5 Blackf. 180 | Ind. | 1839
Covenant by Hughes against Houlton. The declaration alleges that the defendant, by his writing obligatory, bound “himself to the plaintiff for the payment and delivery of the following amounts of good sawed lumber at the mill of the defendant, at the times and for the prices following, to wit, twenty thousand feet of sawed lumber that had been assorted, of one inch in thickness, to be at the average thickness, at the value of one dollar per hundred feet for inch lumber, and for a greater or .smaller price according to the thickness of the .same, and to be delivered at said mill in the month of June, 1832,” sixty thousand feet in March, 1833, and thirty thousand feet in March, 1834. The declaration then avers, that “according to the true intent and meaning, tenor and effect, of the said writing obligatory, the said defendant was bound to deliver to the said plaintiff eleven hundred dollars’ worth of sawed lumber,” at, &c., on,
It is now contended by the appellee that the declaration is bad, because, 1st, There is no averment that the penalty of the bond had not been paid; and 2dly, The covenant described in the declaration is variant from that exhibited on oyer.
There is no foundation for either of these objections. This being an action of covenant founded upon an express contract contained in the condition of the bond, the nonpayment of the penalty had nothing to do with the plaintiff’s right of action, and of course needed not to be averred. Beasley v. Gillespie, 4 Bibb, 314.
The declaration does not profess to set out the contract upon which it is founded in hcec verba, but only its legal import. This, we think, has been substantially done.
The judgment is reversed, and the proceedings subsequent to the joinder in demurrer set aside, with costs. Cause remanded, &c.