This is a motion by the defendant Murray for judgment on the pleadings dismissing the complaint upon the ground that it fails to state a cause of action against the defendant so moving. Whatever practice prior to September 1, 1908, may have been authorized by the decision (People v. Northern R. R. Co., 42 N. Y. 217; Ryan v. Train, 95 App. Div. 73), since that date section 547 of the Code of Civil Procedure has set any question at rest by expressly providing that “If either party is entitled to judgment upon the pleadings the court may, upon motion at any time after issue joined, give judgment accordingly.” The advantages of permitting such a motion are many and manifest. Among such advantages is the avoidance of the delay that arises from the interposition of a demurrer to a complaint or an answer. Hnder the practice authorized by the new section the case can be placed upon the calendar and be moving up toward a position where it can be tried, and in the meantime the sufficiency of the pleadings may be tested by such a motion. By such a practice, also, the parties are enabled to have questions of law determined in advance of the trial, and are thus enabled to avoid the expense and trouble of taking depositions, engaging expensive expert evidence, bringing witnesses from a distance, not to mention the general labor of preparing for trial, none of which could be safely omitted where reliance was placed upon the customary and time-honored method of making
Motion granted, with ten dollars costs.
