The appellant is a State banking corporation and the respondent is one of its depositors. The latter’s claim, as disclosed by th< complaint which was attacked in the court below, is that he drev checks on the appellant to the amount of $1,34.), payment of whicl *167was refused. The gist of the cause of action is found in the allegations of the 6th paragraph of the complaint, and it seems quite clear that in order to plead the cause fully it was incumbent upon this respondent, in addition to the other facts necessary, to allege that at the time of the presentation of the checks in question the respondent had actually to his credit a sum at least equal to the amount of such checks. (Shipman v. Bank, 126 N. Y. 318.) This the respondent failed to do and instead alleged that prior to the presentation of these checks, he had been notified by the appellant that a certain check deposited by him had been collected in his behalf and the proceeds placed to his credit. The vice of this allegation is that it merely pleads an evidentiary fact instead of an ultimate one. Section 241 of the Civil Practice Act requires that the complaint “ shall contain a plain and concise statement of the material facts, without unnecessary repetition, on which the party pleading relies, but not the evidence by which they are to be proved.” Indeed, this means that there must be furnished a plain statement of the ultimate facts and not of the evidentiary ones. (California Packing Corp. v. Kelly S. & D. Co., 228 N. Y. 49; DeCordova v. Sanville, 214 id. 662, revg. 165 App. Div. 128, upon the dissenting opinion of Ingraham, P. J.) In that case the learned justice said: “ The language of the Code (§ 481) is that a complaint must contain ‘ a plain and concise statement of the facts constituting each cause of action without unnecessary repetition/ not the facts from which iy inference or deduction the facts which constitute a cause of iction can be inferred. That fact the plaintiff herein has not seen it to allege in this complaint. This objection is one of substance md goes to the very foundation of pleading, and, with all the irreguarity and confusion incident to the pleadings under the Code, I ihink we should hold to this one requirement: that the plaintiff should state the facts which constitute the cause of action and not sustain a pleading which only states the evidential facts from which he trier of the facts is authorized to infer or deduce a liability.” Applying this principle to the instant case, we have in this omplaint not an allegation of the fact that the plaintiff actually tad money on deposit to his credit which was sufficient to meet the hecks drawn against the same, but one indicating that the defendnt had notified him that it had such money in its hands. The [ability of this appellant must rest entirely upon the question as o whether it had the plaintiff’s money on deposit and not that it ave him notice that it had. The former would be considered Itimate while the latter is simply something from which the essential net may be deduced. We feel, therefore, that this complaint is ^sufficient and the motion should have been granted.
*168Order reversed, with ten dollars costs, and motion granted, with ten dollars costs, with leave to the respondent upon payment of said costs to amend his complaint within six days after service of order entered hereon.
Bijur, J., concurs; Wagner, J., dissents.