Solomon v. Siperstein

54 A.2d 25, 73 R.I. 65, 1947 R.I. LEXIS 66
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJune 27, 1947
StatusPublished

This text of 54 A.2d 25 (Solomon v. Siperstein) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Solomon v. Siperstein, 54 A.2d 25, 73 R.I. 65, 1947 R.I. LEXIS 66 (R.I. 1947).

Opinion

*66 Condon, J.

This is a bill in equity for specific performance of a contract to sell real estate. Respondents demurred to the original bill and their demurrer was sustained. Complainant, by leave of the superior court, filed an amended bill to which respondents were allowed to file what they called a motion to strike out the bill because, as they say in their brief before us, “it did not meet, or attempt to meet, the defects in the original Bill pointed out by the Court on sustaining the Demurrer.” Respondents also filed a demurrer to the amended bill. After hearing, the trial justice granted the motion and struck the amended bill from the record, but did not rule on the demurrer. A decree to that effect was duly entered and from such decree complainant has appealed to this court.

The appeal raises two questions: First, as to the propriety in equity procedure of a motion to strike out the amended bill; and, second, if the motion could be properly entertained, whether or not it should be treated as a demurrer. Respondents contend that their motion was proper as only *67 by such method could they open up the whole record so as to include the original bill, which inclusion was necessary in order to show the nature of the alleged defect in the amended bill. And for this reason they contend that it should not be treated as a demurrer, which would admit everything well pleaded in the amended bill and which would not reach beyond that bill. Complainant, however, contends that, if for such reason respondents’ motion to strike out was proper, his appeal then raises a further question whether the trial justice’s dismissal of the original bill was correct.

If that contention is sound, we are confronted with the necessity of deciding whether or not a certain writing set out in haecr verba in the original bill is such a memorandum of an oral contract to sell real estate as is required by the statute of frauds. The trial justice found that the memorandum was not sufficient because it failed to describe the land and identify the terms and conditions of the contract; and for those reasons he sustained respondents’ demurrer to the original bill. In the amended bill, complainant did not set out the memorandum in haec verba, as he had done in the original bill, but merely alleged that he had a contract with respondents and that there was a memorandum thereof in writing signed by them, without further identifying it.

We must first decide the procedural question. A motion to strike out a pleading is an innovation in equity. Respondents have cited no case in this state approving it, and we have been unable to find any. Respondents have, however, cited one case from New Jersey where the practice of thus objecting to pleas and demurrers, which were frivolous or were interposed for delay, was spoken of favorably although there the court denied the motion and held that the objection ought to have been taken by demurrer, saying: “the summary relief of striking out should not be resorted to unless the circumstances of the case are such that the complainant will be prejudiced by the delay necessary to bring *68 the case on regularly for hearing.” Stanbery v. Baker, 55 N. J. Eq. 270, 272. In a later case in that state the court, while following the Stanbery case, conceded that “an examination of the earlier cases in equity in this state and the antecedent English practice has disclosed no procedure of that nature in courts of equity”. South Camden Trust Co. v. Stiefel, 101 N. J. Eq. 41. However, the court in that case held that such a motion is entertained only against defensive pleadings, saying: “But no case appears to exist in this jurisdiction or elsewhere in which a motion has been presented, much less entértained, to strike out a declaration at law or a bill in equity on the ground that the averments on which relief is based are false.”

At the present time, however, it appears to be proper practice in New Jersey under a statute and rules of court to entertain a motion to strike out a bill within certain limits; for example, if the objections to the bill rest on matters in the bill and such a motion constructively admits all well-pleaded allegations in the bill. National Bank of New Jersey v. Lefkowits, 107 N. J. Eq. 265; Peff v. Peff, 134 N. J. Eq. 506; Regan v. Cozy Lake, Inc., 137 N. J. Eq. 236. In that state the motion to strike out a bill has been held to be “the modern equivalent of a ‘demurrer’ ”. Goldberg’s Corp. v. Goldberg Realty & Investment Co., 134 N. J. Eq. 415.

It thus appears that the practice in New Jersey upon which respondents in the instant cause rely is a departure from traditional equity practice, which departure has been sanctioned in that state by statute and rule of court. It also appears that the decisions confine the practice within limits beyond which the respondents here seek to go. But whatever. the modern practice in that state may be, we are not persuaded that we should adopt it here by judicial decision. We must follow established equity practice until a statute or rule of court ordains otherwise.

Ordinarily objections to bills in equity, not taken by demurrer or plea, are taken by exceptions. For example, if a bill is objected to as scandalous or impertinent, respondent *69 excepts thereto before either demurring or pleading. And the same practice is recognized in this state where an objection is made that a demurrer or plea has been interposed merely for delay. See rules in equity 12, 13 and 29, Rules of Practice and Orders of the Superior Court. Those rules, incidentally, do not take notice of any practice in equity by way of a motion to strike out even a plea, not to mention a bill. We must, therefore, assume that the superior court has not exercised its rule-making power in this respect, regardless of what one justice of that court has permitted the respondents to do in the instant cause.

There does not appear to be any sound reason which would justify us in overlooking, if not approving, the trial justice’s allowance of such a motion in the circumstances of the instant cause. Innovations in equity pleading and practice as in common-law pleading ought not to be approved unless they fill a need that the customary modes are inadequate to meet. We have had occasion recently to disapprove the use of motions to strike in the pleading stage of actions at law except for the purpose of ridding the record of needless or frivolous pleas. Giarrusso v. Brown & Sharpe Mfg. Co., 72 R. I. 229; O’Brien v. M & P Theatres Corp., 72 R. I. 289. In the Giarrusso case we said that, where the motion was properly used, it was in the nature of a mere formal demurrer and was never to be used as a substitute for a substantial demurrer to raise a real and important issue of law. And in the O’Brien case we said that it was not to be used as the equivalent of a special plea so as to import new matter not already appearing in the pleadings.

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Bluebook (online)
54 A.2d 25, 73 R.I. 65, 1947 R.I. LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/solomon-v-siperstein-ri-1947.