delivered the opinion of the ' Court :
Syllabus 1. In this ease there was a demurrer to the declaration filed by the defendants at rules, upon which the court failed to act. But as the declaration is good, being in the usual form of a declaration on two protested negotiable notes, the failure in Ihe court to act upon the demurrer is an omission, which prejudiced no one and of which this Court will not take notice, as the Appellate ,Court will consider the case, as if the demurrer rvas overruled. (See Bantz & Co. v. Basnett, 12 W. Va. 772). There were also filed at the rules the pleas of non-assump-sit and payment. To these pleas no replications were filed, and no formal issue wasjoined; but a special plea was filed in court, and the plaintiff replied to this plea generally, and issue wasjoined upon it. The jury were sworn to try the issue joined. It is settled however, that, though the jury are sworn to try the issue, yet if several issues are joined and the verdict of the jury responds to them all, this Court will disregard such irregularity and consider that all the issues have been tried by the jury. See Walden’s ex’r v. Faqua et al., 2 Wash. 1; White v. Clay’s ex’r, 7 Leigh 68; Baylor v. B. & O. R. R. Co., 9 W. Va. 291.
Syllabus 2. In the present case the, verdict of the jury was responsive to all the issues, being a general verdict for the defendants. I say responsive to all the issues, for though no formal issues were taken on the pleas of non-assumpsit and payment, yet, as both these pleas properly conclude to the country, (see Douglass v. The Central Land Company, 12 W. Va. 512) the plaintiff had a right without the formal addition of a similiter to proceed to trial on them as though issues had been formally joined upon them. See Code of W. Va., ch. 125, § 25, p. 603, and Douglass v. Central Land Co,, 12 W. Va. 506; Judge Maxwell’s opinion in B. & O. R. R. Co. v. Faulkner, 4 W. Va. 180, and Brewer v. Tarpley, 1 Wash. 363. But it is otherwise if the plea concludes with a verification.
*573The first objection urged by the counsel of the plaintiff in error is, that the court erred in allowing the de-fendanls to file this special plea. The Code of W. Va. eh. 125, § 56, p. 607, provides: “ When a plea is offered in any action which is not sufficient in law to constitute a defense therein, the plaintiff may object to the filing thereof on that ground, and the same shall be rejected. But if the court overrule the objection and allow the plea to be filed, the plaintiff may take issue thereon without losing the benefit of the objection, and may, on an appeal from a judgment rendered in the case in favor of the defendant, avail himself of the error committed in allowing such plea to be filed, without excepting to the decision of the court therein.” This obviously permits an objection to be made by the plaintiff' to the filing of the plea, whenever, if the plea were filed, a general demurrer to it should be sustained by the court. It is insisted, however, by the counsel of the defendants in error, that, in order that this statute may apply, the record must expressly show that the ground of the objection to the plea was, that there was not in it sufficient in law to constitute a defence to the action, and as the record in this case simply states that the plaintiff made objection to this plea without stating the ground of his objection, this statute had no application, and that having taken no bill of exceptions to the action of the court in permitting this plea to be filed, it cannot complain in this court of this action, having by its failure to take a bill of exceptions waived its objection.
*574Syllabus 3. *573If the record showed that the gi’ouud of objection was, not that the plea was insufficient in law, but some other ground, as that it ought not to have been permitted to be filed at the particular time it was offered, there would perhaps be soundness in the position taken by the counsel of defendants in error, that this statute would then have no application; but if as in this case the record does not disclose that the objection of the plaintiff’s counsel was based on any ground other than the insufficiency in *574law of the plea, this court must infer that this was the ground of objection, and this statute applies to the case just as much, as if this had been expressly alleged on the record to be the ground of the objection. In this case the record discloses no other grounds of objection on which the plaintiff based his objection to the filing of this plea. Even if we could regard this as a plea of accord and satisfaction as it was I presume intended for, there was no necessity for the defendants to file such a plea, as such defence would have been set up under their jilea of non assumpsit. See Paramour v. Johnson, 12 Mod. Rep. 377; Strong v. King, 17 Mod. Rep. 538; Martin v. Thornton, 4 Esp. 180; Lane v. Applegate, 1 Stark, p. 997 (2 Eng. C. L. R. 312); President Green’s opinion in Bantz & Co. v. Basnett, 12 W. Va. 353. It could also have been set up under the defendants’ general plea of payment perhaps. See Chitty on Contracts (9 Eng. 11 Am. ed.) vol 2, p. 1110, where it is laid down that payment may be made in goods as well as in money; and in Ligon v. Dunn, 6 Ired. (N. C.) L. 137, the court expressly held that under the general plea of payment the acceptance of a bill of exchange in discharge of a bond might be proven. Payment may be made in a bill of exchange. See Mayer v. Nias, 1 Bing. 311. Perhaps it might be necessary, before an accord and satisfaction could be proved under the plea of payment, to file with the plea a bill of particulars showing the character of the payment. See Hoffman v. Walker, 26 Gratt. 314, and opinion of Green, President, in Bantz & Co. v. Basnett, 12 W. Va. 854 and 855. But though the defendants, under their plea of non assumpsit could have relied on an accord and satisfaction of the plaintiff’s cause of action, yet, as accord and satisfaction admits the original cause of action and sets forth matters in discharge thereof, they had a right to file such a plea, though the plea of non assumpsit had been filed. See Merchants and Mechanics Bank of Wheeling v. Evans & Dorsey, 9 W. Va. 373. Of course any special plea pro*575posed to be filed must be such as would not be fatally defective on general demurrer.
lt remains therefore to enquire, whether in this case the special plea would have been fatally defective on general demurrer; for if it would have been, the court ought under our statute to have refused to permit it to be filed, as it was objected to by the plaintiff. The first allegation in this plea is “ that the maker of said notes executed and delivered to the said plaintiff, and the said plaintiff accepted, an order on The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company for $5,000.00, out of which the said notes were to be paid.” This obviously was not an allegation, that an accord and satisfaction of said notes was agreed upon between the plaintiff and the defendants and actually made. On the contrary it amounts only to an allegation, that it was agreed between the plaintiff and the defendant that the defendant should give an order on The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company for $5,000.00 as a collateral security for the two notes due from the defendant, of $1,000 each named in the declaration, and, when the same was collected by the plaintiff, he should apply $2,000 thereof to the satisfaction of said two notes; and, there being no allegation that any monies had been received on this order, it is obvious that these facts stated constitute no defence to the plaintiff’s action. It was properly held in Drake v. Mitchell et al., 5 East 251, that a plea, that a note was given for the payment a.nd satisfaction of a debt, was fatally defective in not avering that the plaintiff had accepted the note as satisfaction. In the allegation, we have quoted above, it is not only not alleged that the plaintiff had accepted the order as satisfaction, but the contrary is alleged, that out of the order wlien collected by the plaintiff these tioo notes have tobe paid. And if this was really the agreement of the parties, it was obvious that the order was but a collateral security, and the transaction as stated could not be an accord and satisfaction, or any other defence to the action.
It is true this plea goes on immediately and makes an-*576ot^er statement utterly inconsistent with the statement °f the agreement of the parties which had been thus set forth. It says : “ Said order was accepted by The VVells-burg Manufacturing Company and then delivered to the said plaintiff and accepted by it in full satisfaction and discharge of the debt in th.e declaration mentioned.” This statement is utterly irreconcilable with that which had just been made. The one statement in its legal effect was, that an order of $5,000.00 was given to the plaintiff simply as collateral security, out of which when collected it was to retain $2,000.00 in discharge of these notes. The other statement is, that this order of $5,000.00 was not given as collateral security, but was given in lieu of the debt due to the plaintiff and accepted by it in full satisfaction and discharge of the debt. By the first statement the order remained the property of the defendant pledged only, that out of it $2,000.00 should be paid the plaintiff. By the second statement the whole $5,000.00 order was the property of the plaintiff, in which the defendant had no interest, it having been given in lieu of the debt the defendant owed the plaintiff. The impossibility to determining what the agreement between the plaintiff and the defendant was, according to the allegations of this plea, would.of itself render this plea fatally defective asa defence to the action. The first allegation of this plea cannot possibly be rejected as surplusage, for it is the very portion of the plea which purports to set out the agreement of the parties, and their conduct relied on by the defendants as a full defence to the action; and if any part of the plea is to be rejected, it would have to be the latter portion, or that portion of it which is utterly irreconcilable with the defence which had been made. But even if it were possible to reject this first allegation as surplusage, the plea would still be fatally defective; for the-second allegation is, that this order was received in full satisfaction and discharge of the debt in the declaration mentioned. What possible meaning can be attached to this language ? The declaration had alleged *577that the defendant, the drawer of .the notes, had promised the plaintiff in writing on June 14,1870, to pay it' one sum of money, the amount for which the first note was drawn, and on the 21st day of June, 1870, had promised the plaintiff in writing to pay it another sum of money, the amount for which the second note was drawn; and that the defendants on the 7th day of October had promised the plaintiff impliedly to pay it another sum of money, that is, the amount of the protest of this first note, and on the 24th day of October, 1870, they had promised impliedly to pay the plaintiff a fourth sum of money, to wit, the amount of the protest of the second note, and that all ihese promises had been violated to the damage of the plaintiff, and therefore it sued.
I suppose that the defendant must say, that the debt in the declaration mentioned, spoken of in this plea as fully satisfied and discharged, meant the whole amount claimed by the plaintiff as having been promised to be paid to it; for otherwise the plea would not be a defence to the whole of the plaintiff’s cause of' action, as it purports to be. But if this be really the meaning of this plea, it is obviously fatally defective ; for the plea alleges that this accord and satisfaction was made on the 20th day of August, 1870, and the declaration shows (hat two of these promises to pay two of these sums of money were not made till long after this time, that is, till the 7th ánd 24th days of October, 1870, respectively, when these notes were protested. If is impossible by any accord and satisfaction to discharge debts which have no existence till long after the accord and satisfaction was agreed upon and completed. Such an allegation borders on an absurdity; and yet to this absurdity the defendants would be driven, even if they could reject the first allegation in this plea as surplusage. I am therefore of opinion that the court ought to have rejected this special plea, because the allegations in it are not sufficient in law to constitute a defence to this action. We will consider hereafter what effect, if any, the improper admission of *578this special plea against the plaintiff’s objection thereto ought to have in this court on the judgment rendered by the circuit court in this case.
But as the defence of accord and satisfaction seems from the evidence to be the real defence relied upon, and as it might have been made, as we have seen, under the plea of non assumpsit, and as the issue on this plea as well as on the special plea must be regarded as having been submitted to and decided by the jury, we will consider the proceedings had during this trial'and whether any errors were committed by the court during the trial, either in the refusal to exclude testimony from the jury or in the instructions given to the jury.
The only evidence which the court permitted to go to the jury, which the plaintiff by his counsel objected to, was the proof of the agreement made between the drawer of the notes sued upon and Kuhn, the president of The First National Bank of Wellsburg, the plaintiff. It had been proven, that the business of the bank was mostly done by the cashier and this president of the bank without consulting the board of directors, which seldom met. And the question, I suppose, intended to be raised by this objection to this testimony was, whether the president could make any accord and satisfaction of a debt due the bank by the acceptance of any order on a third party in full satisfaction and discharge of the debt of the bank, unless he' was expressly authorized so to do by an order of the board of directors.
Syl’abus 4. The inherent powers of the president of a bank are extremely limited. In Hodges ex'r v. First National Bank of Richmond, 22 Gratt. 58, Moncure, President, delivering the opinion of the court, says : “ The president of a bank has, it seems, very little inherent power. He is generally, if not always, a member of the board of directors, and chosen by the board from their own number. It is his duty to preside at meetings of the board. ‘ Ordinarily,’ we are told, ‘the position is one of dignity and of indefinite general responsibility rather than of *579any great or accurately known power. The president is generally expected to exercise a more constant, immediate and personal supervision over the daily affairs of the bank, than is required from any other director. Usage, or directorial votes, may confer upon him special functions, and may extend his authority to correspond with the increase of active duties. But the authority inherent in the office itself is very small; indeed it is very difficult to say precisely how or when it is much in excess of that which can be exercised by any other single director.5 Morse on Banks and Banking, p. 128. ‘A careful collation of all the adjudicated cases,5 continues the same author, ' wears a striking and peculiar aspect which is not very favorable to the assumption of any species o( executive authority without direct authorization.5 Id. 129. He further says: 'That the entire collection of judicial authorities justifies the annunciation of only one act as falling within the proper inherent power of the president. This solitary function is, to take charge of the litigation of the bank. There is no question that this matter belongs to him by virtue of his office. He may institute and carry on legal proceedings to collect demands or claims of the bank. He may appear, answer and defend in suits against the bank. He may retain and employ counsel on behalf of the bank.5 Id.. 129. The powers and duties of a cashier in virtue of his office are, on the other hand, much more numerous, though his office is strictly executive.55
syiiabus5. syllabus a. The president of The First National Bank of Wells-burg, the plaintiff, clearly had no inherent authority by virtue of his office to make such an arrangement or accord and satisfaction, as the defendants undertook to prove in this case. The president of a bank or of any other corporation has, except to the very limited extent which we have above indicated, no inherent authority by virtue of his office to enter into contracts or agreements which will bind the corporation. But on the other hand it is clear, that he may be authorized so to do, and *580. it is equally clear, that it is not necessary, in order to 'prove such authority, to produce a resolution of the board of directors conferring the authority, or to prove any action or consultation of the board on the subject, but such authority may be inferred by proving the existence of such facts as constitute clearly a public holding out, that such an agreement or contract as he has entered into was within the scope of his legitimate delegated authority and as warrant the public in so believing. See Farmers Bank v. McKee, 2 N. J. 318; Mt. Sterling Turnpiks Co. v. Looney, 1 Metc. (Ky.) 550:
Syllabus 7. It may be difficult in some cases to say, when the authority to make the contract or arrangement for the corporation by its president or other officer may be fairly inferred from the proof of the president or.other officer being in the habit of doing acts beyond that which were inherent in him by virtue of his office. For the doing of some such acts habitually would not justify the inference, that he had authority to make contract or arrangement, if it differed essentially in its character from the acts not inherent in his office which he was in the habit of doing, unless the acts, he was in the habit of doing, were so numerous and variant as to justify clearly the inference, that a general authority had been impliedly conferred on him to do all acts and make all contracts, which the directors had authority to make and power to confer on the president to make. If the acts, he was in the habit of doing, were not thus numerous and variant, to justify the inference, that he had authority to do the particular act or make the particular contract for the corporation, the acts so done must be of the same geneial character, so as to involve the same general power, though it may be applied in the particular act or contract done or made to a different subject. See Merchants Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604.
Of course, if the act done by the president or other officer is such that by its charter the directors could not confer on him the power to do, or be such an act as the *581directors themselves could not do, then no such authority could be imposed, no matter if it were shown that the officer habitually exercised such powers. This was the case in Hedges, ex’r v. First National Bank of Richmond, 22 Gratt. 69, Judge Moncure then saying : “ The directors of a bank cannot release without consideration a debt due the bank ; and a fortiori they cannot empower the president so to do.”
SyllabU3g Syllabul,9 In all such cases the question is not so much, whether the authority has been conferred by the directors on the officer, as whether the directors by their acquiescence in similar acts done by the officer, or in a large variety and number of acts, though not similar, justified the party dealing with the officer in believing that the directors had conferred on him such authority. In the language of the syllabus in Merchants Bank v. State Bank, 10 Wall. 604, “ Evidence of powers habitually exercised by a cashier of a bank with its knowledge and acquiescence defines and establishes, as to the public, those powers.” And this principle is equally true when applied to .the president. But as the inherent power of the president is so much more limited than that of the cashier, the evidence of this character, from which the right to exercise unusual powers, can be inferred, should be much stronger in the case of the president than in the case of the cashier of a bank. Not only may the authority of an officer of a corporation, as a bank, to do a partió ular act be inferred from proof of his habitually doing such acts with the acquiescence of the directors of the corporation, but wdiere no such acts are proven, if any act or contract of such officer made without authority is subsequently ratified by the directors upon full knowledge of all the circumstances of the case, the corporation will be bound thereby as fully, as if the officer had been expressly authorized to do the act or make the contract. This ratification need not be shown by direct evidence that it was expressly approved by the board of directors, but such ratification may be inferred from their accept-*582ingthe benefits of the act or contract. As if under the contract so made by the president or other officer money is to be paid to the corporation, and it is received by the corporation and applied to their use even without the knowledge of the directors, if it is not returned, when it becomes known to the directors that it has been applied to their use, such conduct would be a ratification of the contract of such president or other officer.
In thus stating the law I but apply to a corporation fundamental principles governing all principals and agents; and of course these principles are as applicable to a corporation and its officers as to any other principal and agent.
Applying these principles to the case before us, it was proved that the board of directors of The First National Bank of Wellsburg seldom met, and that the business of the bank was mostly done by the cashier and president without consulting the board of directors. If this evidence fairly tended to prove that the president had authority to make with the defendant the contract or arrangement, which it was attempted to prove that he did make, then the defendants ought to have been allowed to prove such contract with the president; otherwise, they ought not, unless this contract was afterwards ratified. It is very difficult to determine whether this evidence of the president’s contract, because of this proof, ought to have been admitted, or not, as tending to show that the president was authorized to make this contract. The proof as stated is so vague and indefinite, that it is difficult to say whether it fairly tended to prove the authority of the president to make such a contract or arrangement as the defendants allege he did. Before we can wisely determine such a question, we ought to be more definitely informed as to what acts and contracts the president was in the habit of making for the corporation. If they were acts of a similar character, or involving a like exercise of power, or if they were very frequent and were very various in their character, so as *583to justify or permit the jury to draw the inference that he was authorized to do any acts which the board directors could do, then this evidence or this proof alone was properly admitted by the court. If, however, the evidence was given in the indefinite manner that it is certified in this bill of exceptions, then it would not have justified the court in permitting pi’oofof the accord and satisfaction agreed upon and made with the president of the bank to go to the jury; for such indefinite and vague testimony is not such as the jury ought to be permitted to consider, as tending to prove that these very large powers claimed had been conferred on the president of a bank, whose inherent powers are so very limited. But of course if the proposed evidence was to be followed up by proof that the contract or arrangement of the president was subsequently ratified by the board, such evidence ought to be admitted to go to the jury.
In this case there was endorsed on the order, which the president of the bank undertook to accept, as the defendants say, in discharge of their notes, a credit made by the cashier of the bank of $1,193.03 paid on this order only four days after it was given, and this amount was credited on the books of the bank. It is true it was credited on a different debt, but as the bank thus appropriated to its own use this amount paid on this order, and if it was never returned by the order of the board of directors, they must be regarded as ratifying the taking of this order by the president, and they having so ratified it, the money so paid and received by the bank must be applied according to the actual understanding of the parties to this transaction at the time the order was given. If the jury believe the order was actually given in discharge of these notes, it must by this appropriation by the bank of this $1,193.03 be regarded by the jury as having been ratified by the board of directors, who must be inferred as having taken it with a knowledge of the true understanding of the parties, unless there was proof, which does not appear in the record, that this money so *584appropriated by the bank was offered to be íeturned by order of the directors. For if it had been appro pri-¿Red without such true understanding, it would have been the duty of the board of directors upon ascertaining that there was this misunderstanding to return this money. And if they never offered to return this money, they must be regarded as having ratified the acceptance of this order by the president and the contract made by him, when he accepted it, whatever that contract really was between the president and the defendant.
The fourth instruction asked by the plaintiff’s counsel and refused by the court was, I presume, intended by the plaintiff’s counsel to mean, that no accord and satisfaction made by and with the president would be binding on the bank, unless it was expressly authorized beforehand by the board of directors, or was subsequently expressly ratified by the board. If not so meant, it was so worded, that thejury on the facts which had been proven would have probably so interpreted this instruction. It was therefore properly refused by the court, as calculated to mislead thejury. It might have been properly given by the court, if it had been first so modified according to the views above expressed as to effectually prevent its misleading thejury.
We express no opinion as to what was the contract actually entered into between the president and one of the defendants, Kimberland, or whether the order was accepted by the president as an accord and satisfaction, or only as collateral security. If we assume that the president was authorized to make the contract he did make, or that it was subsequently ratified, and if we assume that the order on The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company was given and accepted as a full discharge and satisfaction of the defendant, Kimberland’s, notes sued on, then it was a good accord and satisfaction, provided The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company did complete the purchase of the foundry then contemplated, and did by such purchase owe the amount, which by their con*585tract they stipulated to pay, and were not entitled to an abatement therefrom by reason of the fraud of the drawer of the order in misrepresenting the number of flasks sold, such right of abatement being prejudicial to the plaintiff. But if alter this purchase the amount really due from The Wellsburg Manufacturing'Company was reduced to the injury of the plaintiff as the holder of his order, because the company were entitled to an abatement from the nominal amount of their indebtedness, because C. Kimberland had made false statements in regard to the number of flasks sold, and they had been falsely inventoried and appraised upon the faith of his false representation, then the acceptance of this order by the president of the bank would not be a valid accord and satisfaction, it being vitiated by the fact that C. Kimberland knew that The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company would not owe as much as the president of the bank thought they would, and he did not communicate this knowledge- to the president of the bank.
The indebtedness of The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company was, it is true, to the firm of Kimberland & Kuhn, but Kimberland was the active member of'this firm, and we must infer that this indebtedness of The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company was properly applicable to these notes due from C. Kimberland to the plaintiff and to the other debts to which it was applied, for though they appear to be the individual debts of one of the partners, Kimberland, yet the partnership funds were to be applied to the payment of the individual liabilities of one of the partners by the express consent of the other partner, Kuhn.
The first instruction asked by the plaintiff’s counsel, that this order could not be an accord and satisfaction, is, I presume, based on the idea, that as The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company did not at noon on August 20, 1870, when this order was given, owe this §5,000.00 therefore, though accepted as a full sat'sfaction and discharge of the notes sued on, still it could not so operate, as the *586drawee did not have funds on which the drawer had then a right to draw. It is true, that if a firm gives to another a check in accord and satisfaction of a debt, and the drawee did not owe the drawer, or has no funds in his hands on which the drawer has a right to draw, such a cheek can not be a good accord and satisfaction generally, because the making of such a check is a false affirmation by the drawer, that he has funds in the hands of the drawee on which he has a right to draw. Hoge v. Wilson, 28 Gratt. 173.
But this rule, that the draft must be on a party in whose hands the drawer has funds, can have no application to the present case, as the drawer did not represent that The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company then owed any money on which he had a right to draw; but only that if they completed the purchase of the foundry, as was anticipated, they would owe. This is not stated on the face of the $5,000.00 order received by the president, but it is stated on the other order given to him personally and to Prather, and which constituted a part of the same transaction; and it was necessarily known to the president of the bank, as he was also the president of The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company. The court and jury have a right to look to the whole transaction and to consider not only all the papers executed at that time but also all the parol testimony of what was said at the time, in order to determine the true nature of this transaction, and to determine whether this order was accepted as a a full discharge of the notes sued on, or only as collateral security. We cannot be confined to the wording of the $5,000.00 order, nor to that and the other orders signed at the same time, to ascertain the character of the transaction. This $5,000.00 order on its face shows, that it was not intended to set forth and reduce to writing the whole contract and arrangement made between the parties. The contract and arrangement made August 20, 1870, between these parties was a verbal arrangement uot intended to be and in fact not reduced to writing; and *587the several orders, that were given by C. Kimberland given in pursuance of this verbal contract and arrangement, and did not constitute the contract or arrangement. Regarding this as the true relation and bearing of these orders, it results of course, that their existence and production doesnot prevent, but on the contrary necessitates, the enquiry by parol proof of the- contract or arrangement, under which these several orders were given.That this is the true character of these orders is apparent on their face. On their face they would notconstitute an intelligible contract. What property is to be purchased by the drawee is not specified. It is called “my foundry,” when the drawee really owned no foundry, and when the parole evidence shows he meant the foundry and personal property of Kimberland & Kuhn. The order in favor of Kuhn and Prather is simply for a sum of money ; but how it was to be applied does not appear on its face. This depended on the parol agreement of the parties; and the order itself shows therefore, that it did not constitute the agreement made by the parties. So the order in favor of the plaintiff says, the $5,000.00 is to be on the drawer’s debt. The drawer owed the bank no such debt; but some five different debts at least, the bank asserts six differ-erent debts, all due at different times and differently secured.
If we were to look at this order only, the inference might be that the drawee then owed the drawer a sum of money, what amount we could not say, but exceeding $5,000.00, and that the drawer owed the bank a single debt of $5,000.00 at least, but these'inferences would be false. If the parties had intended to reduce their contract to writing, the facts would of course have been set out more fully; the property to be sold to the drawee would have been specified, the exact amounts to be paid to Prather, Kuhn and S. George, executors, would have been stated, and on what account or in satisfaction of what claims the $5,000.00 were to be paid would have been specified particularly, or if the order was given in *588discharge of any claims, it would have been specified what they were particularly. It is therefore obvious that these orders were not intended to be a reduction to writing of the verbal contract or agreement which was then made, but were simply given in accordance with this verbal contract, and of course do not preclude the parol proof of this contract.
The $5,000.00 order was not conditioned upon the payment of the other orders named, but was only payable after them in order of time, precisely as they would have been had they been dated before it; and the failure to pay these prior orders in no manner affects the validity of the order for $5,000.00.
What was the effect of these orders ?•> It is well settled that an order drawn on a particular fund, operates as an assignment of the fund not only as between the drawer and payee, but also as it regards the drawee, though not assented to or accepted by him, and will render him equitably answerable to the payee for a failure or reiusal to appropriate the fund to the payment of the drafts. See 2 White & Tudor’s L. C. (4th Am. from 4th London ed.) 22, 1646, and numerous authorities there cited ; and also Anderson etal. v. DeSeur, 6 Gratt. 363. But the fund on which the order is drawn must have cither an actual or potential existence; for if it has not, it cannot be assigned in any manner. See Huling, Bockerhoff & Co. v. Cabell, 9 W. Va. 522.
Syllabus 10 Though these orders do not clearly specify the funds out of which they were to be paid, yet as in all equitable assignments anything, which indicates an intention to assign, will suffice, and oral declarations may therefore be effectual for that purpose, parol evidence may be received to show such intention. In this case parol evidence shows clearly the particular fund, out of which' these orders were to be paid. It is universally agreed, that an order directing the payment of the whole of a particular fund to a party is an equitable assignment of the fund, and though it be not accepted by the drawee, *589yet the payee may in the name oí the drawer bring his suit at law for the debt, and a court of law in such case will recognize his equitable right and not permit the dismissal of the suit by the drawer or its defeat by the drawee. But if the order is only for a particular amount to be paid out of its particular fund, and the amount of the order is not equal to the entire fund, no suit at law could be instituted by the payee against the drawee, if he has not accepted the order; nor could he institute a suit at law in the name of the drawer, because he has no claim, except to a part of the fund, and the debt due from the drawee can not be divided up into numerous debts due different payees of orders without his consent.
It is true, that some courts appear to have gone further and to have apparently held, that an order on a particular fund directing the payment of a specific sum less than the entire fund did not operate as an equitable assignment pro tanto, and if not accepted, was entirely inoperative. In many of the cases, however, in which broad language was used from which this inference might be drawn, it is probable that the doctrine was not intended to be carried so far, but the language of the court, when construed with reference to the character of the case before the court, ought to be considered as meaning probably no more than that an order to pay out of a particular fund an amount less than the whole fund would not be recognized by a court of law as an equitable assignment-, though, if the order was for the whole fund, it would be recognized by a court of law as an equitable assignment. The following are authorities of this description, or authorities holding that an order on a particular fund for less than the whole amount of the fund was not an equitable assignment pro tanto. Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277; Gibson v. Cooke, 20 Pick. 15; Tieman v. Jackson, 5 Pet. 580, 597; Walter v. Mann, 18 Mo. 564; Bliss v. Pierce, 20 Vt. 25; Eichelberger v. Murdock, 10 Md. 373; Wilson v. Carson, 12 Md. 51; Sands v. Mathews, 27 Ala. 329, 402.
*590Syllabus 11. But the better authorities hold, that when a person having a demand due him assigns part of it to different persons whether by separate orders iu their favor or otherwise, they are valid equitable assignments pro tanto, and though, if the orders are not accepted, a court of law will in no manner recognize these partial assignments or orders as equitable assignments, yet a court of equity in a suit in chancery will recognize and enforce them. See Field v. The Mayor of New York, 2 Seldon 179; Caldwell v. Hartupee, 20 P. F. Smith 74; Hall v. Buffalo, 2 Abb. (N. Y.) App. Dec. 301; The Public Schools v. Heath, 2 McCart. (N. J.) 22; Moody v. Kyle, 34 Miss. 506; Stanbury v. Smith, 13 Ohio N. S. 495, 501; Brooks v. Hatch, 6 Leigh 534; Yates v. Groves, 1 Ves. 280.
In the case of Mandeville v. Welch, 5 Wheat. 277, Justice Story says : <l In cases where the order is drawn on the whole of a particular fund, it amounts to an equitable assignment of that fund, and after notice to the drawee it binds the fund in his hands. But when an order is drawn, either on a general or particular fund, for a part only it does not amount to an assignment of that part or give a lien as against the drawee, unless he consents to the appropriation by an acceptance of the draft, oran obligation may be fairly implied from the custom of trade or the course of business between the parties as a part of their contract. The reason of this principle is plain— a creditor shall not be permitted to split .up a single cause of action into many actions without the assent of the debtor, since it may subject him to many embarrassments and responsibilities not contemplated in his original contract. He has a right to stand upon the singleness of his original contract and decline any legal or equitable assignments, by -which it may be broken into fragments. When he undertakes to pay an integral sum to his creditors, it is no part of his contract, that he should bo obliged to pay in fractions to any other persons ; so that if the plaintiff should show a partial assignment to the extent of the bills, it would not avail him in support of the present suit.”
*591The conclusion reached was clearly right, as that suit was an action at law. We have reason however to believe that some of the language used will probably convey a false idea of what we suppose was Judge Story’s real views. Thus in the portion of this opinionwe have quoted he says: “ But when an order is drawn on a particular fund for a 'part only, it does not amount to an assignment as against the drawee, unless he accepts the order.” And again : “ He (the debtor) has a right to stand upon the singleness of his original contract, and to decline any legal or equitable assignments, by which it may be broken into fragments.” Judge Story, I presume, only meant that a court of law would not recognize an equitable assignment of a portion of a contract or an order on a particular fund for a part only of it. But the broad language he used has lead other courts to consider, that an order on a part only of a particular fund was not good even in a court of equity as an equitable assignment pro tanto.
*592Syllabus 13. Syllabus 14. *591The real views of Judge Story are, I conceive, better expressed in his work on equity jurisprudence, which is in apparent conflict with his views as above stated. With his views as expressed in his equity jurisprudence we concur. He there says : “ If a draft or order is drawn on a debtor for a part or the whole of the funds of the drawer in his hands, such a draft does not entitle the holder to maintain a suit at law against the drawer, except the latter assent to accept or pay the draft.” * * * “ But the transaction will have a very different operation in equity. Thus, for instance, if A having a debt due to him from B should order it to be paid to C, the order would amount in equity to an assignment of the debt, and would be enforced in equity, although the debtor had not assented thereto. The same principle would apply to the case of an assignment of apart of such debt. In such case a trust would be created in favor of the equitable assignee on the fund, and would constitute an equitable lien upon it.” 2 Story Eq. Jur. §§ 1043-4. *592Rut, as we have before stated, the fund on which the order is drawn, must have either an actual or potential existence ; for if it has not, it cannot be assigned in any manner.
It is however, in order that it may be equitably assigned, only necessary that a chose in action should have a potential existence. It is not necessary that it should be either certain in amount or be incapable-of being defeated and avoided by a third party. Thus a laborer, who is hired only by the day and is liable to be discharged at any time, or, though he works by the piece and his wages vary every month and he is liable to be discharged at any time, so that he has a binding contract with his employer only to finish the piece on which he is working, can nevertheless assign his future wages, they having in the contemplation of law a potential existence, and not being regarded as a mere possibility or expectancy. See Emory v. Lawrence and trustee, 8 Cush. 151; Hartley v. Tapley, 2 Gray 565; Lawrence v. Smith, 7 Gray 150. And so too it a person was in the service of his employer till April 1st, and then without any intermission of his service makes another contract for further service at reduced rates, an order made prior to April 1st, while in service under his old contract, would operate as an equitable assignment of wages earned under the new contract made April 1st, after the order was given. See Wallace v. Haywood Chair Company, 16 Gray 209. And so too it has been held that if a party, who had contracts with a corporation for printing, made an assignment of a certain amount of what should become due him, this would be a good equitable assignment of what became due under contracts for printing done under contracts made after the date of the assignment. See Field v. The Mayor of New York, 2 Seldon 179.
If an assignment of future wages were made, when there was no contract of services, even though there had been prior to that such contract of service, the assignment would be inoperative, as it would be an assignment *593of that which had no potential existence, the future wages in such case being a mere possibility coupled with no interest. Morton, Judge, in Lou v. Pen, 108 Mass. 349; Mulhall v. Quinn, 1 Gray 105. Of this nature was the assignment in Huling, Brocherhoff & Co. v. Cabell, 9 W. Va. 522, which this Court held inoperative.
Sy]iabus w. syllabus 16. In the case before us, as now presented to this court, the order was given on the fund which might arise from the sale of a foundry including personal and real property. Some four days before the order was given, it had been agreed by The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company and the owners of this foundry property, that they would purchase the same and that the purchaser would pay for the personal property at a price to be fixed by one Smith, but the price of the real estate was not agreed upon. The personal property had accordingly been so appraised at $5,100.00 three days before this order was given, but the price of the real estate was not agreed upon till two or three hours after the order was given. On these facts we must hold, that the fund, on which this order was drawn, bad, when it was drawn, a potential existence, and the order operated as an equitable assignment of the fund pro tanto. If therefore this order was given by C. Kimberland in discharge and satisfaction of his notes sued upon, and if the plaintiff accepted it as such, though the drawer, The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company, never either accepted or paid this order, it will be a satisfaction, provided the contract made by C. Kim-berland with the consent of his partner was not vitiated to the plaintiffs’ prejudice by the fraud of C. Kimberland in misrepresenting the number of the flasks and thus procuring them to be appraised much higher than their value, as is alleged; for every thing of legal value, which the creditor did not have before, which is agreed to be received and is actually received in full satisfaction of a debt, is a good satisfaction without regard to the comparative magnitude or value of the satisfaction with the original debt, and may be pleaded or relied on as an ac*594cord and satisfaction. See Barn v. Carullo, 4 Myl. & Cr. 702-703; Boyd v. Hitchcock, 20 John. 76; Booth v. Smith, 3 Wend 66; Saul v. Rhodes, 1 Mee. & W. 153; 1 Smith L. C. (7th ed.) 605 and authorities cited.
If this order was received as collateral security for the notes sued on, then the obligations of the plaintiff are correctly set forth in the third instruction offered by the defendant’s counsel and given by the court. See Exparte Mure. 2 Cox’s Cas. in Eq. 63; Slevin v. Morrow, 4 Ind. 125; Russel v. Hoster, 10 Ala. 515; Faut v. Miller & Mayhew, 17 Gratt. 216, 217.
We conclude therefore that the court properly refused to give the plaintiffs, instructions, numbers three, five and six; that it also properly refused to give instructions number one and four, unless they were first qualified in the manner which would make them correspond with the law as hereinbefore stated; and that instruction number two ought not to have been given even with the modification thereof made by the court; but of this the plaintiff can of course not complain. The instructions asked by the defendant were all properly given by the court; and the court might properly have added another, that if The Wellsburg Manufacturing Company could have avoided the contract for the sale of the foundry property, or had an abatement to the plaintiffs prejudice in the price to be paid therefor, by reason of the fraudulent misrepresentation by C. Kimberland of the number of flasks sold, then the order given by him to the plaintiff, though agreed to be received and actually received as an accord and satisfaction of the notes sued on, would not be held to be such accord and satisfaction.
Syllabus 22. A plea of set-off was filed at rules and not written out^ and no bill of particulars filed with it, and no issue taken upon it. This was certainly irregular; but neither party could in this court after verdict and judgment complain of this irregularity, as under this plea in the absence of a bill of particulars no evidence could have been received, even if issue had been joined upon it.
*595Syllabus 20. It remains only to inquire whether the court’s improperly admitting the defendants to file a special plea, to the filing of which the record shows that the plaintiff ob-jeefed, is a sufficient ground for reversing a judgment for the defendants, when this special plea, if it had "been drawn in proper form, would have only amounted to a plea of accord and satisfaction which could have been proven under the general issue of non assumpsit, which had been pleaded. It was decided by this court that the rejection of such a plea as accord and satisfaction, though not proper, would be no ground for reversing a judgment in this court, where the plea of non assumpsit had been filed, and the cause was decided on a demurrer to evidence. See Merchants and Mechanics Bank of Wheeling v. Evans & Dorsey, 9 W. Va. 373, syllabus 5. It is also true, that, if the special plea sets forth facts showing that the plaintiff never had cause of action, it ought to be rejected, if the plea of now assumpsit has been filed. See. same case, syllabus 4. It will be seen that this case only decides, that, where the plea sets forth matters in discharge of the action, as accord and satisfaction, and the plea of non assumpsit is filed, and all the evidence is before the court as on a demurrer to evidence, this court will not reverse the judgment of the court below because it has improperly rejected the special plea, as this court sees all the evidence, and it was admissible under the plea of non assumpsit, and is sufficient to justify the judgment. Whether the same rule would be applied, where the evidence was not before this court, we need not decide. It is probably so; and this court in Hale v. The West Virginia Oil and Oil Land Company, 11 W. Va. 236, does say in broad language : “It is not error to reject a special plea setting up matter in defence to the action, when the plea of non assumpsit is filed, and the matter of defence of such plea may be given in evidence under the plea of non assumpsit.” But it must be remarked, that in that case the special plea rejected set up a defence not like accord and satisfaction, matters in discharge of the action, but it *596set up facts showing that the plaintiff' never had a cause of action ; which might perhaps make a difference, for in such a case the special plea amounts only to the general issue, and its rejection could not injure the defendant, and in fact it ought in such a case to be rejected.
The court in that case says: “ The special plea in effect only amounted to the general issue.” But if we admit that the rejection of a special plea, though setting up matter in discharge of an action, ought not in any case to be a ground for the reversal of a judgment, when the plea of non assumpsit has been filed, and the matters of the special plea could be proven under the general issue, will it follow that the improper receipt by the court of a special plea of this character, when the filing of it has been objected to by the plaintiff, will be no ground for reversing the judgment of the circuit court, when the judgment is in favor of the defendant? And when the evidence has not been certified to this court, can this court say that the circuit court may not have received under this improper plea evidence, that could not have been properly received under the general issue ? On the contrary when the evidence which the court received is not all certified to us, as in this case, can we assume that the court did not receive evidence to support this improper plea, which it would not have permitted if an issue on this improper plea had not been made up ?
In the ease before us it is, as we have seen, very difficult to determine what is the meaning of this special plea, and of course it must be difficult to surmise what sort ot evidence the court below received to support it. What evidence it received would of course depend on the meaning which the court below attached to this special plea. In the case of Hopkins Bro. v. Richardson, 9 Gratt. 486, it was decided: “The admission of an improper plea is error; and the Appellate Court wall not enquire, whether or not the plaintiff could be injured by its admission.” Judge Lee in this case says: “Nor is it any answer to the objection, to say that the plea, even if *597bad, could do the plaintiff no harm by being in the record. That is an enquiry upon which the court should scarcely enter, nor should it speculate upon the effect of an improper plea in prejudice of the plaintiffs rights. If it be insufficient and no answer to the action, it should be rejected, when objected to, nor should the plaintiff be put to an issue upon it.” The views of Judge Lee were cited approvingly by Judge Haymond in delivering the opinion of this Court in Griffie v. McCoy, 8 W. Va. 206. In my judgment the refusal to reject a plea, which the court ought to reject, is a good ground for reversal, unless, -when all the facts have been certified by the court below, it appears affirmatively to the court that the plaintiff could not be injured by having had to try his case on such improper plea.
The judgment of the circuit court in this case must therefore be reversed and annulled, and the plaintiff in error must recover of the defendant in error its costs in this court expended; and this Court proceeding to render such judgment as the circuit court ought to have rendered, doth set aside the verdict of the jury and award the plaintiff a new trial, the costs of the former trials to abide the final result of the suit; and this cause is remanded to the circuit court of Brooke county with instructions to proceed with it according to the principles laid down in this opinion, and further according to law.
The Other Judges Concurred.Judgment Reversed. Cause Remanded.