31 Minn. 446 | Minn. | 1884
The plaintiffs sought by this action to recover the value of lumber purchased from them, and used in the construction of a dwelling-house upon a lot owned by the defendant in the city of St. Paul, and to have the amount of the recovery declared a lien, and enforced as such. The answer of the defendant denied the purchase of the lumber by him, and set forth facts showing that the lot was his homestead at the time of the alleged sale. No reply having been interposed to the asserted right of homestead, the court granted judgment for defendant upon the pleadings. ■ There being no reply putting in issue the allegations showing that the property was a homestead, the answer was to be construed as admitting the facts so pleaded. The property being a homestead, no lien in favor of the plaintiffs was created by the alleged sale and use of the lumber. Coleman v. Ballandi, 22 Minn. 144. The case cited controls that under consideration so far as relates to the question of the homestead right.
It is contended, however, that, upon the facts alleged in the complaint, the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, as in a legal action, the value of the lumber, and the question arises as to the sufficiency of the complaint for this purpose. The only allegations which can be claimed to charge the defendant with this personal liability are the
This complaint is insufficient for the purpose claimed. The allegation as to an express -contract is in no manner connected by averment with the furnishing or delivery of the property. The nature of the contract is not stated. It is not stated that the property was sold to the defendant, nor that it was delivered to him at his request, from which the legal inferenee of a sale might arise. It is only by reference to the transaction as being a sale, without alleging” the fact, that we are to infer that such was its character. The concluding sentence above recited, stating that a portion of .the property was purchased by the defendant, does not show a cause of action for any substantial recovery, and obviously, from its connection, was only directed to the end of showing the right of lien, and this, we think, was the general purpose and effect of the whole complaint.
The complaint does not contain allegations sufficient to constitute
Judgment affirmed.