v.
Silas Archibald
Respondents Archibald and wife were the owners of certain real estate in the city of Seattle, and contracted with Pederson, one of the respondents, to erect upon the premises a hotel building. Pederson sublet to appellant Sweeney the installation of the plumbing and hot water plant. The respondent Crane Company furnished to Sweeney, to be used in said building, certain materials, a portion of which was not paid for, and a lien was filed and established and[*596] judgment rendered, with attorney’s fee of $250. These lien foreclosure cases were consolidated for the purpose of trial, and from the judgment rendered in three of the cases, viz., Sweeney v. Archibald, Sweeney v. Pederson, and Sweeney v. Crane Company, this appeal is taken. The appeal is from the findings of fact and the judgment flowing therefrom, and from the judgment of $250 awarded to respondent Crane Company.
We have made a very particular examination of the testimony in all of these cases, and from such examination we have concluded that the findings of the court were fully justified and sustain the judgment rendered. So far as the objection to the $250 attorney’s fee in favor of respondent Crane Company is concerned, it is purely technical, and so far as the interests of the appellant are concerned, reaches no further than the form of the judgment. For, conceding the correctness of the findings generally, the appellant is the principal obligor, and is ultimately responsible for the costs of the proceedings and the necessary attorney’s fees; and upon payment by Archibald of respondent Crane Company’s claim, he would have a right to enforce contribution against appellant. The judgment as directed by the court simply avoids a multiplicity of suits. Affirmed.
Rudkin, C. J., Chow, Chadwick, and Mourns, JJ., concur.