Arndt v. Brockhausen

3 A.2d 384, 332 Pa. 416, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 575
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 5, 1938
DocketAppeal, 351
StatusPublished

This text of 3 A.2d 384 (Arndt v. Brockhausen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Arndt v. Brockhausen, 3 A.2d 384, 332 Pa. 416, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 575 (Pa. 1938).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Maxey,

The question in this case is: May a husband and wife, pending an appeal from a judgment rendered against them jointly, deposit, in lieu of property bond, cash owned by them as tenants by the entireties to protect their joint property from execution pending the appeal, ivithout having such deposit with the prothonotary become liable for the payment of a final judgment entered against one of them individually f

The plaintiffs, Marion Arndt, a minor, and EdAvin H. Arndt, her father, brought an action in trespass against defendants for damages as the result of injuries sustained by the minor plaintiff Avhen she was struck while crossing the highway by the automobile owned by Jacques Brockhausen, one of the defendants, and driven by his Avife, Emma, the other defendant. It was alleged that at the time of the accident she was operating the car in the course of her and her husband’s joint business.

The jury returned verdicts against defendants in the amount of $2,500 for the minor plaintiff and $308.15 for her father. The defendants appealed to the Superior Court, and, so that the appeal might become a supersedeas and the property of defendants be released from the lien of judgment upon the verdicts, they jointly deposited with the prothonotary of the lower court, $3,000 cash bail, under the terms of the Act of April 22, 1909, P. L. 103. This appeal is to decide whether this money should be returned to the defendants or paid to the plaintiffs.

The Superior Court reversed the verdict as to defendant-husband, holding that there Avas no evidence in the *418 case that his wife was operating the car as his agent and. insufficient evidence to establish that at the time of the accident she was engaged in furthering the business which she and her husband jointly operated.

On April 28, 1937, pursuant to the plaintiffs’ petition, a rule was granted upon the prothonotary and the defendants to show cause why the prothonotary should not pay to the plaintiffs the sums of $2,650 and $350 deposited. An answer was filed to that petition. On May 7, 1938, a rule was granted on petition of defendants upon the prothonotary and the plaintiffs to show cause why the prothonotary should not pay the money deposited to the defendants. Plaintiffs’ reply was filed to this petition. Depositions were taken. After argument before the Honorable William G. Thomas, President Judge of the 56th Judicial District, Specially Presiding, the first mentioned rule was made absolute and the second mentioned rule was discharged. This appeal followed.

The Act of 1909 (supra) provides that it shall be lawful for anyone against whom an order, judgment or decree directing the payment of money shall have been made by any court of record, upon taking an appeal, “to enter bail in the court below” or “in lieu of entering such bail, deposit with the prothonotary of the said court below, in cash, such amount as the said , court shall, upon petition, deem to be sufficient to insure the payment of the amount finally adjudged to be due and owing upon said order, judgment or decree. . . . It is provided that upon the return of the record ... to the court below, with a remittitur certifying the said judgment ... to have been affirmed in whole or in part, the prothonotary shall thereupon enter judgment, as of that date, against the appellant for the amount due upon the said judgment ... as affirmed, with interest and costs as provided by law.”

The court below aptly said: “The power of the court to act is, of course, limited to the power conferred upon *419 it by this Act of Assembly. While it is within the rights of parties, or their counsel of record on their behalf, to attach conditions to such bail or to waive the provisions of the statute entirely, it is not within the power of the court to make such order, or to impose conditions upon or limit the liability of the deposit as to the payment of debt, interest and costs of the judgment, for the law fixes upon such deposits that liability. The order entered in this case can not have any force beyond the point of the authority given to the court by the statute and the court’s authority is limited to the fixing of the amount of cash which is to be deposited in lieu of bail.”

It is true, as appellants contend, that the petition presented to the court below by the appellants here, who were joint defendants in the judgment recovered in the tort action, set forth that they were “jointly desirous of depositing . . . cash in the sum of $2,650 [as to one judgment] and $350 [as to the other] to insure the amount finally adjudged to be jointly due and owing by them upon the judgment ... of the court aforesaid.” But in response to this petition the court entered an order directing “the prothonotary to accept from Jacques Brockhausen and Emma Brockhausen, his wife, jointly, cash in the amount of twenty-six hundred and fifty dollars for the purposes of the appeal therein mentioned (Italics supplied.) A similar order was made in respect to the deposit of $350 for the purpose of the appeal from the judgment for $308.15 recovered by Edwin H. Arndt in his own right.

In taking their appeal and in electing to deposit cash bail in lieu of bail in double the amount of the judgment with security to be approved by the court, the appellants could not impose by agreement any modifications of the statute they invoked. This statute specifically provides that the amount of the deposit shall be “to insure the payment of the amount finally adjudged to be due. ...” Nothing can be clearer than the fact that this money was deposited by the parties jointly to satisfy any *420 judgment finally adjudged to be due upon the judgments appealed from. The Superior Court decided in Arndt et al. v. Brockhausen et ux., 126 Pa. Superior Ct. 269, 191 A. 362, that on the judgments appealed from there was due from one of the “joint defendants,” to wit, Emma Brockhausen, the amounts of those judgments. It followed that the sums deposited by these parties and then in the hands of the prothonotary were held for the payment of these judgments, for such was the purpose for which the deposit was accepted.

Appellant’s counsel asks: “Why could not Jacques Brockhausen and Emma Brockhausen, his wife, jointly make a cash deposit in lieu of property bond to protect their joint property pending an appeal?” The answer is: They could. It was immaterial to the sovereignty which permits an appeal to operate as a supersedeas under certain prescribed conditions whether these parties deposited cash as two distinct individuals or jointly. The important point is that when the desired supersedeas was obtained by the deposit of cash, the latter was available for the satisfaction of the judgments finally rendered after that superseding appeal had been decided. Appellants’ argument comes down to this: The deposits made by Brockhausen and wife were made by them as tenants by the entireties and since the judgment finally recovered was a judgment against one of them alone, the deposit is as immune against the lien of the judgment finally recovered as would be any property held by this husband and wife as tenants by entireties.

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Related

Arndt v. Brockhausen Et Ux.
191 A. 362 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 A.2d 384, 332 Pa. 416, 1939 Pa. LEXIS 575, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arndt-v-brockhausen-pa-1938.