The .plaintiff brought this action to recover from the defendant Adams for certain labor and *287materials furnished by him, and to have the same declared a lien upon a certain building belonging to the defendant Dawson. The plaintiff, as a subcontractor, had furnished the materials and labor to Adams, who had contracted with Dawson for the construction of the building, and the materials and labor were furnished and used in such construction. At the trial it was shown that the building had been completed more than thirty days prior to the plaintiff’s filing of his claim of lien, and he was denied a lien against the building, and judgment was rendered in favor of Dawson. The plaintiff, however, recovered judgment against Adams for the sum of $1,015, from which, and an order denying a new trial, Adams has appealed.
The finding of the court that no special contract was made and entered into between the plaintiff and the appellant as to the amount that the appellant should pay plaintiff for his work and material is not only not sustained by the evidence, but is in direct opposition to all the evidence on the subject. The real issue which was contested at the trial was the price that had been agreed upon between them for the work, and not that there was no contract with reference to the amount to be paid therefor. The plaintiff testified: “We met, and went into the saloon, and he told me that he would give me $3,335 to do the brickwork and the stonework and set the ironwork.” “I gave Mr. Adams one written bid on this building, and I don’t know now where it is. The amount was $3,535.” And, in explanation of the averment in the complaint that the sum of $3,200 was agreed upon between them as the price of the work, he said: “It was at the suggestion of Mr. Adams that I charged $3,200 for the work that I did. He told me that I had to take off a little. My written bid was $3,535, and by an agreement with Mr. Adams it was changed to $3,200.” There was no testimony in the case that the work was to be done for what it .might be worth, or that the plaintiff agreed to do the work without any agreement as to its price. On the contrary, the appellant offered in evidence a written bid for doing the work, with the plaintiff’s name signed thereto, which he testified was received by him from the plaintiff, and had been written by the plaintiff upon one of his business cards, and signed by him, wherein he offered to do the work for $2,226. The entire evidence on this point was that the price at which *288the work was to be done was fixed by the bid of the plaintiff, and the court should have determined the amount of this hid, even though the testimony of the parties thereto was diametrically opposed: See Leviston v. Ryan, 75 Cal. 293, 17 Pac. 239. Instead of so doing, the court admitted evidence, against the objection of the appellant, of the value of the labor and material furnished by the plaintiff, and found that this value was $3,160, of which the plaintiff had been paid a portion, and made this value the basis of its judgment. This finding was also outside of the issues made by the pleadings. The plaintiff had alleged in his complaint that he had entered into a contract with Adams to do certain work upon the building, “for which defendant Adams was to pay and agreed to pay to plaintiff the sum of $3,200.” The appellant did not deny the agreement, except as to the amount, which he alleged was the sum of $2,226. The only issue before the court in this respect was, therefore, the amount which the appellant had agreed to pay for the work, and the court erred in admitting evidence of the value of the work done by the plaintiff, and in rendering its judgment in accordance with the value found upon this testimony. The judgment and order are reversed.
We concur: Garoutte, J.; Van Fleet, J.