Judges: Brunt, Daniels
Filed Date: 12/29/1890
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
The complaint in this action was for a sum due upon an account for money laid out and expended, and commissions in the pur-
It is urged upon the part of the respondent, however, that this was an affirmative defense which must be set up, and various authorities are cited, claiming that they establish this- proposition. We have examined all those which were decided by-the courts of this state, not thinking that authorities of a foreign state can construe the rules of pleading in this state authoritatively, and we find no such proposition whatever laid down in any of the cases. Under a general denial of a complaint alleging a contract a defendant has a right to prove anything tending to shqw that no valid contract was ever entered into. It is only in those cases where there is a confession and avoidance that it is necessary to plead the special facts constituting the defense. If the so-called contract forming the basis of the action never was in law a contract because contrary to the law, a general denial authorizes the defendant to prove that fact. Therefore, in- the case at bar, the defendant had a right to show that no valid contract for the purchase of merchandise was ever-entered into between these parties, or ever contemplated in this transaction, and that they were merely wagering contracts, intended to be settled by the payment upon the one side or the other of differences, without the delivery of any merchandise. The evidence which defendant sought to introduce by the cross-examination of plaintiff’s witness tended to show this, and thereby the defendant brought himself within the rule laid down in Bigelow v. Benedict and Story v. Salomon, supra, in which it was held that contracts were not to be presumed to be illegal, but it was necessary to prove it. We think, therefore, that because of the exclusion of this evidence error was committed which calls for a new trial. The judgment should be reversed, and a new-trial ordered, with costs to appellant to abide event.
Brady, J., concurs.
The plaintiff did not object to the form of the questions intended to elicit answers showing that the business out of which the claim arose was made up of gaming transactions. Neither was the objection taken that this evidence was not admissible under the pleadings. When that objection is intended to be relied upon it must be presented at the trial. The general objection which was presented to these questions, that they were incom