delivered the opinion of the court.
So far as the bill of exceptions is concerned, we are called upon to review the testimony and ascertain if there is any of it which will support the findings of the court. The dispute about the facts as recorded before us was to the effect that the electrical supplies for which the Western Electric Company claimed a lien
We recall also that the bill of exceptions does not disclose that any objection was made to any of the testimony offered on behalf of the plaintiff here. Finally, we have before us an action at law where the verdict is in favor of the plaintiff. Therefore, the question to be determined is whether the decision thus rendered cures the defect in the pleading.
“The extent and principle of the rule of aider by verdict is that whenever the complaint contains terms sufficiently general to comprehend a matter so essential and necessary to be proved that, had it not been given in evidence, the jury could not have found the verdict, the want of a statement of such matter in express terms will be cured by the verdict, because evidence of the fact would be the same whether the allegation of the complaint is complete or imperfect.” (See, also, Lindstrom v. Natl. Life Ins. Co., 84 Or. 588 (165 Pac. 675).
The defendant urges as an objection to the complaint that it does not appear therefrom that material was sold to the subcontractors to be used in the Hotel Pendleton building, and further that there is nothing in the pleading to distinguish the transaction from a sale in the ordinary course of business on open account. As to the subsidiary fact about a sale for specific purpose, or in the general course of business, we are concluded by the findings. When we come to examine the claim of lien introduced in evidence we find that it states that the material was furnished to the subcontractors to be used, and was used, in the alteration and repair of the building. Applying the rule laid down in Booth v. Moody, 30 Or. 222, 225 (46 Pac. 884), we discern that the evidence adduced would have been applicable to a pleading setting out with particularity all that the defendant claims should have been averred. There was enough in the complaint to notify the defendant in general terms that the plaintiff would rely on having been compelled to pay a lien against the building brought about by the default of the subcon