By JUDGE WHITE.
The first error relied on is, that the action is account, and not assumpsit; and hence that the judgement should have been not for the damages,, but that the defendant should account; and that auditors should in the first instance have been appointed to take an account between *417the parties preparatory to final judgement. The necessity of such an interlocutory order evidently depends upon the correctness of the first position assumed, that the action is not assumpsit, but an action of account. Chitty in his 1st volume on Pleadings, lays down this princi-pie : that the action of assumpsit will lie against a bailee for neglect or other breach of duty; and by reference to the 2d volume of the same work, made by the author himself, the form of a declaration against an agent or auctioneer for not duly accounting for goods delivered to him to sell, is to be found. This form is in assumpsit, and the very one pursued in the declaration before us. Without then further reference to authority, it is apparent .that this first position is not sustainable. The next objection taken by the plaintiff in error is, that the proof shews there was a special contract between Robinson and Steinburg, that the latter should receive from the former a number of clocks, to sell at New-Orleans at certain prices, and within a reasonable time after the sale thereof, account with Robinson in New-York currency. This, it is urged, is a specialcontract which should have been declared on, and could not, by the rules of law, have been given in evidence under the common count, which is the only one in plaintiff’s declaration. The case of Haynes against Woods decided by this Court last winter, is relied on to support this position. By reference to that case, it will be seen that the reason why it was then said that the contract was too special to go in evidence under the general counts was this : that it was a contract payable in board; and therefore was embraced by the principle of those cases which hold, that when a contract is payable in property or in some other special mode, differing from money, it is special, and whilst subsisting, must be declared on as such. The contract, however, in the present case is not of this character; for it is payable in New-York currency, which means mqney.’ This second objection then can avail nothing.
Thirdly, it is objected that the Court erred in charging the jury, that if they believed the evidence adduced, it supported the plaintiff’s declaration. The facts proven, as appears from the bill of exceptions, were, that some years before, Robinson delivered to Steinburg six or seven hundred dollars worth of clocks, with a promise on the part of Steinburg to sell the same and account with *418Robinson within a reasonable time after such sale, in New-York currency. It was further admitted, that on tké trial Robinson proved he had demanded the clocks of the then defendant, before the bringing of the action. This was the evidence on which the charge was given which is now objected to. Here was proof of the delivery of the goods to Steinburg to sell, with an express promise on the part of the bailee, to account after the sale within a reasonable time, and a failure to account for many years. Then, according to the authorities already cited from Chitty, he was an auctioneer or agent, who had received goods to sell, with a promise to account, which he had not done; and was liable in this form of action, and under just such a- declaration as this. In Bul-ler’s Nisi Prius 147-8, there is a case cited where the plaintiff declared in assumpsit, that he had delivered goods to the defendant, which he promised to dispose of (as in this case) and give the plaintiff an account. The question arose on demurrer to a plea in abatement, whether the action should not have been account, and not assump-sit. The Court adjudged that there being an express promise to account, assumpsit would lie as well as account, The facts in this case are the same with those in the one from Buller. This action then, according to that authority, was'properly commenced ; and the Court were right in charging the jury if they believed the evidence, that the plaintiff’s declaration was-sustained. They did not say that the facts were proved, or that the jury must believe and find them. All this they properly left to the jury, and merely charged them as to the legal result of the facts if believed. This it was their province and duty to do, and this we think they did agreeably to law.
The judgement below then, would be affirmed but for the last error assigned; which is, that it was rendered de bonis propriis when it should have been de bonis testatoris, For this, the judgement must be reversed and rendered,
Judge Taylor not sitting.