The objection, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, is not waived by failing to demur. (Code, sec. 70.)
The complaint states that, “on or about the eighteenth day of February, 1868, plaintiffs sold and delivered to the defendant 4,000 lbs. of flour, and that the same was worth $212.” It does not show that the defendant undertook or became obligated to pay for the flour within á designated time, or within a reasonable time, or when requested; nor that the time of payment had arrived before the commencement of the action. For aught that appears from the facts stated, the property may have been sold on credit, the time of which has not yet expired; or it may have been sold and delivered to the defendant upon the request and credit of another, with a full understanding that the defendant was not to pay for it. It is assumed in argument that complaints like the one under 'consideration are sustained, by adjudications in other states, under codes similar to ours; and particular reference is made to the state of New York. A
It is not necessary in this case to determine to what extent the ease of Alleny. Patterson should be considered law, because the complaint in this case does not show, by stating either facts or conclusions, that the defendant is indebted. The case of Farron v. Sherwood (3 Smith, 229) states the following rule, which seems entirely consistent with the enactments of the Code: “It was not necessary to state in terms a promise to pay, it was sufficient to state facts showing the duty from which the law implies a promise.” A fault with the complaint in this case is that it neither states a promise to do any certain act at any specified time, nor states facts from which a duty to do so necessarily arises; or from which a promise is necessarily inferred. It is not probable that any method of pleading, in actions for money due upon contract, will ever be- discovered, that is more simple and easy in practice, or better calculated to apprise the court and the parties of the¡ grounds and nature of the action, or more likely to leave'a clear and concise record of what has been done, than that which is now prescribed in the code. Notwithstanding this conceded truth, we sometimes meet with pleadings in this class of actions that neither conform to the common law, nor to the requirements of the code. In actions for money due on contract, the common law required a concise statement of the facts, and in some particulars, the employment of technical language— the code requires a plain and concise statement of the facts. In other words, the common law required J;he facts to be stated concisely, and sometimes in technical language; the code requires the facts to be stated concisely and in plain,
The complaint does not in this case state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
Judgment should be reversed.