The ground of this writ of error is, that the declaration shows no cause of action in the plaintiff. The judgment having been rendered upon the default of the defendant, the case is not within the provisions of the new practice act, which prohibit the taking of objections in arrest of judgment or by writ of error, for causes existing before verdict, in any case in which a verdict has been rendered. St-1852, c. 312, §§ 22, 77.
It was not a question of the admission or rejection of evidence, which, if not made at the trial, cannot be taken after-wards ; because there was no trial. Nor did the court below adjudge the sufficiency of the evidence to maintain the action; for, the judgment being on default, no evidence was laid before them.
Nor is it a case within the rule of the common law, where a good title, or cause of action, imperfectly set out in the declaration, may be cured by a verdict. The reason is, that a verdict presupposes a trial, and the action of the judge on the matter of law; and the court therefore, after verdict, will presume that the evidence necessary to support the action was required and given, though such good title and legal cause of action were not correctly stated.
The question is, whether there is enough in the declaration, of which the notes themselves are'part, and of course, part of the record, to sustain the judgment. The declaration sets forth the making of a note payable to a person other than the plaintiff, *394and not negotiable. It then adds that “the plaintiff is the owner of said note.” But how can he own it? Only as assignee in equity, which, by law, does not enable him to sue in his own name.
It is said, however, that there may have been an express promise by the defendants to pay the plaintiff. But if that was so, the declaration should not have been on the note, but on the new and express promise, of which the assignment of the note was the consideration. Mowry v. Todd, 12 Mass. 281. By the practice act, although the facts may be briefly stated, all the facts must be stated which are necessary to constitute the cause of action. St. 1852, c. 312, § 2, cl. 3. This declaration does not state the facts, if they in truth existed, that the notes had been assigned to the plaintiff, and that, upon notice thereof, the defendants had made an express promise to him to pay them.
The plaintiff’s final averment, “ that the defendants owe him the amount of said note,” is a mere statement of a conclusion of law fi'om facts previously stated, and not an allegation of a distinct substantive fact. Millard v. Baldwin, 3 Gray, 484. It it could be treated as a distinct and sufficient averment, no other averment would be needed in any case.
Judgment reversed.