12 N.J.L. 76 | N.J. | 1830
In the Court of Common Pleas of the-county of Salem, judgment ivas rendered for the plaintiff on a general demurrer to a declaration containing four counts. The defendant below having brought a writ of error, insists, as he did there, that the matters contained in thé declara
*The declaration commences thus : “ Jonathan Belton was summoned to answer Mason S. Gibbon, who sues for the use of James Brooks in a plea of trespass on the case upon promises.” The first three counts are on special undertakings. The fourth count is for money had and received, in the usual form, with these variations : “ For so much money by the said Jonathan Belton, before that time had and received to and for the use of the said Mason S-Gibbon, who sues as aforesaid; and being so indebted, he, the said Jonathan Belton, in consideration thereof after-wards, to wit: on, Ac-., at, Ac., undertook and faithfully promised the said Mason S. Gibbon, who sues as aforesaid, to pay him, the said last mentioned sum of money wdien he the said Jonathan Belton, should be thereunto afterwards requested.”
The difference from the ordinary form of the count for money had and received, is the averment that the plaintiff is suing for the use of James Brooks. The count does not allege that the money was received by the defendant to the use of Brooks; nor that the promise was made to Brooks, or to Gibbon, for the use of Brooks; but simply and at the utmost, that the money was received to the use of Gibbon, and the promise made to him, whereby the right of action became complete in him, but that he is now prosecuting the suit for the benefit of Brooks. Let us suppose, and we are bound to make every fair intendment, that a legal cause of
The plaintiff in error farther insists that the judgment below is erroneous, for the matters contained in a paper accompanying the return and purporting to be a bill of
Another error assigned is, that the judgment was rendered without any writ of enquiry or assessment. According to the record, the assessment was made by the court, by whom in a case like the present, the assessment ought to be made, unless a writ of enquiry is demanded by one of the parties. Rev. Laws, 423, sec. 70. The record of the judgment is drawn as on an assessment by the court, in the manner sanctioned by our own practice, and by the approved precedents of Ticld and Archbold.
Let the judgment be affirmed.
Ford, J., and Drake, J., concurred.