Traer v. Lytle
Traer v. Lytle
Opinion of the Court
Defendant demurred. The demurrer was sustained, upon the ground “ that by section 3146 of the Revision plaintiff should have proceeded by motion to discharge said judgment.”
The demurrer was improperly sustained. Assuming that plaintiff is “interested in said judgment,” within the meaning of said section, and that he should have pursued the summary remedy therein prescribed, the objection should have been taken by motion and not by demurrer. Under the Revision, a demurrer is not applicable to the question whether a proceeding should have been by law or equity, or by bill in equity rather than by motion. Coyningham v. Smith et al., 16 Iowa, 471; Byers v. Rodahaugh, 17 Id,, 53. In some cases the controversy might be speedily settled by motion, as contemplated by the section referred to (§ 3146), others, involving the consideration of much testimony, oral and documentary, might most appropriately belong in chancery. And hence the propriety of having the objection taken by motion instead of demurrer.
This is not one of the causes for which a party can demur under section 2876 of the Revision. And see section 2618; and Savery v. Browning, 18 Iowa, 246; The Key City Gas Light Company v. Munsell, Id., and authorities there cited; also Lansdale v. Mitchell, 14 B. M., 349.
Reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.