Court Opinion

ID: 6163517
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-05 18:18:50.02134+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:55:32.434364
License: Public Domain

Hatch, J.
We concur in the opinion of Chief J ustice Beckwith, delivered at special term, upon the decision of this motion. Had his direction been followed, nothing would remain but to affirm the judgment directed. But the plaintiff has not followed such direction. Instead of entering judgment adjudging the demurrer to the reply frivolous, as ordered by the court, it has entered an order striking out the same from the record. Hot only is this opposed to the direction, but we find no authority for such practice. Code Civil Proc. § 537, provides that if a demurrer is frivolous the party prejudiced thereby may, upon a notice of not less than five days, apply to the court, ora judge thereof, for judgment thereupon, and judgment may be given accord- ■ ingly. The notice of motion is not printed in the record, so that we cannot tell exactly what relief the plaintiff asked. The order, as entered, recites that it was a motion to strike out the demurrer as frivolous, and, if this were so, the motion should have been denied. But the court in disposing of the motion has assumed it to be a motion for judgment upon the demurrer, which assumption we adopt, as it is in conformity with the authority of the section already cited. This section takes the place of section 247, Old Code, which, so far as the question here is concerned, is the same. In Briggs v. Bergen, 23 N. Y. 162, the court held that a frivolous pleading is not stricken out, but remains upon the record, and forms part of the judgment roll. It is only where the pleading is sham that it may be stricken out on motion. Code Civil Proc. § 538. The order entered is therefore vacated and set aside, with leave to plaintiff to enter judgment declaring the demurrer frivolous, with $10 costs and disbursements to the defendant.
Titus, J., concurs. Beckwith, C. J., did not sit in this ease.