There is no force in the first exception. The answer of the defendant must contain a general or specific denial of each material allegation of the complaint controverted by the defendant, or of any knowledge or information thereof sufficient to form a belief. The Code, §243 (1).
I't has been repeatedly held by this court that a general denial, that “no allegation of the complaint is true,” is not a sufficient answer under this section of The Code, because such a plea may put in one issue several matters of fact, some of which are triable by the court, and others by the jury. Flack v. Dawson, 69 N. C., 42.
But the answer in this case is not obnoxious to this objection. It is a sufficient compliance with the requirements of the section. It is a specific denial of each allegation of the complaint contained in the paragraphs, numbering from one to six inclusive, as much so, as if each denial had been set forth in separate and distinct paragraphs.
The other exception is quite as untenable as the first. The action was upon a bond given prior to the 1st day of August, 1868, and the- defendant, besides the statute of limitations and other defences, relied upon the plea of payment in fact, but did *240not introduce himself as a witness to establish the truth of such plea. But the .plaintiff offered herself as a witness in her own behalf.
We are of opinion that under the facts of this case, upon a proper construction of the act of 1883, ch. 310, she was an incompetent witness. The first section of the act provides that no person, who shall be a party to an action founded on a bond executed prior to the 1st day of August, 1868, shall be a competent witness on the trial of such action. The second section, which is in effect a “proviso” to the first, declares that this act shall not apply to the trial of any action, in which the defendant relies upon the plea of payment in fact, or pleads a counterclaim and also introduces himself as a witness to establish the truth of such plea or pleas.
Our interpretation of the act is, that whenever a defendant pleads. payment in fact or a counterclaim in an action upon a judgment or bond of date before the 1st day of August, 1868, and does not offer himself as a witness to establish the truth of his plea or pleas, as the case may be, no person who is a party to the action, or assignor, or indorser, or any person who had at the time of the trial, or ever had an interest in the judgment or bond sued on, can be examined as a witness in behalf of the plaintiff; but when the defendant,'setting up such plea or pleas,, does offer himself as a witness in support of either of such defences, all such persons are competent, unless excluded by some other rule of evidence.
And we are further of the opinion that the spirit and equity of the act extend to counterclaims, which are virtually cross-actions, where the plaintiff relies upon the defence of payment in fact.
There is ho error. The judgment of the superior court is affirmed.
No error. Affirmed.