Fisher v. Gould

9 Daly 144
CourtNew York Court of Common Pleas
DecidedDecember 1, 1879
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 9 Daly 144 (Fisher v. Gould) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fisher v. Gould, 9 Daly 144 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1879).

Opinion

Charles P. Daly, Chief Justice.

The demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint was overruled at the special term, and [145]*145judgment ordered, unless the defendant should, within twenty days, put in an answer, and the twenty days having elapsed without any answer having been put in, the judgment was formally entered, and became final. From the judgment thus entered, the defendant appealed to the general term, where the judgment was affirmed, the costs of appeal taxed, and a formal judgment of affirmance was entered. From this judgment, the defendant appealed to the court of appeals; and, as appears from the opinion of Judge Rapallo, asked leave, if the court should affirm the judgment, to withdraw the demurrer, and put in an answer on terms. The court of appeals affirmed the judgment, with leave to the defendant to apply to this court to withdraw the demurrer and to. answer, and the record being remitted to this court, a judgment was entered, making the decision and judgment of the court of appeals the judgment of this court; that it be enforced for the benefit of the plaintiff, and that he have execution thereon.

The defendant then made a motion at the special term to withdraw the demurrer, and answer, and the judge at special term made an order that the defendant have leave to serve an answer within ten days after the service of the order, provided that he, simultaneously with the service of the answer, pay the plaintiff the amount of the taxed costs and disbursements in the judgment, with §10, costs of the motion; and that the judgment remain as security to the plaintiff, for the payment of such sum as should thereafter be adjudged to him; and that all proceedings on the judgment be stayed, until the further direction of the court; from which order the plaintiff appeals.

I think the order should be reversed. Twenty days were given to the defendant when the demurrer was overruled, that he might put in an answer. He declined to do so, preferring to put his defense upon the question of law involved in the demurrer, and the court of appeals have settled, in Whiting v. The Mayor, 6c. (37 N. Y. 600), what was the effect of so doing. The opinion, fer Curiam, in that case, states that the court were unanimous in holding that “ where a pleading is sustained, the demurrer being overruled, and leave is given to answer the [146]*146pleading, the demurrant is put to Ms election to answer or to submit to judgment, and that if he submit to judgment, the judgment is finalthat if he appeal therefrom to the court of appeals, such appeal comes there on the question of affirmance or reversal only; and no leave to the demurrant to answer or plead anew can be given; that the judgment there is absolutely final. This being the law in the court of appeals, it must be equally the law in this court, and, I may add, has always been law.

As will appear from an early case, in Barnes (Sherlock v. Templar), p. 337, what was allowed was this: if the defendant, upon the demurrer being overruled, or before it, applied to the court for leave to withdraw it, and plead to the merits, and no serious delay or injury to the plaintiff would arise thereby, leave would be given ; and in course of time it became customary, upon overruling the demurrer, if the court was satisfied that it had been interposed in good faith, to give the defendant, if he asked for it, a certain number of days to put in an answer, staying, in the meanwhile, the entry of the judgment (Anon., 2 Wils. 173; Andrews v. Beecker, 1 Johns. Cas. 411; Graham’s Practice, 762, 2 ed.); but the application had to be made during the term and before the judgment was entered, and it was too late to make the application at a subsequent term (Seaman v. Haskins, 2 Johns. Cas. 284; Hilldreth v. Becker, Id. 300; Currie v. Henry, 3 Johns. Rep. 140). In the first of these cases (Seaman v. Haskins) the court say, “After the court has given judgment, and ordered it to be entered, and a term has elapsed, the party comes too late to ask for leave to withdraw his demurrer. He should have applied at the last term, before the rule for judgment was entered.”

1 can find no case in which the court have set aside the judgment upon a demurrer to the whole cause of action, and allowed the defendant to come in and set up another defense. On the contrary, Lord Mansfield said, in Robinson v. Rayley (1 Burr. 323), that the cases in which the privilege of withdrawing a demurrer and pleading to the issue had been allowed “ were, where all the pleadings were supposed to be in. paper, or else the court could not have done it; that there was no [147]*147authority to do it after the pleadings were plainly upon record and in that case, where the defendant pleaded the general issue, and put in several demurrers, and there was a trial of the issue before judgment was given to plaintiff on the demurrer, the court, before judgment was pronounced upon the demurrer, refused an application of the defendant to withdraw it, because a trial had been had; declaring that there was neither precedent nor authority for allowing it. And in Cox v. Wibraham, (1 Salk. 50), where judgment was given for the defendant on the demurrer, the court denied an application to amend the declaration, because the judgment, upon the demurrer, was entered on the record: and what the practice was distinctly appears from an anonymous case in 2 Salk. 520, the brief report of which is this : Since pleading in paper is now introduced, instead of the old way of pleading ore tenus at the bar, it is but reasonable, after a plea to issue or demurrer joined, that upon payment of costs, the party should have liberty to amend their plea, or to waive their plea or demurrer, where all the proceedings are in paper.”

In Furman v. Haskin (2 Cai. 369), the court having expressed the opinion that judgment on the demurrer ought to be for the defendant, the plaintiff asked leave to withdraw the demurrer and take issue on the fact, which was granted, Kent, C. J., saying it was allowable in all cases where the demurrer is not frivolous, if applied for in the same term; and the report states that there was judgment for the defendant, with leave to withdraw the demurrer, and plead issuably; which it was the practice, always, to enter in the form of an order (1 "Whittaker’s Practice, 679); for it was not a complete judgment, but necessarily interlocutory (Burill’s Glossary, 629), as time must have been given to the plaintiff within which to withdraw his demurrer, and reply to the answer; and if he failed to do so, judgment on the demurrer would be entered at the expiration of the time, which, even then, in this particular case, Avas analogous to a judgment in posse, but of contingent "and suspended effect (2 Whittaker’s Practice, p. 2, 2 ed.), as there were issues of fact to be tried upon pleas of the general issue and of the statute of limitations, which was very differ[148]*148ent from the judgment entered of record, in the present case; which was a final disposition of the action upon the pleadings.

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9 Daly 144, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fisher-v-gould-nyctcompl-1879.