It is necessary in the first place lo dispose of a question of form, as .to the verification of the plea. The complainant having waived an answer on oath, the defendant’s counsel supposed the waiver extended to the plea, which in this case is connected with the answer, as the plea covers only a part of the bill. A plea for some purposes may be considered a special answer. And for this reason it has been held that the defendant might put in a plea to the whole bill, under the usual order for time to answer, although the de=. fendant in such a case is not permitted to demur. (2 Dickers R. 554. 1 Grants Pr. 166. 1 Brown's Ch. Pr. 356.) But it is not an answer within the meaning and intent of the statute under which this complainant has waived an answer on oath. A plea was never considered as evidence in behalf of the defendant, as to the facts stated therein, so as to require the testimony of more than one witness to contradict .it, even where it negatived a material averment in the bill. The object of the statute (2 R. S. 175, § 44,) was to prevent the complainant from being concluded by the answer of the defendant, in a case where he was compelled to come into this court for relief, but in which he did not need a discovery,
- *570and where he was unwilling to permit the defendant to be a witness in his own favor, by the forms of pleading. Bills filed under this new provision in the revised statutes, are strictly bills for relief only, and not bills for discovery and relief. Hence, in a case which is proper for a plea, as the complainant is not entitled to a discovery, it cannot be necessary for the defendant to support his plea by an answer, as he must do in most cases where the anwer on oath is not waived. A plea to a bill of this description can seldom be necessary, as the answer cannot be excepted to for insufficiency; and the defendant may set up any matter of defence in the answer. But where the defendant finds it necessary or expedient to resort to this mode of defence, to prevent the trouble and expense of a protracted litigation, he must conform to the former practice of the court, so far- as to verify the allegations and averments in his plea by oath, in the usual form. In a case of this kind, however, where the negative averments in a plea of an. executor relate to transactions in the life time of the testator, or to acts done by others, it is sufficient, if the averments are made upon the defendant’s belief only; and they need not be sworn to positively. (Drew v. Drew, 2 Ves. & Beame, 160.) The averments in this plea were therefore correct in point of form ; but the plea should have been put in upon oath in the usual manner.
The complainant, however, is wrong in supposing that this is an objection which he can take advantage of at the hearing as to the sufficiency of the plea. As well might he object", at the hearing, that a plea or demurrer wanted the signature of counsel. The proper mode of taking advantage of a formal defect of this description, is by an application for an order to set aside the pleading, or to take it off the files for irregularity. The case of Wall v. Hubbs, (2 Ves. & Bea. 354,) referred to by the complainant’s counsel on the argument, shows such to be the practice. The application there was to take the plea off the files; and the only question was, whether the complainant was not too late in making the motion, after he had entered an order, in the register’s office, setting down the plea for argument. The application would have been wholly unnecessary in that case, if the want of a proper verification would *571have been a sufficient ground for overruling the plea on the hearing. If a plea or answer was taken off the files for irregularity, on the ground that it had not been properly sworn to, the defendant, as a matter of course, would have the right to file a nev/ one, properly verified. But if a plea is overruled on the hearing, the defendant cannot have the advantage of his plea without special leave from the court to amend. The case of Wall v. Hubbs merely decided that the complainant, by taking a step in the cause after the irregularity accrued, was not precluded from making a motion to take the plea off the files of the court. But where, with full notice of the irregularity, he brings on the argument of the plea without asking to have it taken off the files, he is not entitled to have it overruled as an insufficient defence, if in other respects it is well pleaded. In the case of Beach v. The Fulton Bank, (2 Paige's Ch. R. 307, 6 Wendell's Rep. 36, S. C.) although an answer had been put in without oath, as to one of the defendants, and was therefore irregular, it was held that both parties were precluded from making any objection to the answer after a replication had been filed, and the proofs had been taken in the cause. And Chief Justice Savage there held that the complainants would have been precluded from objecting to the answer on the ground of the irregularity, by the filing of a replication thereto after notice of such irregularity. (See also Riky v. Kemmis, Beatty's Ch. Rep. 322.)
Upon the merits of the plea, if it turns out to be true in point of fact, my present opinion is, that it will be sufficient to prevent the parties from going into a general account of the partnership transactions, as between the copartners, previous to the first of January, 1812. The late chief baron of the exchequer in England, in a recent case, The Attorney- General v. Brooksbank, (2 Young & Jerv. R. 42,) expressed an opinion that an account stated must be actually signed by the parties to enable the defendant to plead it in bar to a suit for an account; although he seemed to suppose an account not signed might be a good defence if set up in the answer and proved at the hearing. That opinion is clearly not law; and it is directly opposed to that of Lord Hardwicke, in Willis v. Jernegan, (2 Atk. Rep. 252;) where he says, in express terms, that it is not necessa*572ry that the account should be'sigued by the parties. (See also Jessup v. Cook, I Halst. Rep. 436. La Malaine v. Caze, 2 P. A. Brown’s Rep. 128.) As there is no statute, or rule of law, which requires the signatures of the parties to an account stated and settled between themselves, to make it binding and obligatory, provided the fact of the settlement can be established by other proof, it cannot, upon any principle of pleading, be necessary to set out any particular species of evidence, in a plea in bar, to enable the defendant to avail himself of the stated account as a defence.
In the case under consideration it appears by the statement in the complainant’s bill, that it was one of the stipulations in the agreement of copartnership that Smith should make up and state the partnership accounts, annually, on the first of January in each year. Under that stipulation, even if Smith made up and stated the accounts ex parte, in the absence of Heartt, it was the duty of the latter to look into them within a reasonable time, and to point out the errors, if any existed therein, or he must be considered as having acquiesced in the correctness of the accounts as stated on the books of the firm ; to which books both parties had access during the existence of the copartnership. In stating the accounts of partners, as between themselves, the entries on the partnership books, to which both partners have had access at the time when those entries were made, or immediately afterwards, are to be taken as prima facie evidence of the correctness of those entries ; subject, however, to the right of either party to show a mistake or error in the charge or credit. And vouchers for the specific items can never be required except under very peculiar circumstances. Here the copartnership continued but a few months after the statement of the accounts on the first of January, 1812 ; and it is possible that some fact may be disclosed in the evidence which may render it proper to permit the complainant to surcharge or falsify the account, as stated on that day for the preceding year, at least. But this cannot be done if the plea is now allowed as a conclusive bar against opening the account. I therefore think this is a proper case for saving the benefit of the plea to the defendant until the hearing.
*573An order must be entered accordingly, directing the plea to stand over until the hearing of the cause; and saving to the defendant the benefit thereof at that time. In such a case neither party recovers costs as against the other on the argument of the plea, unless the contrary is specially directed by the court. (1 Brown’s Ch. Prac. 359.)