delivered the opinion.
1. The motion to strike the reply from the transcript was properly denied. The record of the justice's court states that the reply was filed in that court before trial, and the justice attached such reply to the transcript and returned it as one of the original papers in the cause, and this record cannot be impeached by ex parte affidavits.
2. The fact that the justice failed to indorse on the reply the date of its filing is of no consequence. A paper is filed in contemplation of law when it is delivered to the proper officer with the intention that it shall become a part of the official *504record, and by him received to be kept on file, and such filing is not affected by the officer’s failure to indorse the same: McDonald v. Crusen, 2 Or. 258; Conant's Estate, 43 Or. 530 (73 Pac. 1018).
3. On the trial, defendant objected to the admission of any testimony on behalf of plaintiff, for the reason that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and because two causes of action are improper^ united. The objection to the sufficiency of the complaint being made for the first time on the trial, the same presumption will be indulged in to- support the pleading as if the objection had been made after verdict: Specht v. Allen, 12 Or. 117 (6 Pac. 494); McCall v. Porter, 42 Or. 49 (70 Pac. 820, 71 Pac. 976); Patterson v. Patterson, 40 Or. 560 (67 Pac. 664); Currey v. Butcher, 37 Or. 380 (61 Pac. 631). Unless, therefore, the complaint is so fatally defective that it would not be good after verdict, the objection to the admission of testimony in its support was properly overruled.
4. The objection made to the complaint is that the contracts under which the services are alleged to have been rendered and the grain sold by plaintiff to defendant are not sufficiently set out; but this is manifestly nothing more than a mere defective statement of a good cause of action, and such as would be cured by verdict: Booth v. Moody, 30 Or. 222 (46 Pac. 884).
5. The causes of action mentioned in the complaint both arise out of contracts, and can be properly united in the same complaint: Section 94, B. & C. Comp.
6. The objection that they are not separately stated should have been taken by motion at the proper time (Section 106, B. & C. Comp.), and cannot be raised during the admission of testimony.
7. The plaintiff testified that he cut 79 acres of grain for defendant under a contract by which he was to- receive $1.25 per acre, to be paid in logs at 85 cents per 1,000, and that he sold and delivered to him 285 sacks of wheat at 95 cents per sack; that he received of defendant, on account thereof, 120,000 *505feet of logs at 85 cents per 1,000, and $187.40 by check, and identified a check for that amount in his favor signed by defendant, which had, as a memorandum thereon, the words ‘Taianee on wheat”; that the logs received by him more than paid for cutting the grain, but that defendant had not paid in full for the wheat. At the close of plaintiffs testimony defendant moved for a nonsuit on the ground that since defendant admitted that the cutting of the grain had been paid by logs delivered to him by defendant, and the cheek received by him as a payment on the wheat, shows on its face that it was for the balance thereon, nothing remained due plaintiff on the causes of action set out in the complaint. But this motion was properly overruled.
8. While defendant testified that the value of the logs delivered to him by plaintiff, if applied on the account for cutting the grain, would overpay such account, he insisted that there was still a balance due on the wheat sold and delivered. The action is brought to recover a balance of $80, alleged to be due plaintiff from defendant on the two items mentioned in the complaint, and it can make no difference, so far as the ultimate rights of the parties are concerned, whether the value of the logs be applied on one or the other. The memorandum on the check that it was for the balance due on the wheat was not conclusive on plaintiff, but was subject to be explained by parol, and the weight to be given it was for the jury.
9. Plaintiff, over defendant’s objections and exceptions, gave testimony tending to show that in January, 1906, he contracted with defendant to purchase from him some saw logs, thereafter to be cut, at 85 cents per 1,000, in consideration of which he agreed to cut certain grain for defendant during the following season at $1.25 an acre. Objection is made to this testimony, because it tends to show an express contract, while it is claimed the complaint is on a quantum m&ruit. The complaint is somewhat indefinite and uncertain as to the character of the contract sued upon; but it is averred that the work was to be done at an agreed price per acre, which would seem to imply that it *506was under an express contract, and as no objection was made to the complaint until the trial, it should now be construed as an action on such a contract.
10. Defendant gave evidence tending to show that in May, 1906, after the making of the alleged contract with plaintiff, he informed him that he had leased the land upon which the grain'was to be grown to one McCulloch, who was to pay for the cutting of the grain and all expenses of the farm after the 1st of March, 1906. Defendant claims that this amounted to a rescission of the contract between himself and plaintiff, and requested the court to so instruct the jury. A rescission of the contract is not pleaded as a defense, nor is the evidence referred to sufficient for that purpose. It is only to the effect that after the making of the contract with plaintiff, defendant leased the land upon which the grain was to be grown, and the tenant agreed to pay for the harvesting thereof; but this was a contract between the defendant and his tenant, to which the plaintiff was not a party, and did not relieve defendant from his liability on his contract with the plaintiff.
11. Complaint is also made because the court permitted plaintiff in rebuttal to testify that the words “balance on wheat,” appearing on the check given to him by defendant and introduced in evidence, were not on such check at the time it was delivered; but this evidence was competent, and the order of proof was in the discretion of the trial court.
There are several other assignments of error in the record, but on examination we are satisfied that they are without merit. Judgment of the court below is affirmed. Affirmed.