Cleary v. Quaker City Cab Co.

132 A. 185, 285 Pa. 241, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 436
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 5, 1926
DocketAppeal, 362
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 132 A. 185 (Cleary v. Quaker City Cab Co.) 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
Cleary v. Quaker City Cab Co., 132 A. 185, 285 Pa. 241, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 436 (Pa. 1926).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moschzisker,

Patrick Cleary, who was a passenger in a taxicab, recovered damages for personal injuries caused by what the jury found to be the negligence of its driver. The suit was brought against two defendants, the Quaker City Cab Company, a common carrier (appellant), and the Public Ledger Company, plaintiff alleging in his statement of claim that he was injured through their combined negligence. At the trial, after plaintiff had produced his case in full, the presiding judge concluded there was no evidence to sustain a verdict against the last-named defendant, and, accordingly, entered a non- *245 suit as to it. The other defendant, against which judgment was entered on a verdict, has appealed, complaining of the refusal of its motion to remove this nonsuit.

In entering the nonsuit, the trial judge followed what he conceived to be the practice provided by the Act of June 29, 1923, P. L. 981. The title of this statute reads thus: “An act relating to procedure in suits wherein it is pleaded that two or more defendants are liable for a specified cause of action”; and the act itself provides means whereby the trial of causes may be proceeded with promptly when the statement of claim avers that “two or more defendants are jointly liable,” but it develops at trial that the averment as to a joint liability on the part of all of the defendants is not sustained by the evidence, or where the trial judge has a doubt concerning the legal sufficiency of the evidence in that respect.

Appellant states four questions involved, and these will be disposed of specifically as we proceed; under one of them, it contends that the Act of 1923 offends against article III, section 3, of the Constitution of Pennsylvania, providing that no bill shall contain more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title. As to this, it is sufficient to say that the present statute contains but one subject, which is expressed with sufficient clearness in its title. The act was evidently drawn to remedy a procedural difficulty which existed in our law when two or more defendants were charged with joint liability and it was not proved as alleged; this purpose is amply covered by the title employed. Under the old law, as established by our cases, an action could not be sustained against either of two defendants, charged with joint liability, where it developed at trial that though one might be separately liable the other was not; that is to say, a joint tort had to be proved: see Dutton v. Lansdowne Boro., 198 Pa. 563; Rowland v. Phila., 202 Pa. 50, 51; Minnich v. Electric Ry. Co., 203 Pa. 632, 636, 637; City of Bradford v. Barry, 254 Pa. 303, *246 308; Polis v. Heizmann, 276 Pa. 315, 317. When, for instance, a joint tort was charged, but it appeared that the acts of the various defendants, or certain of them, though happening at the same time, constituted separate torts, and, therefore, not joint torts, the trial could not be carried on until all nonjoint tort-feasors were eliminated, by nonsuit or otherwise, and the pleadings amended accordingly (Rowland v. Phila., 202 Pa. 50, 51, 52; Booth v. Dorsey, 202 Pa. 381, 383, 384, 386; Minnich v. Electric Ry. Co., 203 Pa. 632, 636, 637; Goodman v. Coal Twp., 206 Pa. 621, 624; Sturzebecker v. Inland Traction Co., 211 Pa. 156, 159, 160); and, under such circumstances, the right to amend was subject to a privilege in the remaining defendants, on pleading surprise, to have a continuance: Rowland v. Phila., supra, 52; Minnich v. Elec. Ry. Co., supra, 636. Doubtless it was to meet this condition of affairs and to give a practical and speedy remedy in such cases that the Act of 1923 was passed. Since the statute deals with procedure alone, and affects no substantive rights, it applies to all cases within its purview, whether arising prior to its enactment or thereafter (Kille v. Reading Iron Works, 134 Pa. 225, 227; King v. Security Co., 241 Pa. 547, 551; Kuca v. Lehigh V. Coal Co., 268 Pa. 163, 166); this determines a second of the questions stated for our decision.

The other two questions placed before us by appellant, when taken together, raise the point as to whether plaintiff’s statement of claim avers a joint tort or only two separate torts happening at the same time. In one of these questions appellant treats the case as having to do with a joint tort, and, in the other, as involving two separate, though, in the above sense, “concurrent,” torts. In this connection, howevex*, it is sufficient to say that, as we view the statement of claim, it avers a joint tort in the sense of “a community of fault which occasioned the injury” (see Howard v. Union Traction Co., 195 Pa. 391, 395; O’Malley v. Phila. R. T. Co., 248 Pa. 292; Gold- *247 men v. Mitchell-Fletcher Co., 285 Pa. 116; see also Hitchins v. Wilson, 68 Pa. Superior Ct. 366); but if, on the contrary, this pleading be read as alleging two separate torts, as distinguished from a joint tort, then, without regard to the Act of 1923, the nonsuit would have been warranted, and, in the absence of objection entered by appellant to the trial proceeding, it cannot now complain : Rowland v. Phila., 202 Pa. 50, 51, 52. This disposes of a third question stated for our decision.

The remaining question involved, referred to above, is phrased by appellant thus, “Whether under the Joint Suit Act of 1923 a trial judge is authorized to enter a nonsuit as to one of two joint defendants in tort and permit the trial to proceed against the other one, where the facts are in dispute?” This requires a construction of the statute and a brief review of the state of the evidence when the nonsuit was entered.

The act in question provides: “Whenever it is pleaded in any suit that two or more defendants are jointly liable for the cause of action specified, and [1], in the opinion of the trial judge, the evidence may not justify a recovery against some of them, the suit shall not be dismissed as to all, but the case shall be submitted to the jury, if the facts are in dispute, to determine which, if any of them, are liable, or, [2] if the facts are not in dispute, the question of liability of any or all of them may be reserved for consideration by the court in banc, or [3] the suit may be dismissed as to some and the trial proceed against the others, in every such contingency with the same effect as if the defendants ultimately found to be liable were the only ones [originally] alleged to be so.”

The statutory provision marked “[!]” above is meant to cover cases where the plaintiff avers in his statement of claim that the defendants named by him are “jointly liable,” but, when all the evidence is taken, the trial judge feels that a joint liability has not been proved as to “some of them,” though, because certain of the facts *248 are in dispute, he is not able to determine “which, if any, of [defendants] are [the ones] liable.” On such a condition of affairs, the act provides that, instead of dismissing plaintiff’s case, the trial judge shall submit it to the jury to determine which, if any, of the defendants- are jointly liable, and, of course, this finding will éxclude liability as to the others.

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Bluebook (online)
132 A. 185, 285 Pa. 241, 1926 Pa. LEXIS 436, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleary-v-quaker-city-cab-co-pa-1926.