Brungart v. Butler

52 Pa. Super. 349, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 251
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedFebruary 27, 1913
DocketAppeal, No. 262
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 52 Pa. Super. 349 (Brungart v. Butler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brungart v. Butler, 52 Pa. Super. 349, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 251 (Pa. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Opinion by

Poetee, J.,

This proceeding is an echo of litigation which brought into this court two appeals, growing out of a sheriff’s interpleader, Thomas v. Butler, 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 268, and 24 Pa. Superior Ct. 305. Butler, this appellant, having several judgments against D. R. Thomas caused execution to be levied on certain personal property which was claimed by Mary S. Thomas, the wife of the defendant in the execution, and, the parties having been duly required to interplead, an issue was framed to determine the ownership of the property. That issue was finally determined in favor of Mary S. Thomas, the claimant of the goods. While that issue was pending, in 1902, Butler procured to be assigned to him a judgment held by McCalmont & Co. against D. R. Thomas, caused an execution to issue thereon and requested this plaintiff, [351]*351who was then sheriff, to levy upon the same property, the ownership of which was involved in the then pending issue. In order to induce the sheriff, Brungart, to make the levy, Butler tendered and delivered to the sheriff his bond, with the other defendants in the present action as sureties in the penal sum of $500, with warrant of attorney to confess judgment, conditioned that, “if the said Burdine Butler shall fully indemnify and save harmless the above named sheriff .... of and from all matter of suits, costs, charges and damages whatsoever by reason of his levying upon, or levying upon and selling by direction of the said plaintiff, and by virtue of said writ, the goods and chattels of any person or persons whatsoever, as or supposing them to be the property of the said D. R. Thomas, then this obligation to be void, or else to be and remain in full force and virtue.” Judgment by confession was, on October 25, 1902, entered upon this bond against the defendants. A scire facias was duly issued upon this judgment, on April 9, 1909, returnable to the third Monday of May, 1909, and was personally served upon the defendants on April 10, 1909. The defendants neither appeared nor filed an affidavit of defense and, for suGh default, judgment was duly entered against them on July 13, 1909, and the amount thereof liquidated at $153.99. Execution was issued upon this judgment on the same day and levy made on personal property of Burdine Butler and on the twenty-eighth of the same month the property was advertised for sale. Burdine Butler did nothing until August 3, 1909, when he presented his petition for a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened, and thereupon the court granted a rule returnable to the first Monday of September, 1909. The plaintiff, on August 30,1909, filed an answer to the petition of Butler, denying all the material allegations of that petition. The appellant, on August 11, 1909, procured a rule to take depositions of witnesses, but .although the taking of those depositions was completed on September 21, following, the testimony was never filed [352]*352in the court below until March 7, 1910, the testimony taken on behalf of the plaintiff having been filed on November 22, 1909. The president judge of the court below having, prior to his elevation to the bench, been of counsel in this case it became necessary to have the pending rule disposed of by a judge from another district. A special term of court for the disposition of cases in which the president judge of the district could not act was fixed for October 30, 1911, and the learned president judge of the twenty-fifth judicial district was duly assigned to hold said term under the provisions of the act of April 27, 1911, P. L. 101. The rule to show cause why this judgment should not be opened was regularly upon the list for disposition at that term and was duly called in regular order, but no one responding for the rule the case was allowed to go over until after the conclusion of jury trials, in order to give the defendant or his counsel an opportunity to appear. When the jury trials had all been disposed of this case was again called for argument, the appellant and his counsel of record being called and failing to respond, the rule was discharged. From that order, discharging the rule to open the judgment, made in such circumstances, we have this appeal.

The only party who has made any attempt to open this judgment is Butler, the principal in the bond upon which the original judgment was entered; the sureties upon that bond have taken no steps to question any of these proceedings. The judgment which Butler sought to have opened was not a judgment entered by confession upon a warrant of attorney. This judgment was entered for a default, after due service of a writ, in the manner expressly authorized by statute. An application to open a judgment is an equitable proceeding, in which the court is controlled by equitable principles. “Gross laches is a circumstance of great, and sometimes controlling weight, and cannot properly be ignored by a court exercising the powers of a court of chancery. The law does pot absolutely fix any period of time within which a de[353]*353fendant must move to open a judgment, but delay long persisted in after knowledge of all the facts always casts greater or less doubt on the bona fides of the defense set up, and gives weight and probability to the evidence adduced to rebut it:” Rehm v. Frank, 16 Pa. Superior Ct. 175; Hirschlan v. Krechman, 20 Pa. Superior Ct. 227. The writ of scire facias in the present case was served personally upon the appellant more than a month before the return day and he neither appeared nor took any steps to cause an appearance to be entered for him. The appellee cannot be accused of having acted with undue haste for he waited more than a month after the return day before causing judgment to be entered against the appellant in default of an appearance. The appellant deliberately waited for more than a month after an execution had been issued and levied upon his personal property and after the plaintiff had incurred the cost of advertising the sale, before taking any steps to show cause why judgment should not be entered against him. When he did obtain the rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened, he became the actor in the proceeding to •open. The burden was upon him to at least attempt to present some sort of excuse for his delay,. as well as to present a defense to the action.

The testimony of the plaintiff was taken in support of his rule and, in explanation of his failure to appear to the action he testified that the writ of scire facias had not been served upon him personally. This was in flat contradiction of the return of the sheriff and that official return was corroborated by the testimony of Sheriff Hurley, whose deposition was taken under a rule, who swore that he had served the writ personally upon this appellant. This being the case we certainly would not be warranted in holding the learned judge of the court below guilty of an abuse of discretion in holding that the assertion of the appellant that the writ had not been personally served upon him was not true. The whole course of this appellant would certainly justify the con[354]*354elusion that his deliberate purpose was to delay the plaintiff’s cause. He first ignored the writ of scire facias for almost four months after it was served upon him. Having obtained a rule to show cause why the judgment should not be opened and taken depositions in support of that rule, he regained those depositions for five months before filing them in court, and finally, after the plaintiff had been delayed for over two years, when the rule was regularly upon the argument list for disposition, neither he nor his counsel appeared.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
52 Pa. Super. 349, 1913 Pa. Super. LEXIS 251, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brungart-v-butler-pasuperct-1913.