The headnotes sufficiently deal with the case; but it will not be out of place to consider the pleadings for the purpose of showing that the plea of the defendant to which reference was made in the fifth headnote was not a plea in abatement on account of non-joinder of parties. The suit was for the purchase-price of personal property sold at administrator’s sale, which was alleged to have been bid in by the defendant, and for which
Under our present system of pleading the plaintiff is required to plainly, fully, and distinctly set out his cause of action in distinct and orderly paragraphs. Civil Code, §4961. ■ The defendant is required to distinctly answer each paragraph of plaintiff’s petition, and is not allowed to file a mere general denial. Civil Code, §5051. He may include in his answer different grounds of defense against the action, as, for instance, a denial that he owes the debt alleged by the plaintiff, and that it is barred by the statute of limitations, and that it has been paid; but each of such defenses must be distinctly made. Civil Code, §5052. Hnder a denial of the allegations of the plaintiff’s petition, no other defense is admissible except such as disproves the plaintiff’s action; all other
In the case before us the plaintiff alleged, in the 4th paragraph
Paragraph 3 of the plaintiff’s petition alleged that an order was granted to him as administrator, by the ordinary of the county, to sell the perishable and personal property belonging to the estate, and that as such administrator he did dispose of and sell such property to the highest bidder, as the law directs, such sale being for cash on delivery of the goods. In response to this paragraph the defendant answered that for want of sufficient information he neither admitted nor denied it. This, under our law, placed upon the plaintiff the onus of proving such allegations. Civil Code, §4961. It could hardly be claimed that this could be called only a part of a plea in abatement. It has already been shown that paragraphs 4 and 5 of the answer denied material allegations of the petition. Thus, whether the allegations in the defendant’s answer be taken as a whole, or disjointed excerpts be taken from the 4th and 5th paragraphs thereof, it-can not be construed into a plea in abatement. The truth isl, it is evident that counsel did not intend it as such, and the court did not so construe it. No request was made to submit any issue raised by a dilatory plea as such to the jury, either separately or in connection with the general trial. The ease went to trial on its merits. It was not sought to have a mere judgment of abatement, which would permit the action to be again brought, but to have the claim of the plaintiff defeated altogether. It is quite apparent that the real contention of counsel0 for the defendant was, not that the suit should be abated for non-joinder, but that a general verdict should be rendered for the defendant, because he claimed that the liability was one incurred on behalf of a firm of which he was a member,
Judgment affirmed. .