Plaintiff, appellant here, brought suit upon a promissory note for $1,616.72, executed by defendants. As defenses the defendants alleged a material alteration in the note, and that the note was procured by fraud on the part of plaintiff; they also alleged the same fraud as the basis of a counterclaim in the sum of $2,135.16. The jury in answer to a special interrogatory found there had been no material alteration in the note, but rendered a general verdict for the defendants in the sum of $808.36, and judgment was entered thereon. Plaintiff moved for a new trial, which motion was denied, and the only appeal is from the order denying the new trial.
As to whether appellant properly raised at the trial the questions on which he relies here, and whether he has sufficiently *Page 816 presented by his notice of motion for new trial, any of the questions urged, various contentions are made by the respondents upon the record. Plaintiff's original notice of his motion for a new trial is styled "Notice of intention to move for a new trial"; but it being sufficient in form as a notice of motion for a new trial, it will be considered as such, as to any matters sufficiently presented thereby. (Times Printing Co.v. Babcock, 31 Idaho 770, 176 P. 776.)
After the time elapsed for filing specifications of particulars in which the evidence was claimed by plaintiff to be insufficient to justify the verdict, a new notice of motion for a new trial was filed, containing such specifications; and the trial court, upon plaintiff's application, under C. S., sec. 6726, for relief from his default in not filing the specifications, entered an order purporting to grant the relief asked, and considered the specifications upon the hearing of the motion for new trial. Whether C. S., sec. 6726, authorizes relief in such a case need not be decided here, since one question raised by the original notice of motion for new trial requires a reversal of the order appealed from.
One of the errors of law occurring at the trial, alleged in the first notice of motion for a new trial, consists of the overruling by the court of plaintiff's objection to any evidence offered in support of the defense and counterclaim, so far as based on fraud, upon the ground that the answer in that respect fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a defense or state a counterclaim. To attack pleadings by a general objection to the introduction of evidence upon the ground that the facts pleaded do not constitute a cause of action nor a defense is not a commendable practice, and is not favored by the courts, and upon such objection the court will consider as properly alleged all facts that may reasonably be implied from the allegations made. Every intendment will be taken in favor of the sufficiency of the pleading, and it is only when the pleading utterly fails to state, either directly or by reasonable inference, some fact essential to the cause of action or defense pleaded that such objection *Page 817 should be sustained. (Coliseum Athletic Assn. v. Dillon, 204 No. App. 504, 223 S.W. 955; Hines v. Pershin, 89 Okl. 297,215 P. 599.) But if by even such liberal construction the pleading itself fail to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or defense, then the objection should be sustained. (31 Cyc. 759; Carpenter v. Sibley, 153 Cal. 215, 126 Am. St. 77, 15 Ann. Cas. 484, 94 P. 879, 15 L.R.A., N.S., 1143; McConnell v. Davis, 46 Okl. 201, 148 P. 687; Haupt v.Independent Tel. Messenger Co., 25 Mont. 122, 63 P. 1033.)
Appellant's contention is that the fraud pleaded as a defense does not show that respondents were damaged thereby, and that the counterclaim likewise fails to show such damage. The defense so pleaded by defendants was that the plaintiff and defendants had been copartners in the ownership and operation of certain farm property; that on December 21, 1920, the parties agreed to dissolve the partnership and that defendants should purchase the interest of plaintiff therein; that plaintiff had been bookkeeper of the partnership, and made certain representations to defendants as to assets and liabilities of the partnership, which they relied upon in arriving at the purchase price of plaintiff's interest; that by reason of the existence of certain outstanding liabilities not disclosed by plaintiff, and the nonexistence of certain assets which he represented to exist, the total assets of the partnership were worth $2,135.16 less than plaintiff represented them to be worth; that the defendants thereupon agreed to pay plaintiff $3,600 for his interest in the partnership assets, and that the note sued on by plaintiff was a note given for a part of said purchase price. The counterclaim, by reference, incorporated all of said allegations of fraud and stated that by reason thereof the plaintiff was indebted to defendants in the sum of $2,135.16. The theory of the defense and counterclaim pleaded, and the theory upon which the case was tried and the jury instructed, was that if the assets were worth less than they would have been if as represented, the defendants were damaged to that extent. It was not pleaded, nor did the defendants *Page 818 attempt to show by the evidence that the interest of plaintiff in the partnership assets was in fact worth less than the purchase price agreed by the defendants to be paid therefor; nor was rescission asked or tendered.
Perhaps under the numerical weight of authority, the fact that the assets were worth less than they would have been worth if as represented, in itself shows a damage to the defendants. (27 C. J. 92.) But this court has adopted the rule adhered to by other and equally eminent authority, to the effect that in order to show damage from fraud, the purchaser of property must show that the property he obtained was of less value than the price paid for it. (Frank v. Davis, 34 Idaho 678, 203 P. 287;Gridley v. Ross, 37 Idaho 693, 217 P. 989; 27 C. J. 96, and cases cited.) Among the courts adopting this rule is the supreme court of the United States. Upon the theory that in such a case the defrauded party is entitled to recover the loss he has sustained, which is obviously the difference between what he parted with and what he received, and that he should not in such case recover speculative profits in addition thereto, it was so held, upon a review of the conflicting lines of authority, in Sigafus v. Porter, 179 U.S. 116,21 Sup. Ct. 34, 45 L. ed. 113.
It would seem that this court has settled the rule of law on this point in Frank v. Davis; and under that rule, the affirmative defense of fraud, and the counterclaim based upon the same facts, utterly fail to show either directly or by any possible inference, facts constituting either a defense or a counterclaim. The objection to the evidence offered on that issue should have been sustained.
In view of the fact that a new trial must be granted, it should perhaps be pointed out that the plaintiff should be held liable only for the damage, if any, resulting from any loss to the defendants in the purchase of his share. Under the instructions of the court, and obviously by the verdict of the jury, it was considered that although plaintiff owned and sold only an undivided interest in the partnership assets, presumably one-third, he was chargeable with the full amount of the difference in the partnership assets as a whole. *Page 819 Even if defendants' theory of the rule of damages were correct, on proof that the partnership assets were worth some $2,100 less than they would have been if as represented, the plaintiff should only have borne one-third of that loss; and the jury finding that there was no alteration in the note, must necessarily have found a verdict for the plaintiff in the amount of the note less a maximum of one-third of the alleged damages, or about $700.
The order appealed from should be reversed and a new trial granted.
McCarthy, C.J., and Dunn and Wm. E. Lee, JJ., concur.