78 Iowa 434 | Iowa | 1889
I. The defendant demurred to plaintiff ’s petition, and his objections to the petition were sustained. On an appeal to this court the decision of the district court was reversed. When the cause was
II. The authority and duty of the court to tax costs for an unsuccessful demurrer is not questioned in this case, but defendant’s counsel think that the demurrer was an amendment to the first demurrer, and should be regarded as a part of it, and costs could not be taxed upon it separately. But the demurrer is in fact as well as in form a new pleading. It is based upon new grounds, and served to arrest the proceedings —“to stop” the action of the court — until it was decided. It must be regarded as an original demurrer.
•' III. But counsel correctly say such method of pleading (a demurrer following a demurrer) is forbidden by the statute. Code, section 2639. They claim that an amendment to a demurrer is proper; therefore the pleading in question must be regarded as an amendment. But it cannot be so regarded, for the reason that it presents wholly new matter, — different cause of demurrer, — as it “stopped” proceedings of the court for
The district court ought to have sustained the motion to tax costs. Reversed.