25 Ind. App. 250 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1900
—Appellee’s complaint avers that on July 1, 1891, he was appointed to the office of patrolman for appellant by the board of metropolitan police commissioners of appellant, “then and there duly appointed, organized, and acting as such under and in pursuance of the laws providing .for such board,” at a salary of $550 per year; that he entered upon such employment and discharged the duties thereof for six months and six days when with the consent of his superiors he retired from the service; that the service was accepted by appellant as rendered, was of the value of the salary fixed, and that such salary to the amount of $285 is due and unpaid.
The first and second assignments of error question the sufficiency of the complaint. It is argued that there is no averment that the board was a legally constituted one but
Appellant answered in four paragraphs. The first was the general denial. A demurrer was sustained to the second paragraph, and this ruling is assigned as error. But this paragraph does not confess and avoid the complaint. Its allegations are to the effect that appellee was never appointed an officer of appellant; that he was at no time such officer; that appellant never agreed to pay him for any services, and notified him when he began the services that appellant would not be responsible for his pay and that he never performed such services. This paragraph is no more than a special or argumentative denial of the complaint, and having been pleaded with the general denial, under which the facts pleaded were provable, there was no reversible e^ror in sustaining the demurrer to it. Henderson v. Henderson, 110 Ind. 316; Nixon v. Beard, 111 Ind. 137; Mason v. Mason, 102 Ind. 38.
The remaining error assigned is overruling appellant’s motion for a new trial. Whether the questions argued under this assignment can be. considered depends upon whether the evidence is properly in the record. Counsel'for appellee
Judgment affirmed.