95 N.J.L. 432 | N.J. | 1921
The opinion of the court was delivered by
The appellant, Catherine Savage, seeks by this action to recover for personal injuries sustained by her while traveling as a passenger on a trolley car of the respondent company. The averment of the complaint upon which the liability of the respondent is predicated reads as follows: “That while a passenger as aforesaid
The procedure followed by court and counsel was that proscribed l>y the legislature in the year 1912 by rule 26 of the new Practice act (now rule No. 40 of the Supreme Court). By that rule general demurrers were abolished, and, as a substitute therefor, it was provided that “any pleading may lie struck out on motion on the ground that it discloses no cause of action, defence or counter-claim respectively. The order made upon such motion is appealable after filial judgment. In lieu of a motion to strike out. the same objection * * * may be raised in the answering pleading and may be disposed of at or after the trial.”
The question upon which the determination of this appeal depends is whether the complaint could have been successfully attacked by a general demurrer, upon the ground that it disclosed no cause of action; and wc think that it must he answered in the negative. In the case of Central Railroad Co. ads. Van Horn, 38 W. J. L. 133, 138, the defendant interposed a demurrer to the second count of a declaration, which showed merely that the plaintiff was in one of the cars of the
The opinions referred to are those of the Supreme Court; but the soundness of the judicial declarations has never been challenged, so far as we are aware, and they meet with our approval. It is hardly necessary to add that they are dis-positive of the present appeal; for they establish the prin
It will be observed by a reading of these opinions which we have cited that, in each of them, although the declaration was held good on general demurrer, it was pointed out that they would each of them have been struck out, on motion, for lack of certainty and failure to state the specific act of negligence which was charged against the defendant company or the pár-tioular employe responsible therefor. But the motion to strike out referred to in these cases was that provided by the twenty-fourth section of the act of March 17th, 1855, entitled “An act to simplify pleadings and practice in courts of law” (Pamph L., p. 295), as a substitute for the pleading then known as a special demurrer, and which was abolished by the twenty-third section of the same act. The twenty-fourth section of that statute now appears as section 110 of our present Practice act, and declares that “the court or a judge may on four days’ notice strike out any complaint which is irregular or defective, or is so framed as to prejudice, embarrass or delay a fair trial of the action.” The distinction between the motion to strike out just referred to and that provided by the present fortieth rule of the .Supreme Court is the distinction which existed at common law between a special and a general demurrer, the one being directed at matters of form and the other at matters of substance. The scope of the former motion — that is, whether it can be availed of after a party has pleaded issnably — is, of course, not involved in the present appeal, and, naturally, has not been considered by us.
Another, matter should, we think, be adverted to by ns. as the case must he sent back for retrial. Tn the colloquy between court and counsel, during the argument of the motion to strike out under rule No. 40, the attorney for the appellant stated that all lie would he able to prove, if the trial of the ease was permitted to proceed, was that his client was standing on the
' The judgment under review will be reversed.