Betcher v. Hay-Roe

240 A.2d 501, 429 Pa. 371, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 814
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 16, 1968
DocketAppeal, 61
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 240 A.2d 501 (Betcher v. Hay-Roe) 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
Betcher v. Hay-Roe, 240 A.2d 501, 429 Pa. 371, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 814 (Pa. 1968).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice O’Brien,

This is an appeal from an order of the Oonrt of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, overruling appellants’ preliminary objections raising a question of jurisdiction.

The alleged accident occurred on May 18, 1966, at 1163 Arrowood Drive, Mt. Lebanon, Allegheny County, Pennsylvania, where the appellants were tenants of a one family home. At that time, the appellee, who was babysitting for the appellants’ children, allegedly was injured as a consequence of the collapse of a chair in which she was sitting in the dining room. The chair was the property of the appellants.

On June 25, 1966, the appellants removed from the aforesaid premises and became residents of the State of Hawaii. Appellee instituted suit in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, at No. 3441 October Term, 1967. Appellee’s Complaint was served upon the Secretary of the Commonwealth and upon the appellants by Registered Mail in accordance with the procedure prescribed by Pa. R. C. P. 2079(a).

The appellants raised preliminary objections alleging that service of process was defective and contesting the jurisdiction of the court over the persons of the appellants.

The court below, after listening to the arguments of counsel, concluded that the situation presented was one which fell within the scope of the Act of July 2, 1937, P. L. 2747, 12 P.S. §331, and that substituted service of process had been properly accomplished.

The issue before this court is a very narrow one. Is the substituted service permitted under §331 of the aforementioned Act? That section provides: “Any nonresident of this Commonwealth being the owner, tenant or user of real estate located within the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, and the footways and curbs adjacent *374 thereto, or any such resident of this Commonwealth who shall subsequently become a nonresident, shall, by the ownership, possession, occupancy, control, maintenance, and use, of such real estate, footways, and curbs, make and constitute the Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania his, her, its, or their agent for the service of process in any civil action or proceedings instituted in the courts of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania against such owner, tenant, or user of such real estate, footways, and curbs, arising out of or by reason of any accident or injury occurring within the Commonwealth in which such real estate, foot-ways, and curbs are involved.”

The question as thus posed is: Did the action arise out of or by reason of any accident or injury in which real estate was involved? Was real estate involved?

We agree with the court below that real estate was indeed involved. Appellants strenuously contend that the condition of 'the real estate should be causally connected with the accident or injury. Since the chair which was the cause of the accident was personalty, appellants claim that the terms of the statute have not been met. They point to two lower court decisions as well as one analogous Supreme Court decision as support for their position. Andrews v. Jaffa, 3 Crawford Co. L.J. 192 (1963) involved a suit to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the minor plaintiff as a result of a gunshot wound inflicted upon him by the minor defendant on a farm in Crawford County, Pennsylvania, owned by the minor defendant’s father, also a defendant. The defendants were residents of Ohio. The court held substituted service under §331 to be improper: “In the present case the real estate was in no way involved except for the fact that the shooting took place on defendant’s land. This fact alone could hardly mean that the farm was in any way *375 involved in the accident.” The court went on to cite another lower court decision, this one from Allegheny County, Shouse v. Wagner, 84 Pa. D. & C. 82, 84, where the court said: “Being ‘involved’, is not the same as being the site or location of an accident or injury . . .

“From the use of the word ‘involved’, it is plain to see that the Legislature intended that the real estate, footways, or the curbs, of themselves, should-be closely tied in with the happening of the accident or injury.

“The condition of the real estate should be causally connected with the accident or injury. If the real estate, -footways or the curbs, or any of them are in such a state of disrepair ‘the result of which an accident or injury occurred,- then of course the property would be involved within the meaning of the act.”

We cannot agree with these courts that “involvement” under the Statute requires more than the occurrence of the accident or injury on the real estate. We say this, not unaware that our decision in Olson v. Kucenic, 389 Pa. 506, 133 A. 2d 596 (1957) might seem to portend otherwise. The facts in that case were that the plaintiff, as administratrix of her deceased husband’s estate, sued in the Court of Common Pleas of McKean County to recover damages for his death. The defendant was a resident of Westmoreland County where he was served with the complaint by the sheriff of that county who had been deputized for the purpose by the sheriff of McKean County. The plaintiff averred in her complaint that her husband’s death resulted from the negligent discharge of a rifle by the defendant' while he and the decedent were hunting on wil'd woodland in McKean County. The defendant disputed the validity of the service and, by preliminary objections, questioned the jurisdiction of the McKean County Court of his person. The preliminary objections'Were sustained and on appeal we had to deter *376 mine whether substituted service was proper under the Act. There this court was construing not §331 involved in the instant; case, but rather §106 (Act of July 1, 1937, P. L. 2665, 12 P.S. §106), which provides: “. . . in cases where claims are made for damages arising from any accident or injury occurring upon real estate, the footways, sidewalks, and curbs adjacent thereto, it shall be lawful to commence an action for the recovery of damages in any court of record in the county wherein the real estate, footways, sidewalks, and curbs, are located, and service of process may be made by the sheriff of the county in which the action is brought by deputizing the sheriff of the county wherein the defendant resides or where service may be had upon such defendant under the existing laws of this Commonwealth, in like manner as process may be now served in the proper county.” In §106, the dispositive language is “accident or injury occurring upon real estate”, whereas in §331, the key language is “accident or injury ... in which real estate . . . [is] involved.” In Olson, at page 510, we construed the apparently broader language of §106 to require that “the cause of action [arise] from a condition inherent in or incident to realty or from an owner’s or possessor’s acting or failing to act in respect of his realty or the statutorily specified appurtenances.” The fundamental basis for the Court’s decision iwas that to have sustained the extraterritorial service of process in that case would have so broadened the intent of the Act “as to authorize extraterritorial service of process in almost any conceivable action regardless of its nature”, since every accident, with the possible exception of mid-air collisions, occurs on real estate.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
240 A.2d 501, 429 Pa. 371, 1968 Pa. LEXIS 814, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/betcher-v-hay-roe-pa-1968.