31 Cal. 231 | Cal. | 1866
The complaint is in two counts. The first count alleges that the defendant promised the plaintiff, if he would find a purchaser for certain real estate in San Francisco, that the defendant would pay the plaintiff for his services the excess of the purchase money over and above the sum of sixty-two thousand dollars; that the plaintiff procured F. H. Waterman to buy at sixty-five thousand dollars, which sum the defendant had actually received.
The second count is for three thousand dollars, as so much money had and received by the defendant to the plaintiff’s use. No allusion is made to Waterman or the purchase money paid by him, or to the sixty-five thousand dollars, or to any feature of the special contract. The count is, in short, for money had and received in the most general form. No bill of particulars was asked for, nor was any filed.
Issue was well taken on the first count, but to the second count there was no response. The only passage in the answer that can be claimed to have any reference to that count is this: “He denies that he received three thousand dollars in gold coin, parcel of the sixty-five thousand dollars, to and for the use of the plaintiff.” This denial is bad for two reasons: First—The count does not charge that the three thousand dollars sued for was parcel of sixty-five thousand dollars, or of any other sum, but three thousand dollars absolutely and without clog. The traverse is therefore pregnant with an admission that three thousand dollars had been received as charged—that is, three thousand dollars disconnected from the circumstance named in the denial, and spoiling its pith. Second—The traverse is vitiated for another but kindred reason. The denial is that the three thousand dollars was received in gold coin. That involves an admission that three