The complaint avers that the defendant is indebted to the plaintiff in the sum of $275, with interest, at the rate of' two and a half per cent, per month. The ease was referred to a referee, and the only evidence adduced to sustain plaintiff’s claim, merely established the fact, that he and defendant went together to a place to sign a bill of sale, and that while there, the former remarked that defendant owed him $400, which the latter did not deny. I do not see how this evidence can sustain the above averment of the complaint. This sets forth a specific contract, that defendant owes plaintiff the sum of $275, with a specified amount of interest, which it is averred defendant promised to pay at a particular time. This allegation is not broad enough to be sustained by the mere facto that the defendant did noto deny that he owed $400. The other circumstances diminish the effect of this silence still further, for it does not appear that the occupation at the time, had any connection with the subject of their indebtedness in question, and that they were merely engaged about a bill of sale. But independent of this nature of precision of this allegation in th© complaint, I think that on broader 'grounds, a person can hardly lbs held liable to pay a debt simply because he did not deny its existence when charged, and that at a time when the debt, if it existed at all, was not the subject of consideration.
The report of the referee is set aside.