly was such by the terms of the contract; that he grossly erred and underestimated the quantity of overhaul made by said contractor; that he also neglected and refused carefully and honestly to estimate the loose rock excavated; that he purposely and wrongfully estimated the quantity of loose rock to be only 5,505 cubic yards, and allowed only thirty-five cents a cubic yard for excavating said rock. The provisions of the contract under which it is alleged that said contractor ivas entitled to the classification insisted on by him, are set forth and embodied in the complaint. It is further shown that the classification made by said engineer*, as well as the computation of overhaul, was so made over the protest of said contractor, and that because of the bias, interest, ignorance, fraud, mistake and dishonesty of the engineer, as charged, such classification and estimates are void, and in no manner binding upon the contractor.
It is further shown that notice of said cross-complainant’s intention to hold a lien upon the railroad in the several counties mentioned was filed in the manner and at the places prescribed by the statute. The prayer is for judgment against the traction company in the sum of $75,000 and a foreclosure of the lien.
The second paragraph of the cross-complaint relies upon the same contract and is similar to the first, except that it *12is alleged therein that part of the contract is reduced to writing, and that part remained in parol.
The third paragraph of the cross-complaint recites the history of the traction company’s organization substantially as in the other paragraphs, but is founded upon the contract of March 1, 1903, which is denominated contract number two. This contract embraces certain grade construction of appellant’s road in Hamilton county, and it is averred that by its terms the cross-complainant, as contractor, agreed to furnish all the materials, except that used for bridges, and to prepare the grade for the construction; that he was to receive twenty cents a cubic yard for all earth excavated between certain stations therein mentioned, and thirty-two and one-half cents for the earth excavated between certain other stations therein named; that, in case it became necessary to haul the earth or other material excavated more than five hundred feet, then said contractor was to receive the additional sum of one cent a cubic yard for each one hundred feet such material was hauled in excess of five hundred feet ; that he was to receive $20 an acre for grubbing, and that for all tile he was to receive the prices thereiu named; that it was stipulated in this contract that the work was to be begun within fifteen days from the date of notice of the chief engineer, and ivas to be completed on or before July 1, 1903, provided, that if there was any delay due to the failure of the traction company to procure necessary rights of way in time for the performance of the work the period should be extended a reasonable time after such rights of way were procured. It is further alleged that such contractor commenced his work at the proper time, and prosecuted it vigorously, but, by reason of the numerous delays by the traction company, he was unable to complete such work before January 1, 1901, at which time such work was completed and accepted by the company; that in the necessary completion thereof he was required to, and did, *13clear and grub a certain amount of land therein mentioned, used certain quantities of tile of various sizes, and was compelled to perform certain extra amounts of work in excavating the pole lines for the traction company, which work was worth $934; that he excavated 57,959 cubic yards of material, classified as earth, at the price of thirty-two and one-half cents a cubic yard, and 61,626 cubic yards of earth at twenty cents a cubic yard; that the amount of overhaul necessary to be done was 311,904 cubic yards, which aggregated, under the contract, $3,119; that he performed certain other extra work at the Atlanta overhead station, amounting to 1,722 cubic yards at twenty cents a cubic yard, and that he performed other extra work, known as “force account,” to the amount of $92.30; that he performed all of the conditions of the contract upon his part; that the total value of the work done amounted to $35,901.18, upon which he has been paid $26,744.15, leaving a balance of $9,157.03 due and unpaid; that the partial estimates made from time to time, as provided by the contract, were erroneous in this, that he was allowed only $2,252 for the overhaul, estimated at 225,222 cubic yards; that the estimates made were further wrong, in that the engineer oC the company estimated the earth excavated at 56,581 cubic yards at thirty-one and one-half, cents a cubic yard, and 47,783 cubic yards at twenty cents a cubic yard, instead of the true amount as hereinbefore alleged. It is alleged that the engineer was a stockholder, officer and employe of the traction company, and that all of the errors of which the cross-complainant complains were the result of gross negligence, fraud and abuse of discretion; that these estimates and classifications were made over the protest of such contract- or, and are not binding'upon him, by reason of their fraudulent character as therein alleged. It is shown that notice of the cross-complainant’s intention to hold the statutory lien was duly filed and recorded, as provided by law. The *14prayer is for judgment for $10,000 and attorneys’ fees and for a foreclosure of the lien.
1. Among the first propositions advanced by appellants’ counsel for a reversal of the judgment is that section twelve of the mechanics’ lien act of 1883 (Acts 1883 p. 140) as amended (Acts 1889 p. 257, §6, §8305 Burns 1908), so far as it attempts to create a lien against railroad property in favor of contractors who neither furnish material nor personally perform any labor, is, under article 4, §19, of the state Constitution, invalid, because contractors cannot be said to be embraced in the title of the mechanics ’ lien act of 1883, supra, which is as follows:
“An act concerning liens of mechanics, laborers, and materialmen. ’ ’
Section twelve of said act, as originally enacted, declares that “all persons, who by contract with any railroad corporation * * * shall perform labor or furnish material for any such corporation, * * * in the way of grading, building embankments, or making excavations for the track of any such railroad corporation, or who shall build or repair bridges or trestle-work for any such railroad corporation, or the lessee thereof, shall have a lien, ’ ’ etc. Said section appears to have been twice amended, once in 1885 (Acts 1885 p. 236) and again in 1889 (Acts 1889 p. 257, §6, §8305 Burns 1908), but there has been no amendment to the title of the statute, and whatever attempts the legislature may have made by subsequent amendments to extend or broaden the provisions of the act, as it was originally enacted, appear to have been made without any change of the original title. This section, as it appears in the amendatory act of 1889 (§8305, supra), upon which appellees seek to base their right to a lien upon the railroad property in question, reads as follows: “All persons who shall perform work or labor in the way of grading, building embankments, making excavations for the track, building bridges, *15trestle-work, works of masonry, fencing or any other structure, or who shall perform work of any kind in the construction or repair of any railroad, or part thereof, in this State; and all persons who shall furnish any material for any such bridge, trestle-work, work of masonry, fence or other structure, or who shall furnish any material for use in the construction or repair of any railroad, or part thereof, in this State, whether such work or labor be performed or such material furnished in the pursuance of a contract with the railroad corporation, building, repairing or owning such railroad, or whether such work or labor be performed or material furnished, in pursuance of a contract with any person * * * engaged as * * * contractor, subcontractor or agent * * * may have a lien, ’ ’ etc.
The question, as raised and presented by counsel for appellants is that the title of the mechanics’ Hen' statute of 1883 is not broad enough, under the constitutional provision to which we have referred, to authorize thereunder legislation providing a Hen in favor of “contractors” who do not personally perform the labor in the construction of a railroad, and that therefore the provisions of §8305, supra, must be limited to persons who themselves actually perform such labor, and that the term “laborers,” as employed in the title, cannot be held to extend to or embrace contractors who undertake the work of building or constructing a railroad. This question, so far as we are able to discover, appears to be raised and presented for the first time in this appeal. Each contract in this case, executed by the railroad company and appellee Biek, reads, in part, as follows:
“This agreement made and concluded * * * by and between J. N. Bick, of the first party, hereinafter called ‘contractor,’ and the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company, of the second party, hereafter called ‘company,’ bears witness as follows: First. The contractor, in consideration of the prices hereinafter agreed to be paid to him by the company, hereby undertakes and agrees to do and perform to the satis*16faction and acceptance of the chief engineer of the company, all of the grubbing, clearing, grading and to furnish all materials and to do and supply all other things requisite and necessary to complete the roadbed, with the exception of the permanent bridges and masonry, and prepare the same ready for receiving the superstructure upon that portion of the railroad known and designated as section * * . Such work shall be finished in the best and most workmanlike manner and shall be constructed of the best materials of their several kinds, and all in conformity with the annexed specifications and conditions and proposals, which are hereby expressly made a part of this contract. ’ ’
The contract for the overhead construction of appellant company’s road, as entered into between it and Brennan & Nelson, is as follows:
“This agreement made December 15, 1902, between the Indianapolis Northern Traction Company, hereinafter referred to as the ‘company,’ and Brennan & Nelson, hereinafter referred to as ‘contractor,’ witnesseth: The contractor does hereby covenant, promise and agree, for the consideration hereinafter named, to do all work, deliver all materials for erecting, complete in place, the work described, all in accordance with the specifications and drawings referred to herein and hereunto attached, in a proper, thorough and workmanlike manner and under the direction and to the satisfaction of the company’s engineer.”
As shown by these contracts and the evidence in this ease, appellees undertook to perform the construction of the parts of appellant company’s railroad as provided by the contracts, not merely as laborers, but wholly as contractors, the work of such construction being let to them by the railroad company under the aforesaid contracts, such work being performed by persons whom appellees engaged as their employes to carry out their contracts.
*172. *16An examination of the title in controversy discloses that it indicates that the object of the legislation proposed by the legislature is to deal only with liens pertaining to three *17classes of persons, viz., “mechanics, laborers and material-men.” The title is expressed in explicit language, and it is quite evident that thereby it was the intention of the legislature to limit the proposed legislation thereunder to the liens of mechanics, laborers and materialmen. It so explicitly expresses the whole purpose of the legislation as to bring it within the maxim that the expression of one thing exeludes all others. Under the circumstances, therefore, it is not within the province of a court to extend the legislation under such a title so as to embrace liens in favor of persons who do not fairly come within tlfe meaning or scope of the title in controversy. Mewherter v. Price (1858), 11 Ind. 199; Voss v. Waterloo Water Co. (1904), 163 Ind. 69; State, ex rel., v. Board, etc. (1906), 166 Ind. 162, 198; State v. Dorsey (1906), 167 Ind. 199.
3. In considering the question as to whether appellees’ right to the liens here involved can be upheld under §8305, supra, we must first determine whether the legislature, in enacting the mechanics’ lien law of 1883, supra, intended to extend its protection to contractors of the class to which appellees belong, or in other words, to persons who, under their contracts, furnish the labor of others in carrying out the work which they have contracted to do. The act in question being remedial in its character, should, as to all persons who come within its provisions, be accorded a liberal construction. But as it is in derogation of the common law, the liberal rule of construction does not apply in determining what persons come within the statute, but in respect to this question a court must indulge in a strict construction, for as said in the case of Morris v. Louisville, etc., R. Co. (1890), 123 Ind. 489: “Courts must construe and enforce the statute as a remedial one, but they cannot extend it to meet cases not within its scope, however meritorious they may be.” See 2 Jones, Liens (2d ed.) §1554; Phillips, Mechanics’ Liens (3d ed.) §§18, 19; Boisot, Me*18chanics’ Liens §§34, 37; Cincinnati, etc., Railroad v. Shera (1905), 36 Ind. App. 315, and authorities cited.
4. The next inquiry is, What is meant by the term “laborer,” as employed in the title of the act ? While this term is found in the title, nevertheless its meaning must be determined by the same rule which would be applicable if it were contained in the body of the statute. It is a well-settled canon of construction in this State that words or terms employed in an act of the legislature will be interpreted or construed in their plain, popular and usual meaning, unless such a construction will manifestly result to defeat the intent of the legislature. Massey v. Dunlap (1896), 146 Ind. 350.
5. *191. *18It is evident that if we are guided by this well-recognized rule in the interpretation of the term “laborers,” as used in the title, we will not, in so doing, defeat the legislative intent. It certainly may be asserted, as there is nothing appearing to the contrary, that the word “laborers” was used by the legislature in the common meaning usually accorded to it by lexicographers, as well as by the courts in their interpretation of such term contained in statutes of similar import as the one here involved. The policy of the legislation enacted under the title in question, was to protect a class of persons commonly known as “mechanics” and “laborers,” who, generally speaking, perform the labor which they have contracted to do, or, in other words, persons who, by the force of their circumstances, depend for their support on the wages or compensation received by them for their labor, and for that reason, among others, the legislature deemed it proper to award to them a lien to secure the payment of the wages or compensation earned by them. It is clear that by the term “laborers” in the title of this act the legislature did not intend to-extend the legislation so as to include a class of persons known as “contractors,” who usually carry into effect the work which they have undertaken, not by their own labor, but by *19means of the services of employes from whose labor they expect to secure a profit. In 2 Jones, Liens (2d ed.) §1630, the author says: "The right conferred by a lien in favor of laborers is personal, and cannot be availed of by one who furnishes labor.” In respect to the definition of the term “laborer,” see Century Dict. p. 3318, and 2 Bouvier’s Law Dict. p. 99. That statutes conferring lien rights upon laborers cannot be held to apply to or include eon-tractors, such as appellees in this case appear to be, is well sustained by the following cases: Raynes v. Kokomo Ladder, etc., Co. (1899), 153 Ind. 315; McElwaine v. Hosey (1893), 135 Ind. 481; Anderson Driving Park Assn. v. Thompson (1897), 18 Ind. App. 458; Little Rock, etc., R. Co. v. Spencer (1898), 65 Ark. 183, 47 S. W. 196, 42 L. R. A. 334; Dano v. M., etc., R. Co. (1872), 27 Ark. 564, 567; Martin v. Michigan, etc., R. Co. (1886), 62 Mich. 458, 29 N. W. 40; Chicago, etc., R. Co. v. Sturgis (1880), 44 Mich. 538, 7 N. W. 213; Heebner v. Chave (1847), 5 Pa. St. 115; Seider’s Appeal (1863), 46 Pa. St. 57; Wentroth’s Appeal (1876), 82 Pa. St. 469; Pennsylvania, etc., R. Co. v. Leuffer (1877), 84 Pa. St. 168, 24 Am. Rep. 189; Mann v. Burt (1886), 35 Kan. 10, 11, 10 Pac. 95; Adams v. Goodrich (1875), 55 Ga. 233; State v. Mills (1882), 55 Wis. 229, 233, 12 N. W. 359; Tod v. Kentucky Union R. Co. (1892), 52 Fed. 241, 3 C. C. A. 60, 18 L. R. A. 305; Rogers v. Dexter, etc., R. Co. (1893), 85 Me. 372, 27 Atl. 257, 21 L. R. A. 528; Vane v. Newcombe (1889), 132 U. S. 220, 10 Sup. Ct. 60, 33 L. Ed. 310; Henderson v. Nott (1893), 36 Neb. 154, 54 N. W. 87, 38 Am. St. 720; Aikin v. Wasson (1862), 24 N. Y. 482; Wakefield v. Fargo (1882), 90 N. Y. 213; Lang v. Simmons (1885), 64 Wis. 525, 25 N. W. 650; Frick Co. v. Norfolk, etc., R. Co. (1898), 86 Fed. 725, 32 C. C. A. 31. See, also, 24 Cyc. pp. 810-814, and cases cited in foot notes.
In the case of Aikin v. Wasson, supra, the court held that a contractor for the construction of a part of a railroad was not a laborer or servant, within the provisions of the statute *20making stockholders of a railroad corporation personally liable for the debts due or owing to any of its laborers or servants for services performed for such corporation.
In the case of Wakefield v. Fargo, supra, the court held that a person employed by a corporation at a yearly salary as a bookkeeper and general manager was not a laborer within the provisions of the same statute in New York.
The view entertained by the court of appeals in this latter case is quoted with approval in the case of Raynes v. Kokomo Ladder, etc., Co., supra. The question there was whether appellant, who ivas the general manager of appellee company, was entitled to the lien secured by the provisions of §§7058, 7255 Burns 1894, Acts 1885 p. 36, §3, Acts 1889 p. 257, §1. The court, in considering the provisions of those sections said: “The persons to whom such liens and preference are secured, * * * . are mechanics and laborers employed about any shops, etc., who perform manual and mechanical labor. A general manager is not included either in the letter or spirit of these enactments. In speaking of the kind of services which entitled the laborer to the benefit of a similar statute, it is said in Wakefield v. Fargo [1882], 90 N. Y. 213: 'That he who performs them must bo of a class whose members usually look to the reward of a day’s labor, or service, for immediate or present support, from whom the company does not expect credit, and to whom its future ability to pay is of no consequence.’ ”
The case of Rogers v. Dexter, etc., R. Co., supra, involved the construction of a statute which imposed a liability on the railroad companies to pay for the. work of “laborers” employed in the building of roads of such companies. The court, in that appeal, held that the provisions of this statute did not apply to a subcontractor who personally performed labor along with other men employed by him in the construction of a railroad section which he had contracted to build. The court, in considering the application of the statute, said: “In the language of the business world, a *21laborer is one who labors with his physical powers in the service and under the direction of another for fixed wages. This is the common meaning of the word, and hence its meaning in the statute. The plaintiff in this case performed his labor in his own business. He was responsible only for (he performance of his contract. The means for such pei’forniah.ce were of his own choice. He need not personally have performed physical labor at all. He could have employed all, as well as a part, of the necessary labor. What physical labor he did perform was not for wages, but to reduce the expenses and increase the hoped-for profits of his contract. lie clearly was not a laborer within the common and statute meaning of the term.”
In the case of Wentroth’s Appeal, supra, the questions arose whether Frederic Snyder, who had pei-formed a certain contract by hiring teams and drivers, but who did no hauling’ himself, ivas a laborer within the meaning of a statute which gave a preference to “miners, mechanics, laborers or clerks for labor or services rendered by them.” The court, in that appeal, held that, within the contemplation of the statute, laborers were those who performed with their own hands the contract they make with their employers. The court, iu passing upon the question, said: “What class of persons was intended to be comprehended by the word ‘laborer’? We think this question has been very accurately answered by this court in Seider’s Appeal [1863], 46 Pa. St. 57. ‘By laborers,’ says Mr. Justice Woodward, in delivering the opinion of the court, ‘we mean those who perform with their own hands the contract they make with the employer. ’ It is clear that Frederic Snyder does not fall within this description. The act meant to favor those who earned then-money by the sweat of their own brows, not those who were mere contractors to have the work done, and whose compensation was the profit they would realize on the transaction.”
*226. *21Quotations in support of our conclusion might be made *22from many of the other authorities hereinbefore cited, but to do so is unnecessary, and would serve only to extend this opinion. It must follow, and we so hold, that the term “laborers,” as used in the title of the act in question, cannot be interpreted or construed to apply to a class of persons denominated and known as “contractors,” and was not so intended by the legislature, consequently the provisions of §8305, supra, must be considered as applying to and including mechanics, laborers and materialmen, and do not embrace contractors. To construe it so as to include contractors would render it to this extent violative of article 4, §19, of the Constitution, for the reason that this class of persons is not within the scope of the title of the act, of which it forms a part.
Counsel for appellees, however, insist that the liens of their clients can be upheld under the provisions of §8295 Burns 1908, Acts 1899 p. 569, which is section one, as amended, of the original mechanics’ lien act of 1883, supra. But so far as this section can be said to have been enlarged by amendment in the attempt to make it apply to and include contractors, it is open and subject to the same constitutional objections. We conclude, for the reasons stated, that appellees are not entitled to the lien and attorneys’ fees awarded in their favor by the lower court, and the decree and judgment to this extent are erroneous.
7. Under appellants’ second proposition it is argued that as this is a case of equitable jurisdiction, therefore it is made the duty of this court, by the provisions of the act of 1903 (Acts 1903 p. 338, §8, §698 Burns 1908), to weigh the evidence upon which the cause was determined by the trial court. This evidence is embraced in a bill of exceptions and was given by witnesses who testified ore tenus before the trial court. There appears to be quite a conflict in the evidence upon many of the material points in issue. In fact it may be said that the testimony of appellants’ own witnesses upon some material matters is not *23fully impressed with harmony, hut is conflicting. Appellants’ counsel admit in their brief that “there was much conflict in the oral testimony introduced on the trial in the Brennan branch of the case upon certain incidental questions of fact.”
In the case of Parkison v. Thompson (1905), 164 Ind. 609, we construed the act of 1903, supra, and held that in a ease in which questions of fact depend for their support upon conflicting oral evidence, we will not undertake to reconcile the conflict and decide upon which side lies the weight of the evidence. It was further affirmed in that case that, under the old practice, before the same procedure was prescribed in eases of law and equity by our civil code, no oral testimony was heard in equity or chancery cases at the trial, as the testimony in such cases was in the form of depositions taken before a master or some other duly authorized officer. By this procedure the trial court was altogther deprived of the opportunity of seeing the witnesses and of observing their demeanor and bearing while testifying, and occupied no better position for determining the credibility of the witnesses and weighing their evidence than did the Supreme Court, to which the cause might be removed for review of the questions involved. The holding in the case of Parkison v. Thompson, supra, has been followed by this court in the following cases: Hudelson v. Hudelson (1905), 164 Ind. 694; Ray v. Baker (1905), 165 Ind. 74; Seiberling & Co. v. Porter (1905), 165 Ind. 7; Karges Furniture Co. v. Amalgamated, etc., Union (1905), 165 Ind. 421, 2 L. R. A. (N. S.) 788; Tinkle v. Wallace (1906), 167 Ind. 382.
Under the decisions just cited, the rule that this court will not weigh oral testimony wherein there is a substantial conflict, and determine on which side of the question there is a preponderance, is firmly settled. In such eases, if. there is competent evidence to sustain the judgment of the lower court upon all material points, it will not be disturbed upon the weight of the evidence.
*248. The evidence given upon the issues joined between appellants and appellees Brennan & Hogue is quite voluminous, covering as it does many pages of the record. It will be noted that these parties in their complaint allege facts to establish that appellant company was in default in the performance of its part of the contract; that it delayed and hindered appellees in carrying out their part of the contract, by its failure to have ready the necessary poles, material and the grades of the railroad, and thereby enable them to commence and complete the overhead work which they had contracted to do within the period provided in the contract, and upon these facts and others, as averred in their complaint, they base their right of action. The contract under which they were obligated required that all of the work which they had contracted to perform should be completed by August 15, 1903. Certainly when appellant company obligated these parties to do and finish the work within a fixed period, it was its duty to afford them a fair and reasonable opportunity to begin and complete the work, or, in other words, under the mutual contract entered into, it became the duty of the company to furnish the required material, secure the rights of way, and have the road grade in readiness, so that appellees, in the exercise of reasonable diligence, might begin and finish the work within the prescribed period, without being subjected to unreasonable expenses on account of the default, delays and hinderance of appellant company. Its default or failure in these respects would subject it to liability for whatever damages appellees might reasonably sustain on that account. If appellant company violated its contract, as alleged, by the defaults, delays and hinderance charged against it, and thereby prevented appellees from beginning and completing the work which they had contracted to do, the law would hold said company liable for the reasonable value of the work which the contractors performed, and also for any loss sustained on account of their being pre*25vented by said appellant from completing the work which they had undertaken to perform. French v. Cunningham (1898), 149 Ind. 632, and authorities cited; Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Donnegan (1887), 111 Ind. 179; Lewis v. Atlas Mut. Life Ins. Co. (1876), 61 Mo. 534; Minneapolis Mill Co. v. Goodnow (1889), 40 Minn. 497, 42 N. W. 356, 4 L. R. A. 202; Mississippi River Logging Co. v. Robson (1895), 69 Fed. 773, 16 C. C. A. 400.
9. An examination of the evidence most favorable to appellees discloses that it sufficiently sustains the averments of the complaint. It appears from the evidence that the delays which appellees encountered in the progress of the work should be imputed to appellant company’s own default and negligence. Inasmuch as there is evidence in the case which fully supports the judgment of the court, we are not permitted to disturb it upon the question of its weight. Aside from the question of the mechanics’ lien and attorneys’ fees awarded to appellees, the judgment should be affirmed.
7. We next turn to the consideration of the questions raised by appellants upon the evidence given in the branch of tiie case relating to appellee Bick. This evidence covers 3,816 pages of record. Appellants’ counsel insist that it is at least our duty, upon this branch of the ease;, to consider and weigh the evidence, for in doing so we will really determine questions of law, i. e., whether, under the classification clause of the specifications, which were made a part of the working contract entered into by appellant company and appellee Bick, material which, as they claim, is admitted to have been plowed with a ten-inch grading plow with six horses, was loose rock or earth. They assert that the evidence shows that it was the theory of appellee Bick that “if the plow's, -working in any given material, turn only ‘one-fourth of a furrow,’ then the contractor was entitled to have three-fourths of the material excavated classified as loose rock and only one-fourth as earth.” They argue *26that under the contract the test of classification is the means employed in the excavation and not the quantity excavated on a given day.
The evidence shows that the valley of-the Wabash river, in Miami county, is enclosed with high banks, dividing the uplands from the lowlands. These banks at irregular intervals are cut by streams flowing from above into the river. Appellants’ engineers, in locating the line of the railway in this part of the country, for several miles followed ravines and located the line diagonally across these ravines, and thereby made it necessary, in the construction of the road, to make cuts through the hills, and fills across the hollows. A long fill appears to have been rendered necessary from the bottom of the hill to the bank of the river opposite the city of Peru. The purpose of so locating the road apparently was to get a lower grade than otherwise could be secured. Appellee Biek, as a contractor, did the grading of over twenty miles of the road. A portion of the work which he performed was between Kokomo and Peru, in Howard and Miami counties. The other portion of the grading was in Tipton and Hamilton counties. For the purpose of carrying forward the work, said appellee organized a corps of men and teams and entered upon the work in the spring of 1902. As the work progressed he increased his force by adding thereto other employes and teams. At times it appears that he was delayed in the progress of his work by the failure of appellant company to provide the rights of way, the one immediately north of Kokomo not being secured until the beginning of the following winter, and said contractor was then directed by the company to do his work immediately, in order that the track of the road might be laid. Said appellee, it appears, was delayed by the failures of appellant company until cold weather, which froze the ground so hard that' it could not be excavated by plowing. The surface of the earth north of Kokomo is black loam, and on account of its being frozen it became necessary to break it *27up by blasting, and to use, in removing it, wagons instead of wheelers, and thereby said appellee appears to have incurred extra expenses on account of money expended by him for powder used in blasting the frozen earth and the extra labor- rendered necessary for this purpose. Under the working contract he was to be paid for excavations, but not for fills, and if the earth was hauled more than five hundred feet away from the part where it was excavated, whether it was wasted or put into fills, overhaul was to be allowed. Said appellee declares that at the trial there were four questions of fact in issue in regard to the work performed by him on the line north of Kokomo: (1) The number of cubic yards excavated in constructing the grades. (2) The price for excavating all material that did not come within the class covered by the price fixed at twenty cents a cubic yard. (3) The amount of overhaul. (4) Extra work, material and “force account.” It is asserted that no question arose in respect to the classification of material excavated on that part of the line south of Kokomo, for the reason that such material was earth only. But there was on this part of the line a dispute as to the amount of extra work, “force account,” and overhaul. In respect to these several points each party introduced many witnesses, including expert accountants, all of whom testified ore tenus. It appears that on the line south of Peru there were six cuts. These were known as (1) Cole’s No. 1; (2) Cole’s No. 2; (3) Redmond’s; (4) Jones’s; (5) Geve’s, and (6) Cassville. The work on this latter part of the road was commenced some time in February, 1903, and was completed the last of the following December. In the performance thereof said contractor employed about twelve hundred men, together with seven hundred teams; all of these, however, were not engaged in work at the same time. The contract provided that
“all material excavated by the contractor under this contract shall be classified either as earth, loose rock *28or solid rock, and the-chief engineer of the company shall determine how the excavated material shall he classified. In cases of dispute his finding and decision in the premises shall be conclusive on both parties.”
One of the clauses in the specifications provides as follows:
“There shall be no classification of material of any kind other than earth, loose or solid rock, as provided for in these specifications. * * # But this clause of the specifications shall not, be construed so as to prevent the application of a percentage system in classifying material as provided in clause two hereof.”
We find nothing in the contract or the specifications which stipulates specifically what shall be classified as earth. Clause two of the specifications provides as follows:
“Loose rock shall comprise: Hard shale or soapstone lying in its original or stratified position, coarse boulders in gravel, cemented gravel, hardpan, other material requiring, in the judgment of the chief engineer of the company, the use of the pick and bar, or which cannot be plowed with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled, and drawn by six good mules or horses. It is to be understood that the plowing test shall apply to all the materials named herein, and that only such material is entirely loose rock which, in the judgment of the chief engineer, it is impracticable to plow at all with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled, behind a good six-mule or -horse team. Any material in which a portion of a day’s work in plowing can be done with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled, behind a good six-mule or -horse team, will be classified as a percentage of earth and a percentage of loose rock, the amount of such percentage to be finally determined by the chief engineer of the company. ’ ’
The further contention of appellants’ counsel is that the provisions of clause two of the specifications are shown by the evidence not to have been properly construed or interpreted by the trial court, or in other Avords, the contention is advanced that the interpretation accorded to this clause by the company’s chief engineer in classifying the material excavated Avas correct, while, on the other hand, the interpre*29tation placed upon it by the trial court was wrong. They further insist that under the contract the- court did not correctly classify the material excavated on that part of the work north of Kokomo. Paragraph one of appellee Bick’s cross-complaint relies on the written contract of December 6, 1902, while the second paragraph is founded on a contract partly written, but in other respects oral. It is not claimed that any question of classification arose on the third paragraph. Whether the court rendered judgment, for the work done north of Kokomo, on the first or second paragraph, the record does not disclose. • It is evident, under the condition of the record, that we are confronted with the difficulty of determining (1) upon what paragraph or paragraphs of the cross-complaint the judgment rests; (2) what particular construction the trial court placed upon the provisions of the contract in respect to classification of material, for the reason that the court’s finding is very general, there being (a) nothing therein to apprise us in respect to the amount of material which the court found had been moved by appellee Bick; (b) nothing as to the price allowed him for moving materials; (c) nothing in respect to the amount awarded for the extra work and “force account;” (d) nothing for the overhaul. Virtually all that is shown by the general finding or judgment is the total amount awarded in favor of appellee Bick, which, outside of attorneys’ fees, is $57,969.07.
The provisions of clause two of the specifications, stipulating of what loose rock shall consist, may be divided as follows :
“Loose rock shall comprise: (1) Hard shale or soapstone lying in its original or stratified position; (2) coarse boulders in gravel; (8) cemented gravel; (4) hardpan;. (5) any other material requiring, in the judgment of the chief engineer of the company, the use of the pick and bar; (6) material which cannot be plowed with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled, and drawn by six mules or horses; (7) it is *30to be understood that the plowing test shall apply to all material named herein, and that only such material is entirely loose rock which, in the judgment- of the chief engineer, it is impracticable to plow with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled behind a good six-mule or -horse team; (8) any material in which a portion of a day’s work in plowing can be done with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled, behind a good six-mule or -horse team will be classified as a percentage of earth and a percentage of loose rock, the amount of such percentage to be finally determined by the chief engineer of the company. ’ ’
The following hypothetical question was propounded by appellee Bick’s counsel to S. TI. Knight, the chief engineer of appellant company, who testified in its behalf at the trial: “Assuming, Mr. Knight, that four or five cuts are to be made, varying in length from three hundred to six or seven hundred feet, and varying in depth, say, from fifteen to twenty-seven or twenty-eight feet, and that after the first four feet of the top soil is taken off there is encountered a hard soil or clay, interspersed with rocks or boulders, so that in attempting to plow it every five to ten feet with a heavy ten-inch grading plow, drawn by from four to six heavy horses, the plow is turned out by some boulder, or becomes fast under the boulder, so that when it is fast there is great difficulty in extracting the plow; that in plowing, or attempting to plow, the plow does not enter the ground more than three inches and often less; that a furrow from three to five inches wide is turned up, two men riding on the whiffletree, some times one man in addition on the plow-beam, some times one man holding the plow handle, and some times two, the dirt hauled off by wheelers, which are very often being tripped bys boulders which are being developed by the plowing, heavy boulders so large that they have to be blown out with dynamite and hauled off by chain, they being so large that a team cannot snake them, but they have to be rolled with a rolling hitch; three or four fur *31rows have to be plowed before the wheeler can attempt to fill at all; then being compelled to go one hundred feet, then get say one-third of a load, being compelled to go to the fill that way because they could not get enough dirt in front of the wheelers to shove the dirt back in to the wheelers, —I wish you to state to the court, you being familiar with the specifications in the contract and using that knowledge, whether or not any portion of that soil or clay or boulders should be classified as loose rock under the specifications?” The answer of the witness to this question was: “On these specifications, I would not. ’ ’
The following hypothetical question was also propounded to him: “Assuming that after the yellow clay is taken off, several feet of it, that there was encountered a blue clay a little harder than the yellow, but with comparatively few boulders and stones, and that it was excavated in the same way I have detailed [meaning as detailed in the previous question], except it was not necessary to use dynamite or to pick out the boulders, what would you say as to whether or not any portion cf that blue clay should be classified as loose rock, under the specifications?” The answer of this witness was: “I would not.”
There is evidence iu the record to establish the facts stated in these questions and therein assumed to be true, and that material excavated, as therein stated, was classified by the engineer entirely as earth. Counsel for appellee Bick claim (1) that his answers to the questions quoted clearly show that he placed a wrong legal construction upon the provisions of clause two of the specifications hereinbefore set out; (2) that his answers to the questions disclose that upon the subject of classifications he was so prejudiced against appellee Bick and in favor of appellant company, his employer, and of which he was a stockholder, that he was not a fit person to settle the question of classification.
*3210. *31We will endeavor particularly to point out wherein, as *32we believe, the engineer, as shown by his answers to the previous questions, misinterpreted the provisions of the specifications in regard to what material should be classified as loose rock. It is true that there is a provision in the specification in question that the chief engineer of the company should determine how matter excavated should be classified, etc., and his decision, in case of dispute, was to be conclusive on both parties. This provision, however, contemplated, under all circumstances, the exercise of an honest judgment on the part of the engineer upon the matter involved. This court has held that stipulations or provisions of this character cannot operate to deprive the parties of the right to resort to the courts for a redress of wrong or to a recovery of whatever may be due to them. Louisville, etc., R. Co. v. Donnegan, supra; Kistler v. Indianapolis, etc., R. Co. (1882), 88 Ind. 460; Board, etc., v. O’Connor (1894), 137 Ind. 622; Board, etc., v. Gibson (1902), 158 Ind. 471; McCoy v. Able (1892), 131 Ind. 417.
The rule generally affirmed by the authorities is that the measurements, estimates and classification of material, in cases where they are left to the judgment or decision of the engineer, are accepted as prima facie correct, and to that extent are binding upon the parties to the contract, in the absence of fraud, or gross or obvious mistake on the part of such engineer, and the burden is upon the party who assails them to establish such fraud or mistake. McCoy v. Able, supra; 3 Elliott, Railroads §1059.
11. *3312. *32As previously shown, appellee Bick, under his cross-complaint, assailed the decisions or findings of the chief engineer, on the ground that he acted arbitrarily and that his judgment was impressed with gross mistakes and fraud. Without regard to the controlling effect which. under any circumstances, might be accorded to the provision or stipulation in the contract that the decision of the chief engineer as to estimates, measures, etc., was con-*33elusive in cases of dispute, the provision certainly cannot control in respect to the contract so as to preclude either party from controverting any construction or interpretation which the engineer may have placed ^upon it, for it is elementary that it is the province of courts to construe contracts. Consequently, as claimed by counsel for appellee Bick, if the engineer misinterpreted the provisions of the contract in his classification of loose rock by applying the “plow test” either to the first, second, third or fourth clause of the stipulations as hereinbefore set out, then said appellee would be entitled in this action to have such errors of the engineer reviewed by the court and corrected. Williams v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1892), 112 Mo. 463, 20 S. W. 631, 34 Am. St. 403; Lewis v. Chicago, etc., R. Co. (1891), 49 Fed. 708; 30 Am. and Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.) 1271. Counsel for appellants contend that the stipulations in clause seven, viz.,
“it is to be understood that the plowing test shall apply to all material herein named, ’ ’
modifies or destroys the classification of material immediately preceding, as specified under clauses one, two, three and four, or, in other words, that while the provision of the specification by which the contracting parties expressly agreed that “hardpan,” and “coarse boulders in gravel,” should be classified as loose rock, nevertheless it was intended that such material was subject to the plowing test provided for by clause six. The provisions of the specification must be construed together and given a reasonable interpretation, and they should not be construed in such a manner as to lead to absurdity.
13. By the second clause the parties were dealing with the plowing test as provided by clause six next preceding. This test was to apply to all material coming within its meaning, that is to say, as therein provided only such material was to be considered as entirely loose rock *34which, in the judgment of the chief engineer, it was impracticable to plow at all with a strong ten-inch grading plow, well handled, etc., or, in other words, impracticable to plow the material, in the judgment of the chief engineer, when the plow test was applied. It is manifest that the latter test was not intended to refer to or control the particular material specified as hardpan, etc., which the parties had already declared should constitute “loose rock.” To hold to the contrary would be absurd.
We may assume that appellant company and appellee Biek, in entering into the contract, recognized that the materials specified in the first, second, third and fourth clauses were well-known, hard substances, quite difficult to excavate, therefore they mutually declared that they should be classified as loose rock. Doubtless the parties believed that other hard material might be developed in excavating, and therefore the pick and bar test and the plowing test were provided for other hard earth not specifically falling within that mentioned in the preceding clauses.
In the case of Lewis v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., supra, the specification involved was as follows: “Loose rock shall comprise (1) shale or soapstone lying in its original or straified position, coarse boulders in gravel, cemented gravel, hardpan, or any other material requiring the use of pick and bar, or which cannot be plowed with a strong, ten-inch grading plow, well handled, behind a good six-mule or -horse team.” It will be observed that this is virtually the same as the one with which we have to deal. It appears in that case that, as the engineers construed the specification, “shale, cemented gravel, hardpan,” etc., were not classified as loose rock unless more than six horses or mules were required to plow such material. The court in that ease, in determining whether the engineers had properly construed the specification, said: “After an attentive consideration of the question, the court concludes that the engineers put a wrong construction on the second clause of the specification, *35so far' as they construed the ‘plowing- test’ to be applicable to shale, soapstone, cemented gravel, and hardpan, as well as to other hard, earthy substances. The right interpretation of the clause is as follows: Shale, soapstone, cemented gravel, and hardpan were known substances, and were known to be hard to handle. Therefore it was declared that they should be classified as loose rock. And inasmuch as it was thought probable or possible that other hard earths might be encountered in the progress of the work, it was agreed that any other material requiring the use of pick and bar, or that could not be plowed ‘ with a strong, ten-inch grading plow, * * * behind a good six-horse or -mule team/ should likewise be classified as loose rock. This is the correct exposition, and truly expresses the thought in the mind of the draughtsman. * * * By far the largest portion of all the material found in the various cuts, except the rock cuts, was broken up, I think, by the use of a team of not more than six horses. Probably that was the most practicable and economical method of working the cuts, as an eight-horse team is usually cumbersome. Nevertheless if the engineers had classified every cubic yard of earth that was so broken up with six horses ‘as earth excavation/ it would not have accorded with the spirit of the contract. ’ ’
In the case of Williams v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., supra, identically the same specification was involved as in the ease of Lewis v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., supra. In the ease first cited the plaintiffs claimed and offered to show that the engineer had construed hardpan to be loose rock only “when it could not be plowed with a strong ten-inch plow, behind a good six-horse or -mule team.” The plaintiffs further contended that under this clause of the contract the classification of hardpan as loose rock was fixed without any reference to the plowing test. The court sustained this contention, saying on page 493: “We think the plaintiffs are correct in their interpretation of the clause, and, if the engineer did so miscontrue it, he exceeded the power vested *36in him by the contract, and there is no principle of law or equity that demands that plaintiffs should submit to a misconstruction of their contract which would result in serious loss to them. The contract fixed certain classifications of material; others it left to the judgment of the engineer.” The court further affirmed that plaintiffs were entitled to show, it! they could under their complaint, that the engineer misconstrued the contract in his classification of the loose-rock clause, and had not measured the work according to the contract; that an allegation of fraud was not necessary to entitle them to make such a showing.
The interpretation of the term "loose rock,” as used in the specification in question, for which appellee Bick contends, is manifested by the statements of facts in the hypothetical question propounded to the chief engineer. Appellants’ counsel, however, deny that said appellee’s contention in respect to the construction is correct within the meaning of the contract, but affirm that the one accorded to it by the chief engineer is right. The infirmity of the interpretation placed upon the specification by appellant company’s engineer is that it accords with neither the letter nor spirit of the contract. We have, we believe, sufficiently shown that the engineer was wrong’ in the construction which he accorded to the specification as to how the material mentioned in the hypothetical question should be classified. In addition to this we may say that the provision, "any other material * * * which cannot be plowed, ’ ’ must be construed to mean such hard material or substance as cannot be plowed with reasonable facility. The term "plowed” was certainly used in its usual meaning, and must have been so understood by the parties. They did not mean the mere "rooting up” of the material, or cutting a very shallow furrow, or such plowing as would require men to ride upon the whiffletree and upon the plowbeam in order to keep the nose of the plow in the material which they were attempting to plow. It is not tenable to argue that plowing, within the *37meaning of the test provided, was accomplished where, as the evidence shows, the material attempted to be plowed was hardpan, or contained many large and coarse boulders and cemented gravel, and that thereby the plow would frequently be turned out of its shallow furrow, and would become fastened beneath the boulders, so that the men handling it would be required to resort to the use of the pick and bar to loosen or extricate it from the boulders; that it required the force of several men to hold the point of the plow in the ground; and that the plow point would frequently he broken by the hardness of the material which was encountered in the progress of the work. Certainly it could not in reason he said that such material, within the meaning and spirit of the contract, should he classified as ordinary earth, to be removed by the contractor at twenty cents a cubic yard. A converse view, however, is apparently entertained by appellant company. There was no price fixed by the contract for excavating loose rock, and said contractor was entitled 1o otdy the reasonable value of such work, which value, as shown by the evidence, is far in excess of that provided in the contract for the removal of earth. Appellee Bick claimed that the only feasible and practicable, as well as the cheapest, method of loosening and breaking up much of the material which was encountered in the work in some of the several cuts was by means of a plow, and that only a small portion of it eould be removed by the ordinary method employed for removing earth. After showing the character of the material, the number and size of boulders, and the great labor and difficulty experienced in loosening, excavating and removing the material in question, and the only practicable method by 'which it could he broken up, the contractor was asked the following questions: “Q. Now, what other method did you adopt there, trying to excavate this earth, except the way you have already detailed? A. Well, the boys tried to pick it and tried to blow it out. Q. How did you pick it ? A. Run a pick down as far as he eould drive *38it, and bring it up. He would just jerk out what was on the pick. Q. Could he bury the pick in to the handle? A. It was too hard. Q. Now, you spoke of blowing up with dynamite ? A. Powder; it would not take any effect on it, just blow out whatever hole they put it in. Q. Now, you have been a contractor a good many years. Tell the court what method of loosening this earth was there known or available other than to do it with a plow as you did it ? A. Under these conditions, nothing more.”
Appellee Bick’s testimony was supported by many other witnesses. Because he employed the plow as the most feasible and available method of loosening and breaking up the material in controversy, certainly affords appellant company no room for insisting that such material should be classified entirely as earth, to be paid for at twenty cents a cubic yard, mainly for the reason that the excavation thereof was principally done with a plow as the most feasible, practicable and the cheapest method, as the evidence fully establishes. What appellee did in this respect could not be said to be plowing, brrt merely, in common parlance, “rooting out” the boulders and breaking up the hard substances with a strong grading plow which -was used.
Counsel for appellee Bick examined many witnesses upon the trial of the cause, some of whom were expert civil engineers. The evidence given by the men employed in excavating and grading appellant company’s railroad shows that much of the material developed in some of the several cuts was hardpan, and that other parts thereof, to quite an extent, were intermingled with large and small boulders. The material encountered in the attempt to plow was so hard that some times the plow points would last only two or three hours. One witness testified that the material was so hard that he could not drive a harrow tooth down through it; that in his attempt to do so the tooth was bent, although it did not strike any boulder or rock. Others testified that dynamite was employed to break up the material, without much *39success; that it was useless to try to remove it with a force of ten or twelve horses attached to the plow; that the more horses used in drawing the plow, the more difficult it was for the men to keep the plow in the ground; that all that could be done was simply “to root” along; that six, seven, and sometimes as many as eight horses were used, but on aceoimt of the hardness of the material and the many boulders encountered it was found impracticable to use this number of horses. Four horses were all that it was practicable to use in breaking up the material.
It is not necessary that we give the evidence in detail upon the many points in dispute before the trial court, for to do so would, under the circumstances, serve no useful purpose. Suffice to say that the evidence, as we find it in the record, is ample to sustain the allegations of appellee Bick’s cross-complaint, and the finding and judgment of the lower court upon all material points. In fact, it may be said that had the court given full credit to the testimony of said appellee it would have been justified in awarding a recovery in his favor of a much larger amount than it found was due to him. As heretofore shown, the contention of appellant company’s counsel, that the lower court erred, upon the ground that it did not adopt the construction of the contract for which they contend, even if true, cannot be sustained. It does not appear that during the progress of the work there was any substantial dispute on the part of said appellant’s engineer in regard to the estimates and classification of the material to which said appellee was entitled. Instead of making estimates and classifications, which, as shown, said appellee frequently requested should be made, the engineer merely promised to do so, but failed to carry out his promise. The controversy appears to have arisen after said appellee had completed the work and turned it over to appellant company. It appears that he was anxious that estimates and classifications should be made by the company’s engineer in order that he might know what *40he was being allowed. His pay roll at the time was running high; some weeks to $14,000.
He testified that he asked Mr. Knight, the chief engineer, about making estimates and classifications of material excavated, saying to him that he thought the matter ought to be settled so far as the work had progressed, stating to the engineer that the estimates which had been made were “rather shy.” The engineer, in reply to this, as shown by said appellee’s testimony, said: “Mr. Bick, my monthly statements are to a certain extent guesses; they are approximates only. When you get through with your work you will have every yard and every yard of overhaul and your proper classification, so don’t worry about them; I am going to treat you right.” Appellee Bick also appealed to the assistant engineer, who told him that there was a mistake in the overhaul, and that he would make it right next month, and he also promised to see that a detailed statement of the estimates should be furnished to said appellee, but this promise was not carried out. Said appellee testified that he also had a conversation with Mr. Drum, the general manager, in August or September before the work was completed, and informed him that he was getting “pretty rough treatment” as to estimates. Appellee Bick testified: “I told him my judgment was that I was not getting my yardage, and when was I to get my overhaul up to that time ? They had practically allowed me nothing, only a trifle on classification. That I needed the money; that they ought to give it to me; that he ought not to hold it until the job was done; that I ought to receive it as we went along.” The general manager said in reply to this: “Mr. Bick, these engineers are narrow. It is hard to get a good man. You will come out all right when you get through.”
14. This evidence stands undisputed, and at least tends to show, as insisted by appellee Bick, that he was thereby induced to wait until his job was completed, in the belief that he would be fairly dealt with and treated *41at the final settlement. It appears that appellants adopted the method of measurement denominated and known in mathematics as the “prismoidal formula,” while the witnesses for said appellee, who testified as to the number of yards of material excavated, adopted and used the method known as the “average and area.” Expert engineers testified pro and con as to the correctness of these two methods. Appellants argue that the court adopted the latter method, but in respect to this contention we are not apprised by the record which method of computation or measurement the court adopted, therefore the question as to which of these two methods is the most correct is not before us for determination.
It follows from the conclusions which we have herein reached that the judgment below must be in part reversed and in part affirmed. It is therefore ordered that all that part thereof which adjudges and awards a statutory lien in favor of the respective appellees and attorneys ’ fees thereon, and a foreclosure of such lien, be reversed, with instructions to the lower court, on motion of appellants, to modify the judgment or decree to that extent. In all other respects the judgment is affirmed.
Myers, J., did not participate.