after stating the case: If it was the intention of the pleader to allege, in the third section of the reply, that there was a mutual mistake in drawing the mortgage, and that the real contract between the parties was that the instrument should embrace not only the goods then in the store, but all thereafter purchased to renew or replenish the stock, he should have so plainly stated and asked for a correction of the mortgage in that respect. But, while it would seem from the proof tendered that he intended so to allege, in part, we think that both the reply and the proof which were rejected by the court must be given a broader scope, and extend not only to a mistake in the mortgage, but also to include a separate and independent agreement to give the plaintiff a parol mortgage upon the original stock and .all subsequent additions to it, or all goods thereafter purchased, to secure the entire indebtedness due to him. The expression in the reply, “and (the defendant) mortgaged to plaintiff, as security for the credits so extended, all of the goods in said store at the time of the bringing of this action,” would seem to bear this construction if we give it a liberal interpretation, which we are required to do in order to administer substantial justice between the parties. Revisal, sec. 495. The pleading is not very explicit, we admit, but is sufficient, by the indulgence of the law, to embrace the idea of a parol lien or mortgage upon after-*233acquired goods. Sucb a mortgage is as good, at least between the parties, as if it had been in writing, provided, if reduced to writing, it would have been valid. Cobbey on Chattel Mortgages, sec. 14; McCoy v. Lassiter, 95 N. C., 88; Moore v. Brady, 125 N. C., 35. There can be no objection to the validity of the parol mortgage upon the ground that it embraced future acquisitions of goods, not then in esse, or not belonging to the mortgagor at the time. Perry v. White, 111 N. C., 197; Brown v. Dail, 117 N. C., 41. Jones, in his work on Chattel Mortgages (4th Eel.), sec. 154, says that a mortgage upon a stock of goods, and any new goods acquired by way of renewal or substitution for them, is valid, at least between the parties to it. See, also, section 172 and Cobbey on Chattel Mortgages, secs. 355 and 370. The reply is susceptible of the construction that the plaintiff and defendant agreed that the latter might sell the original stock in the ordinary course of trade, and that all'new goods bought and substituted for those sold should be subject to the lien. This agreement would seem to come within the principle stated and applied in Sharpe v. Pearce, 74 N. C., 600; Jones on Mortgages (4th Ed.), sec. 71; and would, perhaps, be valid as between the parties to the mortgage. We have held that no particular form of words is necessary to create a lien or to constitute a mortgage, it being sufficient that the parties intended their agreement to operate as such. McCoy v. Lassiter, supra. The law seeks after the common intention of the parties, and enforces it as between them when it is ascertained. The ruling of the court, by which the reply was stricken out, we think, was erroneous.
If it was necessary for the defendant to aver that the mortgage given to the plaintiff did not embrace the property in dispute, instead of simply denying the plaintiff’s title and right of possession thereto, this new matter is deemed to be controverted by the plaintiff as upon a direct denial or avoidance, as the case may require (Revisal, sec. 503; Fitzgerald *234 v. Shelton, 95 N. C., 519; Buffkin v. Eason, 110 N. C., 264; Clark’s Code [3d Ed.], sec.268, and cases cited at ¡ap. 268 and 269); and, tbis being so, why should it be held improper for the plaintiff to file a written reply in order to state distinctly his defense to the new matter, whether a counterclaim or not, instead of relying upon the statutory reply ? Such a written reply was made in Bean v. Railroad, 107 N. C., 731, and expressly approved by the Court. Whether he would be bound by such a pleading, and forbidden at the trial to prove other matter by way of avoidance, we need not decide, for the question is not before ns. How was the defendant prejudiced by being informed of the particular grounds upon which the plaintiff claimed the right to' recover the property ? We are inclined to the opinion that, as the plaintiff merely alleged his title and right to possession, a general denial by the defendant would have sufficiently presented the real issue between the parties, unless the plaintiff sought to reform the mortgage. There is a marked difference between such an equity to reform the instrument and an agreement merely to substitute other property for that described in the mortgage. We think the court erred, also, in striking out the reply after it had remained on file several terms without any objection from the defendant. Dempsey v. Rhodes, 93 N. C., 120; Kerchner v. Riley, 72 N. C., 171; McMillan v. Baker, 92 N. C., 110; Corn v. Stepp, 84 N. C., 599.
We do not find any inconsistency between the complaint and the reply. In the complaint the plaintiff alleges simply his title and right of possession, and in the reply he shows how he acquired them. Where is the conflict? Houston v. Sledge, 98 N. C., 414; Hardin v. Ray, 94 N. C., 456. There is no departure in pleading here, as we understand the several allegations of the complaint and the reply. The plaintiff merely amplifies in the latter the statement of his title; and the case is, in principle, therefore, exactly like Simpson v. Lumber Co., 133 N. C., 95. There is no new cause of action set up.
*235It is not necessary that we should consider the other matters discussed in the learned and well-prepared briefs of counsel. lYe are of the opinion that the court erred in its rulings upon the pleadings and the evidence, and a new trial is ordered.
New Trial.