The trial was upon the common counts, to which the defendant had pleaded the general issue and recoupment. Demurrer to the latter plea being overruled, plaintiffs replied by the general replication (Code, 1907, § 533S), and sought to reply by special replication No. 2, setting up estoppel, to which demurrer was sustained. These rulings are assigned and argued as error.
In the plea of recoupment it was averred that at the time of the institution of the suit defendant had a claim against plaintiffs “growing out of the transaction upon which this suit is based,” and which is offered to be recouped “against the amount claimed in the complaint [and] as she asks for judgment for th^e excess,” averring:
That “the plaintiffs were employed by her to do certain work on the property described in the complaint, in repairing, building additions to, or beautifying the building on said premises, and that plaintiffs were to do said work in a good and workmanlike manner”; that “plaintiffs did said work in a negligent and unskillful manner, and that as a proximate consequence thereof she was damaged * * * ; that said damages were proximately caused by the negligent, unskillful manner of the said building by plaintiff, which negligence consisted in this: That plaintiff failed to do said work in a skillful and workmanlike manner.”
Grounds of demurrer challenging the plea are that it is not averred that the work was not done by plaintiffs as directed by defendant; that it is not shown in what the negligence consisted which proximately caused her damages; and it is not averred “with exactness or definitely in what manner or defect defendant received her damage.”
“Q. Now,'Mr. Plier, I will ask you to state to the jury what difference, if any, there was in the value of this property of Mrs. Miller, in the condition that it is in, and what it would have been, if the material used down there that you saw had been put into the place in a good and workmanlike manner?”
The plaintiffs then and there duly and legally objected to said question, on the ground that it was illegal, irrelevant, and incompe *608 tent, and the court then and there overruled said objections, an,d the plaintiffs duly and legally excepted to the court’s said ruling. The witness answered:
“If it had been put in workmanlike manner it would have been worth a couple of hundred dollars more.”
Plaintiffs moved the court to exclude the answer, the court overruled the motion, and plaintiffs duly excepted. The.question and answer was one way of proving the value of the house with and without the improvements, made the basis of the suit, and of which this witness was permitted to give his opinion. B. R. L. & P. Co. v. Sprague,
“Now, taking into consideration only the new part of the house there, what would you say the difference in value is between the value of the house at that time when you examined it and the value that the house would have been if the new part had been constructed in a skillful and workmanlike manner, with the material used?”
To said question plaintiffs then and there duly and legally objected, and the court overruled said objection, and the witness answered, “I would say from $100 to $125.” The plaintiffs moved the court to exclude said answer as evidence, and the court overruled said motion, to which action of the court the plaintiffs duly excepted. The objection to the latter question was general, and the ruling is not for review. Adams Hdw. Co. v. Wimbish,
Finding no reversible error, the judgment of the circuit court is affirmed.
Affirmed.
