In an action of assumpsit for goods sold and delivered, the defence was, that the goods were received and purchased on a barter account. The defendant filed an admis*295sion, that he had purchased and received the goods at the prices charged, but alleged that they tvere so purchased on barter account, that is, to be paid for not in money but in other goods. He thereupon claimed the right to open and close, under the forty-first rule of the court of common pleas, which claim was not sanctioned by the court. We think the decision was right. The defence was matter of denial, not of avoidance. On indebitatus assumpsit, for goods sold and delivered, the plaintiff must prove a sale upon an express or implied contract to pay for them in money; otherwise there is no debt. A delivery of goods, upon a special agreement to deliver other goods in satisfaction, is a special contract and a good one, but it creates no debt. If such were the cause of action relied on, it must be specially declared on, with an averment of a breach, by alleging a demand of the goods stipulated to be given in satisfaction, and a refusal or neglect of the defendant to deliver them. When, therefore, the defendant insisted that the goods were received upon a barter account, he denied the existence of the plaintiff’s cause of action, and left the affirmative upon the plaintiff, and the burden of proof to establish his main allegation, a sale for money. He did not bring himself within the rule.
The defendant filed a specification of defence and a set-off, insisting that all the goods were to be paid for in a specific article. • The cause had been referred to an auditor under the statute. The auditor’s report, as we understand it, states that it was objected that the goods were sold on barter account, to be paid for in printer’s ink, but that the proof did not sustain the objection except as to part, which was paid for in printer’s ink, by way of set-off. He therefore reported, that the plaintiff ought to recover certain amounts, subject to the set-off allowed.
This part of the report was objected to, on the ground, that the auditor had exceeded his authority, in reporting upon matter not submitted to him, by expressing an opinion upon ths grounds of defence. The court took a different view and admitted the report. It appears to us, that the auditor acted *296within the scope of his authority, and that by force of the statute his report was admissible and competent evidence. This is determined by the considerations above stated. It was for the plaintiff to prove a sale for money; the defendant insisted that the whole of the goods were delivered on barter account, to be paid for, not in money, but in exchange for a specific article. The whole account was referred to the auditor, to find whether any, and, if any, which of the articles were sold for money, and the finding that they were or were not' sold on barter account, which negatived their being sold .for cash, was directly within the range of inquiry, and of course within the scope of his authority. The auditor found that certain items were on barter account, and these were deducted from the set-off, leaving the balance as items due in money, and the jury found for the plaintiff, subject to the set-off.
Exceptions overruled.