Court Opinion

ID: 6653175
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-20 20:55:53.198073+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:59:46.459713
License: Public Domain

Harrison, C. J.
In this action in the district court of Webster county the defendant in error declared upon an account and demanded judgment against the plaintiff in error for the stated sum. The answer admitted the existence of the account, and alleged matters of counter-claim. There was filed what was no doubt intended for a reply. A trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the defendant in error.
It is urged for the plaintiff in error that there was no reply, and that the pleas of new matters in the answer were admitted. What was evidently intended for a reply was filed, and appears in the record as follows: “Comes now the plaintiff, and denies each and every allegation of new matter therein contained.” We need not consider the availability of this as a plea to the answer, for the reason that, to the extent it is disclosed by the record, the parties participated in a trial and treated the averments of the answer as denied, and, under such circumstances, the objection that no reply was filed was waived. See Western Horse & Cattle Co. v. Timm, 23 Nebr., 526; Missouri P. R. Co. v. Palmer, 55 Nebr., 559.
It is argued that the instructions were not filed with the clerk. It is not shown that the plaintiff in error ob*412jected to the Instructions on the ground now urged; and this renders the complaint at this time unavailable. See Fry v. Tilton, 11 Nebr., 456.
It is also contended that the petition was defective, for that in the copy of the account attached thereto there was no dollar mark at head of any column or at any place in the account. While it is true that there was not a dollar mark in or on the copy of the account, some of the columns of figures were made in such manner and used in connection with terms which clearly and unmistakably indicated the import of the figures. Moreover, the account, as shown by the copy, was admitted in the answer. It follows that the judgment of the district court will be.
Appirmed.