Brown v. Fish

Willard Bartlett, J.:

If this action were against the defendant Ann Eliza Fish alone, I should think that the order appealed from ought to be affirmed. *330So far as .this defendant is concerned, the matters stricken out seem ■at the most to be statements of evidence which it would be competent for the plaintiffs to put in by way of proof upon the trial, but which are not essential to an adequate statement of the plaintiff’s ■cause of action against her.

■ The difficulty in sustaining the order, however, arises out of the fact that there are other defendants who are not parties to the motion.; and, as against these defendants, the portions of the conn plaint which- have been stricken out constitute a material part of-the cause of action upon which the plaintiffs rely. The case in this respect- seems to be in all essential particulars similar to Hoffman v. Wight (137 N. Y. 621), in which the Court of Appeals said : “ The result of the order here made is to strike out what is at all events a material allegation against the other defendant and to leave the plaintiff with no cause of action whatever against such defendant, assuming that his. cause of action as alleged was one upon the judgments. We think the case is not within the proper scope of the section of the Code (545) which allows. irrelevant and redundant matter to be stricken out.”

For the reason indicated, the order under review was erroneously made, and must be reversed.

All concurred.

Order reversed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements.