Goldberg v. Utley
Goldberg v. Utley
Opinion of the Court
I think this order is not appealable to this court. First. We have no evidence that the motion was not decided upon the merits, and if so, it was discretionary with the court below. The ground of the decision is not stated in the order, and the memorandum is not evidence. Second. But if the memorandum is regarded the motion involved only the question whether there was a waiver, which like laches is never appealable, but is regarded as discretionary, and the construction of the order of the judge is of the same
The case of Bass v. Comstock (38 N. Y., 21), holds that a demurrer will not lie to a complaint containing different causes of action, which may be united merely because they are not separately stated and numbered, but I know of no authority against interposing a demurrer, when the causes of action are improperly united, although not separately numbered. The two cases are quite different. The one is formal and discretionary, the other is substantial and involving a legal right.
The appeal must be dismissed.
All concur.
Appeal dismissed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Ellen Goldberg v. William R. Utley
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published