28 Iowa 250 | Iowa | 1869
It is, however, further provided (Rev. § 2846): “ The court, at any time before the defense, shall, on motion of the defendant, strike out of the petition any cause or causes of action improperly joined with others.” The Kentucky Code contains the same provision, and it has there been held that misjoinder of actions is no cause of demurrer; that a motion to strike out is the proper remedy. But the defendant’s motion in this case was not to strike out, but for an order directing the plaintiffs to elect upon which cause of action they would rely. This was the motion the District Court acted upon, and overruled; and the correctness of that action was the only question before the General Term. It was not competent for that court to entertain and act upon a different motion, or to give the relief defendants might have been entitled to, if any, under a different motion.
Since the two causes of action may be prosecuted by the same kind .of proceedings, there was no improper joinder. The judgment of the District Court was therefore correct, and the order of the General Term must be
Reversed.