This action was instituted by the plaintiff to recover an amount which he alleged to be his due on eight county warrants, each drawn against the district road fund of a designated road district in Stanton county. The petition was framed to meet the requirements of section 129 *400of the Code of Civil Procedure in regard to statement of a cause of action. The first count of the petition was as follows:
“1. His first cause of action is founded upon a county warrant, of which the following is a copy, with all the indorsements thereon:
“ ‘$10.00. State of Nebraska, Levy of 1874.
“‘Amount levied, $566.00.
“ ‘Amount issued, 315.75.
“ ‘Stanton Counts', Stanton, Aug. 2, 1875.
“ ‘Stanton County, Treasurer of said County: Pay to H. Tibler, or order, ten & 00-100 dollars, and charge to account of land road fund, Dist. No. 5.
“‘[SEAL NEBRASKA.] R. OBERG-,
“ ‘■Chairman County Commissioners.
“ ‘No. 34. C. L. Lamb, County Clerk.’
Indorsed as follows:
“ ‘Presented Aug. 13, 1875, and not paid for want of funds. E. S. Butler, Go. Treasurer.
“ ‘No. 17. Reg. for payment Aug. 13, 1875.
‘E. S. Butler, Trs.
“‘Tax R., $2.39. May 3, ’76, balance/
“2. There is now clue from the defendant to the plaintiff on said warrant the sum of $8.12, which he claims, with interest from May 3, 1876.”
As to each of the other seven warrants declared upon there were similar allegations, with some differences in matters of which notice need not be taken in this proceeding, except that it appeared that each of two of the warrants had the name of its payee indorsed on the back.
The general allegations of the pleading were as follows: “The defendant refused, and still refuses, to pay said warrants, or any part thereof, although often requested so to do by the plaintiff. (18.) The plaintiff further says that the defendant has long since collected the taxes levied for the payment of all the aforesaid war*401rants, against which levy they were drawn, as shown upon the face thereof, ancl which several funds and levies aforesaid, as shown upon the face of the warrants, copies of which are set out in the above eight causes of action, were more than sufficient to pay the warrants aforesaid, after paying all prior warrants drawn against said several funds.” There was filed for defendant a general demurrer to the petition, which on hearing was sustained, and the plaintiff electing to stand on his petition and plead no further, judgment was entered for the defendant. The plaintiff presents the case to this court by a proceeding in error.
One objection to the petition was that the instruments therein declared upon were non-negotiable, and there was no statement in the pleading of the transfer of the title to them to the plaintiff, and no allegation of his ownership. As we have before said, the petition was framed to fulfill as a pleading the provisions of section 129 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which reads as follows: “In an action, counter-claim, or set-off, founded upon an account; promissory note, bill of exchange, or other instrument, for the unconditional payment of money only, it shall be sufficient for the party to give a copy of the account or instrument, with all credits and indorsements thereon, and to state that there is due to him on such account or instrument, from the adverse party, a specified sum, which he claims with interest. When others than the makers of a promissory note, or the acceptors of a bill of exchange, are parties in the action, it shall be necessary to'state also the kind of liability of the several parties, and the facts, as they may be, which fix their liability.” This section of our Code is an exact copy of a section of the Code of the state of Ohio, and very similar to one in the New York Code. The provision has been the subject of construction in each of the states to which we have just referred, and it has been determined that a petition drawn as prescribed by the corresponding section of the Code of the state of *402the decision,, to the one of our state under consideration, by the original party to the instrument in suit, or its owner by assignment or indorsement, is sufficient without any averment of extrinsic facts to show the right or title to it. {Sargent v. Steubenville & I. R. Co., 32 O. St. 449; Myer v. Miller, 2 W. L. M. [O.] 420; Ohio Life Ins. & Trust Co. v. Goodin, 1 Handy [O.] 31; Prindle v. Carruthers, 15 N. Y. 425; Batchers & Drovers Bank v. Jacobson, 15 Abb. Pr. [N. Y.] 218; Swann, Pleading & Precedents 181-189; Kinkead, Code Pleading, secs. 296, 301.) After an examination of the subject we feel satisfied to follow’ the construction given to the section in the states to which we have referred.
A second point raised under the demurrer was that the warrants were drawn for the payment from the treasury of the road district funds, and within the provisions of the law such moneys could only be drawn by road supervisors and by warrants of the commissioners; further, the warrants in suit were not drawn in terms in favor of road supervisors, or it was not stated in them that the parties payees were road supervisors. 'The law in force at the time the warrants in suit were drawn provided that district road funds should be expended by the road supervisors of the road districts (see General Statutes 1873, ch. 67, secs. 12-14), and the money to be obtained from the county treasury must be as follows: “It shall be the duty of the county treasurer, upon the order of the county commissioners, to pay to the supervisor of each road district the funds that may be in the treasury, belonging to said road district; and it shall be the duty of the supervisor to expend the money to the best advantage to his road district for special purposes, as by law provided.” (General Statutes 1873, ch. 67, sec. 35; Session Laws 1867, p. 46, sec. 5.) The warrants upon which a recovery was herein sought were drawn in terms at least to individuals, and not to road supervisors. It is true that such instruments are prima facie correct and legal if signed by the proper officers, and the officers will *403be presumed to have done their duty, and if illegal the impeachment much come from the defendant (1 Dillon, Municipal Corporations sec. 502); but here it is a direct question of the sufficiency of the pleading, and on its face the petition disclosed the issuance of the warrants to persons to whom by law they could not be issued. (Burlington & M. R. R. Co. v. Lancaster County, 4 Neb. 307; Burlington & M. R. R. Co. v. York County, 7 Neb. 487; Burlington & M. R. R. Co. v. Kearney County, 17 Neb. 511.) This constituted the pleading bad “and open to attack by demurrer.” The judgment of the district court must be
Affirmed.