Lynch brought suit in Dougherty superior court against Joyce and the City of Albany, the material allegations of his petition being, in brief, as follows: In March, 1901, the City of Albany contracted with Joyce to bore an artesian well on described property belonging to it and in the city limits. The plaintiff, in turn, contracted with Joyce to work as a mechanic on the well at an agreed compensation of $4 per day, and in compliance with his contract did work thereon for 471 days, entitling him to $1,884. Joyce has paid him only $646.80, and refuses to pay the balance of $1,237.20 due. “Petitioner claims a lien on the aforesaid well and premises, and in compliance with the law did, on the 1st day of October, 1902, within three months after the completion of the contract, file such lien in the office of the clerk of the superior court of [Dougherty] county.” Joyce is insolvent. The city has appropriated sums sufficient to pay Joyce for boring the weE, and is now indebted to him in a sum more than sufficient to pay plaintiff’s claim against Joyce. Plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law by which he can recover the amount due him, and unless Joyce is enjoined he will coEect the amount due him by the city and leave plaintiff without recourse. The prayers of the petition were, for (1) a temporary restraining order directed to Joyce, enjoining him from coEecting the amount due him by the city untE the further order of the court; (2)- a decree against defendants for principal and interest “ on said principal due your petitioner as aforesaid;” and (3) process. The
1. Although the petition contained no prayer for a foreclosure of the plaintiff’s alleged lien against the property of the city, or for a special judgment against that property, it was treated by counsel for both the plaintiff and the city as a suit to foreclose such a lien; and we will therefore decide the case upon the questions made in the demurrer and argued in the briefs of counsel in this court. So treating it, we are clear that the court below erred in not sustaining the demurrer to so much of the petition as sought to enforce a mechanic’s lien on the municipal property. “ There can be no mechanic’s lien on public property, unless the statute creating such'lien expressly so provides, since such a lien would be contrary to public policy, and would also be incapable of enforcement, public property not being subject to forced sale.” Boisot on Mech. Liens, § 208. “ It is clear that property owned by a municipal corporation and used for public purposes can not be sold by virtue of an execution issued on a judgment rendered against the corporation. As one of the results of. this general rule, there is no right to a mechanic’s lien against such property.” 2 Dill. Mun. Corp. (4th ed.) § 577. While we are not aware of any Georgia case directly involving the question whether or not public property of a city is subject to a mechanic’s lien, the whole trend of the decisions of this court in cases of similar character supports the view that such a lien does not exist. Leake v. Lacey, 95 Ga. 747, was a case where a creditor of a contractor sought to garnish a city and subject to his debt an amount due the contractor by the city, the work for which the contractor was engaged having been completed. Mr. Justice Lumpkin, delivering the opinion, recognized a distinction between cases where
2. In the absence of a right to a lien, it is, of course, apparent that the plaintiff could not, under the allegations of his petition, recover a general judgment against the city. There was no privity of contract between him and the city;-he dealt alone with Joyce, and to Joyce he must look for the payment of his debt.
Judgment reversed.