11 Minn. 174 | Minn. | 1866
By the Oowrt
The plaintiff in his complaint, alleges that the defendant is a municipal corporation, and “that on and before the 13th day of July, 1851, and until April 1st, 1858, A. L. Larpenteur, Norman W. Kittson and William B. McGrorty, were the duly elected and qualified, and acting Street Commissioners of the Second Ward of the said city of Saint Paul, under and by virtue of the said charter and the amendatory acts thereof then in force. That the said Larpenteur, Kittson and McGrorty, acting in their official capacity as such ^ Street Commissioners, and by the authority vested in them as such Street Commissioners by said charter, and the acts amendatory thereof, then in force, having prior to the 5th day of August, 185J, determined to grade Bench street in said ward between Jackson and Wabashaw streets, advertised for bids for doing the same. In pursuance whereof the plaintiff made the lowest bid for doing said job, and said Street Commissioners having awarded the contract therefor to the plaintiff as the lowest bidder upon said bid made by him for doing said job, the said Street Commissioners entered into a written contract under seal, with the said plaintiff for the said grading of Bench street as follows, to-wit, pursuant to said bid.” The plaintiff then sets out the contract and alleges performance on his part, and a failure on part of the defendant to pay the sum due thereon, and demands judgment. The defendant, among other defenses, alleges in the answer, “that the said Street Commissioners some time prior to the 13th day of July, 1851, determined and ordered the grading of Bench
££ £The Street Commissioners’ office of the Second Ward is kept at the corner of Fifth and Pobert streets, up stairs, over Forbes & Kittson’s dry-goods store; the Commissioners hold their regular meetings every Wednesday, at 3 o’clock, p. m.’
No bids were asked for such a contract as the one made with the plaintiff, and the contract let not being the same that was advertised, the acts of the city or ward officers in making it, were void, and created no liability on the part of the defendant. But the plaintiff’s counsel argues, that the allegations of the answer above set out are not “ new matter,” and therefore were not admitted by the failure to deny them. An answer must either deny the facts alleged in the complaint, or set up new matter by way of avoidance. Those matters which the defendant should affirmatively plead as a defence are “new matter” within the meaning of our statute; those that amount merely go a traverse of the allegations of the complaint are not. "Was it in this case incumbent on or proper for the defendant to set out these matters in the answer ? I think it may correctly be laid down as a general rule of pleading, that a defendant who admits the facts alleged, but wishes to avoid that effect, may and should affirmatively set up the special matters on which he relies as an avoidance. Finley v. Quirk, 9 Minn. 194.