Tbe plaintiffs in error brouglit suit, in the city court off Atlanta, against the defendant upon an open account. There was a demurrer to the petition, upon the grounds, that “no cause of action, plainly, fully and distinctly set forth, is alleged against the defendant; that in none of the paragraphs of the plaintiffs’ petition is any amount alleged or claimed against the defendant”; and that the action was barred by the statute of limitations. The court below sustained this, demurrer, and subsequently, during the same term of the court, the plaintiffs moved the court to set aside the judg
1. This petition was defective; it simply alleged that the •defendant was indebted to the plaintiffs upon an open account, “besides interest, a copy of which account is hereto .annexed and made a part of the same,” without alleging how much the defendant was indebted upon 'the account, ■or for what amount the plaintiffs sued, or even alleging that the plaintiffs sued for the amount of the balance shown by the bill of particulars. As a copy of an account was attached ■to the petition, this allegation, taken in connection there
any or all of the allegations contained in any or all of the ■ paragraphs of the petition.” The plaintiff should so plainly, fully and distinctly set forth his cause of action that the defendant may either admit or deny the whole of his claim, or ■ admit it in part and deny it in part. “Where the plaintiff’s cause of action is not set forth with sufficient clearness in his declaration, the remedy is by special demurrer, or by objection to the testimony.” Jossey v. Stapleton, 57 Ga. 144. In this case the plaintiffs’ cause of action was not set forth with sufficient clearness in the petition. The defendant pursued the proper remedy; the plaintiffs made no offer to cure the defect by an amendment; and the judgment of the court, wdffch simply sustained the demurrer generally for this-reason, was right.
2. This suit, having been brought more than four years-from the date of the last item on the account, was barredi.
Judgment affirmed.