delivered the opinion of the court.
Juan Nogueras Pedraza obtained a judgment against Juan Canel for $789.73 with interest thereon at 6 per cent from the 23rd day of May, 1911. The creditor attached an auto: mobile of the defendant to secure the judgment. To release this automobile and claiming it as his own Francisco Bird y Quiñones intervened with two sureties. Not only was judgment rendered for Nogueras, but the intervention proceeding' was also decided in his favor on the 21st of June, 1916.
The complainants in this case are the two sureties in the intervention proceeding. They allege that on October 30tli,. 1918, at the demand of Nogueras they paid him $756.90 and, it does not appear that they were even threatened with an, execution or attachment process. Before the complainants-made this payment, or on the 11th of July, 1917, Nogueras; also collected from Francisco Bird Quiñones the sum of $400 *248on account of the judgment, with.' a promise on the part of . the latter to pay the balance up to $900.
It definitely appears, and we think this is the principal fact in this case, that at the time of the payment by the complainants to Nogueras of the sum of $756.90 the judgment against Canel, after crediting him with the amount paid by Quinones of $400 and calculating interests, was more or less exactly the amount paid by the complainants. There is no averment in the complaint that Nogueras received more than his debt against Canel.
The Complainants set up that the payment by them was made under a misapprehension or inadvertence; that they were never notified of the judgment; that they did not know whether Francisco Bird Quiñones had paid anything or not, .and that Nogueras did not attempt a discussion (excusión) of ihe property of Francisco Bird Quinones for whom they were sureties.
From these facts it would appear that the complaint was a frivolous one. The complainant-appellees have not honored us with a brief. The complainants, without stopping to insist on a discussion against Quinones, paid $756.90. They waived the necessity for a discussion by this action and the payment must be considered to be voluntary. Volenti non fit injuria.
Likewise they waived any necessity for a notice of a .judgment, even supposing that such a notice was necessary. 'They were surely put upon notice by the demand of No-gueras. Nor did it make any conceivable difference that complainants did not know whether Quinones had paid anything or not. It does not appear that Nogueras was overpaid by either Quiñones or complainants, or that the said creditor, was seeking to obtain more than the amount of the judgment, and it is a settled fact that principal and sureties all joined to release the attached automobile.
' • Nogueras is the appellant in this court. In the court *249"below lie admitted the facts of the complaint, but the Court understood that he was acceding to the prayer of the complaint and hence rendered judgment against him. The. record shows, as maintained by appellant, that he only admitted the facts of the complaint, having previously filed a demurrer. Such admission will not cure an insufficient complaint. Questel v. Conde, 18 P. R. R. 727. In any event, Nogueras was entitled to have his demurrer reviewed in this court. The facts as reviewed show a lack of a cause of action in complainants.
Furthermore, we may question whether it would not be •error for a court to entertain a complaint which failed to state a cause of action.
The judgment must be reversed and the complaint dismissed.
Reversed.
- Chief Justice Del Toro and Justices Aldrey, Hutchison and Franco Soto concurred.