20 Barb. 343 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1855
It was insisted on the part of the plaintiff at the trial, that none of the material allegations in the complaint were controverted by the answer,
The complaint is substantially, that the plaintiff, “ on or about the 31st day of May, 1851, was lawfully possessed as of his own property, of one large gold English lever watch,” stating its value, “and that the said plaintiff, on or about the time above
It does not appear by the complaint, that the watch ever came into the possession, or under the control of the defendant, except by the allegation that it was lent to him by the plaintiff. That allegation is therefore a material one. It was not necessary to make it; a general allegation that the defendant had the watch in his possession, without stating how he acquired it, would have been sufficient to connect the defendant with the property; but it was necessary to connect the defendant with it in some way, to lay a foundation for the allegation of a refusal to deliver it to the plaintiff on request, and of a conversion; and the plaintiff having chosen to do it in the mode adopted, and in no other mode, the allegation employed for the purpose is an issuable allegation.
The third paragraph of the answer is in these words : “And the defendant further answering, specifically denies that the plaintiff, on or about the 31st day of May, 1851, did leave such watch as aforesaid with the defendant in this action, for. any period, with the promise of this defendant to return the same to the plaintiff.” This is bad pleading in form; it is a negative pregnant; the denial may be strictly true, and yet only the time stated in that part of the complaint to- which it is intended to apply—which is wholly immaterial—be wrong. But this form of pleading was formerly, when a general demurrer would lie for defects in substance, and a special demurrer was required for formal defects, only the subject of a special demurrer ; and unless demurred to specially, it put every thing material to which it applied in issue. (Gould’s Pl. ch. 6, part
Overlooking the defect of form, which has been considered, I think the portion of the answer above given, substantially controverts the allegation in the complaint, of the lending of the watch to the defendant. Webster’s definition of the word “lend” is, “1. To grant' to another for temporary use, on the express or implied condition that the thing shall be returned, as to lend a book.” A “loan for use” is defined by writers on the law of bailment to be “a bailment of goods to be used by the bailee temporarily, or for a certain time, without reward.” (Story on Bailment, § 6, 219, 220.) Thus understanding the term “lend” in the complaint, the delivery of the watch to the defendant, and his promise to return it, are included in the allegation that the plaintiff lent the watch to the defendant. The answer, instead of a literal denial, negativing the allegation in the words of it, denies that the plaintiff did leave the watch with the defendant for any period, with his promise to return it. This meets the substance of the allegation, and puts it in issue.
The first paragraph in the answer is, that the defendant “is not informed and cannot state,” whether the plaintiff was, at the time stated in the complaint, possessed as of his own property of the watch. The code does not warrant this form of denial. A denial must be general or specific, or it must be,
It is contended on the part of the plaintiff, that the concluding part of the answer, alleging a sale and purchase, is inconsistent with the allegation in the complaint, of a bailment, and therefore a denial of it. If the supposed inconsistency existed, without some further denial, no proof of the bailment would have been requisite on the part of the plaintiff in the first instance; he would have been entitled to recover, unless the defendant established the new matter of a sale and purchase, brought forward by him in his defense ; the burden of proof as to which was upon him. But the complaint and answer, in the 'respect alluded to, are not necessarily inconsistent. For ought that appears on the face of the pleadings, the sale was subsequent to the bailment.
There being one material issue formed by the mere denials in the answer, the exception taken must be overruled, and the judgment affirmed.
Selden, Welles and T. R. Strong, Justices.]