Detmold v. Gate Vein Coal Co.

7 F. Cas. 546, 3 W.N.C. 567, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1694

This text of 7 F. Cas. 546 (Detmold v. Gate Vein Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Detmold v. Gate Vein Coal Co., 7 F. Cas. 546, 3 W.N.C. 567, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1694 (circtedpa 1876).

Opinion

THE COURT. Judgment would be granted upon the copies as filed, if it were not for the fact that the copies of the book entries, filed to assist the assessment of damages, tend to extend and not to limit the claim, as shown by the copies of the instruments of writing. Such a purpose is not within the rule allowing averments to be filed with copies of instruments. Judgment in each case vacated without prejudice to the right of the plaintiff to move for judgment, in accordance with the practice under the old second term rule, for default of affidavits alleging defence, and the amount thereof; but defendants have leave to file such affidavit in each case.

CAD WAT .A PER. District Judge

(orally). The following order was entered of record: “And now, to wit, this 15th day of November, A. D. 1876, the court orders the judgments to be vacated as having been unadvisedly entered, but without prejudice to any right of the plaintiffs to move for judgment for want of an affidavit of defence under the rule and practice which is in that behalf independent of the statute law of the state.”

NOTE. The practice [in Pennsylvania] of taking judgment by default for want of an affidavit of defence originated in the supreme court [of the state] in 1795, under an agreement signed by all the attorneys except two, and entered among the records of said court. As it is believed that this document is not to be found in print, it is here inserted, viz.:
“It is agreed by the attorneys practising in •the supreme court of Pennsylvania, that, in all actions now depending or which shall hereafter be instituted in the same court, either by original process or by removal from any inferior courts, the defendant's attorney shall confess judgment to the plaintiff at the third court (here follow certain provisions as to stay of execution) unless the defendant, or some person for him or her, shall make affidavit, at or before the second term, that, to the best of his knowledge and belief, there is a just defence, in whole or in part in the same cause, and if the defence is to part only, then the defendant’s attorney shall confess judgment to the plaintiff (if the plaintiff’s attorney will accept the same in full satisfaction of his demand), for so much as shall be acknowledged to be due to the plaintiff in the said cause.
“Witness our hands this eleventh day of September, 1795.
-Cha. Heatly.
“Benj. R. Morgan.
“Jas. Thomas.
“Robt. Porter.
“Samson Levy.
“John Caldwell.
“Jno. Wells.
“Robert Henry Dunkin. “Jno. Hallowell.
“Jared Ingersoll.
“Alex’r Wilcoeks.
“Bdw. Tilghman.
“Moses Levy.
“Jos. B. McKean.
“A. J. Dallas.
“Peter S. Du Ponceau.
“Jasper Moylan.
“John D. Coxe.
“W. Rawle.
Jac. Bankson.
Benj. Chew, Jr.
Wn. Moore Smith.
Charles Swift.
John F. Mifflin.
Wm. Tilghman.
William H. Tod.
W. Briuton.
John Read, Jr.
Rich’d Lake.
James Gibson.
Adam Gordon.
Walter Franklin.
Joseph Hopkinson.
Tbos. W. Tallman.
Tb os. Armstrong.
J. W. Condy.
M. Keppele.
Jno. R. Smith."

[547]*547Entered in appearance docket, supreme court, September term, 1795, pp. 628, 629.

This agreement was also entered as a rule of the supreme court, under, date of Sept. 11, 1795 (MS. Book of Buies of Supreme Court, rule 50, p. 39), but it was not enforced against the two attorneys who refused to sign it, and who neither gave nor took judgments under it. A modification of the rule (permitting the plaintiff to direct that judgment by default for want of an affidavit of defence should be entered as of course) was afterwards adopted by the supreme and circuit courts in 1799; and a further modification was adopted by the court of common pleas in 1809. See Yanatta v, Anderson, 3 Bin. 417. The latter rule provided that in all actions of debt or contract where special bail was not required, the plaintiff might direct judgment to be taken by default, at any time after the fifth Monday of the next succeeding term to which the process was returnable, unless the defendant had made an affidavit, and previously filed the same in the prothonotary’s office, stating that, to the best of his knowledge and belief, there was a just defence, in whole or in part, in the said cause; and, if the ■defence was to part only, the defendant should specify the sum which he admitted was due; provided always that no judgment should be entered by virtue of this rule unless the plaintiff had filed a declaration during the term to which the process was returnable. In actions where special bail was required, if the plaintiff filed his declaration within the first three days of the next term after special bail was entered, and the defendant did not make an affidavit before the fifth Monday of that term, the plaintiff could enter judgment. The district court of Philadelphia county also, after its establishment in 1S11, adopted a similar rule, which provided that judgment could be taken at the third Monday of the next succeeding term, if the plaintiff had filed his. declaration before the third dav of that term. Walker’s Court Buies (Ed. E. W. Davis. 1847).

The remark of Bead. J., in Sellers v. Burk, 11 Wright [47 Pa. St.] 350 (decided in 1864), that the provisions of the act of 1835, and its supplements, “giving power to the courts in this county to enter judgment by default for want of an affidavit of defence in certain specified causes, have, in a great measure, superseded all former rules on the subject;” and the intimation of Cadwalader, ,T., in the above-reported ease, would seem to imply that tbe old practice which obtained before the act of 1835, and its supplements, may still be invoked in cases which, though not within the act, would be within tbe old rule of the court. It is believed that in the TJ. S. court for the eastern district of Pennsylvania, such judgments have been occasionally granted, probably in conformity to the practice in some of the counties comprising that district. It would seem, however, as stated in 1 Troub. & II. Pr. 308, that in Philadelphia county' “the rules of court which preceded these statutes have now been repealed;” and that the practice is now entirely regulated by the provisions of the act of March 28, 1835, § 2 [Pa. Laws, p. 89], relating to the district court for the city and county of Philadelphia. and its supplement, act of April 14, 1840 [Pa. Laws, p. 328], relating to tbe court of common pleas.

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Related

Vanatta v. Anderson
3 Binn. 417 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1811)

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Bluebook (online)
7 F. Cas. 546, 3 W.N.C. 567, 1876 U.S. App. LEXIS 1694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/detmold-v-gate-vein-coal-co-circtedpa-1876.