Downer v. Campbell

21 Pa. D. & C. 434, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 133

This text of 21 Pa. D. & C. 434 (Downer v. Campbell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Washington County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Downer v. Campbell, 21 Pa. D. & C. 434, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 133 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Brownson, P. J.,

This case was originally heard on the argument list before a full bench, consisting of Brownson, P. J., and Cummins [435]*435and Hughes, JJ. Before a decision was arrived at, Judge Cummins died, and it now devolves upon his surviving colleagues to dispose of the case.

The record brought before us by this writ of certiorari shows an action commenced by the issuing of a “fraudulent-debtor attachment” and also a writ of “short summons”. The exceptions which question the right of the plaintiffs to have such an attachment issued and the sufficiency of the service made by the constable cannot be sustained, for the reason that the docket of the justice does not show the entry of any final judgment.

As was pointed out in Commonwealth v. Day, 3 D. & C. 749, the writ of certiorari is made use of for two entirely distinct and different purposes. One of these is to remove from an inferior to a superior court a case which the latter court has concurrent jurisdiction to hear and determine, and which for some reason cannot or ought not to be tried in the former. As is mentioned in Commonwealth v. Day, the cases of Commonwealth v. Simpson et al., 2 Grant 438, and Commonwealth v. Balph et al., 111 Pa. 365, are instances of the use of this writ for that purpose. When so used, the certiorari issues before the case has proceeded to a final judgment in the court below.

The other purpose for which it is used is to secure an appellate revision, by the superior tribunal, of the proceedings in the inferior court, to the end that errors appearing upon the record may be corrected; and when this is the purpose of the writ it will not lie until after final judgment: In re Change of Grade of Germantown Avenue, 99 Pa. 479, 480, 481; 2 Troubat & Haley’s Practice (6th ed.) 1221-22; In re Selin’s Grove Road, 2 S. & R. 419; Commonwealth v. Nathans, 5 Pa. 124, 125; Wallace v. Jameson et al., 179 Pa. 94, 98; Commonwealth v. Day, 3 D. & C. 749; and the same rule applies to a writ of error. The reason for this rule is that, the power of the reviewing court upon such a writ being purely correctional, the law does not intend that it shall put, and it does not put, that court in the place of the court below for the purpose of doing that court’s work, by deciding the question (that was pending and undetermined in the court below at the time when the writ issued) of the right of the plaintiff to have a judgment entered in his favor. Until the entry of a final judgment, the question whether the precedent interlocutory steps, appearing of record and leading up toward the entry of a judgment (or, as it was expressed in Hall’s Appeal, 56 Pa. 238, merely “preparatory ... to the final judgment”), are regular enough, and sufficient as matter of law, to enable the plaintiff to recover, is a question which it is the function of the tribunal of first instance to decide, and it must do so before a reviewing court will undertake to consider and determine it. As was said by Mr. Justice Mitchell in Wallace v. Jameson et al., 179 Pa. 94, 97-98, a party may not bring a case up to the appellate court piecemeal, every time an interlocutory step is taken in it; “he must wait until he is aggrieved by a final judgment, and bring the whole case here at the same time.”

In the present instance, the docket of the justice shows the entry of no judgment in favor of either party. Accordingly, this certiorari, if designed, or insofar as it may have been designed, to review the interlocutory steps taken as exhibited by the record and to have the entire proceedings set aside ab initio, appears to be premature.

But, although the docket does not exhibit the entry of a judgment for any sum in the plaintiff’s favor, the record papers sent up show that on January 20, 1932, which was the next day after the return day of the summons, the justice issued an execution against the defendant for $171.42. This execution recited the recovery of a judgment for that amount, but we do not think that such a recital in such a writ is the equivalent, or supplies the lack, of the entry of a [436]*436judgment upon the docket. See McGinnis v. Vernon, 67 Pa. 149; Montgomery et al. v. McCaffery, 1 Wash. Co. R. 69, 73-74. Upon the back of this execution is endorsed a return (although not signed by the constable) of a levy upon “one Hudson automobile.” The question now comes up: Is the issuing of this execution, without any precedent judgment to support it, reviewable, and can it be set aside upon this certiorari? This question, which the third exception filed was evidently intended to raise, may be stated in different language as follows: Does such issuing of execution amount, in and of itself, to a “final judgment” or the equivalent thereof, within the meaning of the rule that the writ of certiorari lies only after such a judgment has been rendered so that it may be reviewed?

The nearest case that we have been able to discover in connection with proceedings before a justice of the peace is Winters v. Homsher, 8 Lanc. 137. In that case it was held that, as the certiorari was not taken out within 20 days after the entry of judgment by the justice, the judgment itself could not be reviewed, but, as the writ was sued out within 20 days after the issuing of an execution, that execution could be reviewed and set aside under it. There was no discussion of the principle involved. See also Montgomery v. Souder et al., 8 Lane. 185, and Worst et al. v. Souder et al., 8 Lane. 187.

There are, however, several cases in the Supreme Court which lay down a principle which appears to be applicable.

The issuing of an execution “is the act of the court” in law, although it may be the prothonotary who actually performs the act: Ewing v. Thompson, 43 Pa. 372, 377. A fortiori, when a justice of the peace issues an execution which is signed with his own hand and sealed by him, this is his official act as a magistrate. This being so, the issue of the execution amounts in law to an “award of execution”, which is “in the nature of a final judgment” and therefore reviewable upon a writ of error. In Harger v. Commissioners of Washington County, 12 Pa. 251, 252, it was said: “There can be no doubt that error lies on an award of execution: 1 Lord Raymond, 98; Cassell v. Duncan, 2 S. & R. 57; and it has been expressly determined this rule embraces a fi. fa. improvidently issued for costs not legally due, if that be apparent of record: Barnet v. Ihrie, 1 Rawle [44,] 53. The objection made to the removal of these executions is therefore untenable, and the question whether they were improvidently issued, is properly presented for determination here”; and the fi. fa. was set aside and the record remitted for further proceedings.

This setting aside was for the reason that, the fi. fa. being issued to collect costs incurred in the quarter sessions, and the record not showing a proper taxation of costs, ascertaining and adjudicating what items were owing and collectible, “the executions . . . [were] thus left without the necessary support; the record had not so far matured as to warrant the last step, and for this reason the final process must be set aside”: page 254. The situation of the record in that case would seem to be very much analogous to that in the case at bar. So in Barnet v. Ihrie, 1 Rawle 44, where an execution was issued to collect costs, certain items of which had been objected to, and an appeal from their taxation remained undertermined, the court said (p.

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Related

Commonwealth v. Nathans
5 Pa. 124 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1847)
Harger v. Commissioners of Washington County
12 Pa. 251 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1849)
Patterson v. Patterson
27 Pa. 40 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1856)
Pontius v. Nesbit
40 Pa. 309 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1861)
Ewing v. Thompson
43 Pa. 372 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1862)
Hall's Appeal
56 Pa. 238 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1868)
McGinnis v. Vernon
67 Pa. 149 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1871)
In re Change of Grade of Germantown Avenue
99 Pa. 479 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1882)
Commonwealth v. Balph
3 A. 220 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1886)
Feagley v. Norbeck
17 A. 900 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1889)
Packer v. Owens
30 A. 314 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1894)
Wallace v. Jameson
36 A. 145 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Long v. Lebanon National Bank
60 A. 556 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1905)
Barnet v. Ihrie
1 Rawle 44 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1828)
Commonwealth v. Simpson
2 Grant 438 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1854)

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Bluebook (online)
21 Pa. D. & C. 434, 1934 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/downer-v-campbell-pactcomplwashin-1934.