Friedman v. Lubecki

524 A.2d 987, 362 Pa. Super. 499, 1987 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7791
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 24, 1987
DocketNo. 00946
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 524 A.2d 987 (Friedman v. Lubecki) 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
Friedman v. Lubecki, 524 A.2d 987, 362 Pa. Super. 499, 1987 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7791 (Pa. Ct. App. 1987).

Opinion

BROSKY, Judge:

This is an appeal from a judgment entered on an order denying appellants’ Petition to reinstate their appeal after entry of a rule to show cause upon appellee why their appeal from a judgment entered against them by a District Justice should not be stricken for failure to file their complaint timely.

The issue presented in this appeal is whether the delay in filing the complaint, occasioned by late notice of the judgment by the District Justice 24 days after entry of judg[501]*501ment and a limited work schedule in appellants’ counsel’s office due to the Christmas holidays, constitutes good cause to require reinstatement of the appeal. For reasons appearing below, we reverse and remand.

On November 18, 1985, judgment was entered by the District Justice for appellee, a boarder, seller and buyer of horses. On December 12, 1985, 24 days after entry of judgment, the District Justice notified appellants of the judgment entered against them.1 The following day, December 13, 1985, and well within the 30-day period prescribed by Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1002, appellants perfected an appeal from the said judgment to the Court of Common Pleas of Butler County, Pennsylvania.

Subsequently, on January 6, 1986, appellants filed their Complaint against appellee alleging specific damage in the amount of $55,000, the purchase price of two Arabian fillies, plus interest, as well as damages for the expenses of boarding and caring for the horses and in pursuing the litigation.2 The complaint alleged breach of an oral contract to resell two Polish Arabian fillies which appellants had purchased from a third party for $55,000.

On January 10, 1986, in accordance with Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1006 but four days after appellants had filed their Complaint, appellee praeciped to strike appellants’ appeal from the judgment of the District Justice for failure of appellants to file their Complaint against appellee within 20 days of the filing of their notice of appeal from the said judgment pursuant to Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1004 A. As provided by Pa.R.C. P.D J. 1006, appellants, on February 7, 1986, filed a Petition to reinstate their appeal alleging, as the sole reason for good cause to allow reinstatement, that the shortened holiday work period prevented the timely preparation and filing [502]*502of their Complaint with the Prothonotary of the Butler County Common Pleas Court.3 The Petition was denied on June 3, 1986, and judgment was entered pursuant to Pa.R. App.P. 301(d) on June 27, 1986. This timely appeal followed.

We note that appellee filed her praecipe to strike after appellants’ Complaint had already been filed in Common Pleas Court. If appellee expected that appellants be sanctioned by not having their appeal processed to ultimate determination, her remedy, immediately available after the 20-day period had passed for appellants to timely file their complaint pursuant to Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1004 A, was to praecipe, at that time, to strike the appeal as provided by Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1006. We do not deem the effect of striking an appeal in this context to be automatic from the first day after appellants’ default. Rule 1006 is not self-enforcing. Therefore, it became the duty of appellee, upon default of appellants, to praecipe to strike the appeal.

To fully accomplish the purpose of its terms, we hold that the Rule 1006 procedure must be triggered before an appellant files his Complaint in Common Pleas Court. Instantly, the filing of the Complaint by appellants pursuant to Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1004 A barred appellee from thereafter invoking her remedy under Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1006.

Our Supreme Court has construed an analogous situation interpreting the Rules of Civil Procedure relating to joinder of parties. Alexander v. Mastercraft Constr. Co., Inc., 455 Pa. 579, 317 A.2d 278 (1974). There, the original defendant failed to file his complaint against the additional defendant within the 20-day period prescribed by then Pa.R.C.P. 2252(b), after having first joined him by praecipe. The Alexander court held that it was then incumbent upon the [503]*503additional defendant to pursue his remedy under Pa.R.C.P. 1037(a). Rule 1037(a) provides that a defendant may praecipe for a rule on the opposing party to file its Complaint within 20 days of the entry of the rule. If such Complaint is not forthcoming within the prescribed time, the Rule further provides that a defendant may then praecipe for entry of a default judgment.

In Alexander, the original defendant did file his Complaint, albeit untimely, and the additional defendant then proceeded to attack this unseasonable filing by means of preliminary objections, without having first invoked Rule 1037(a) before the untimely Complaint had been filed. The trial court dismissed original defendant’s Complaint on this basis.

However, the Supreme Court reversed, holding that then Pa.R.C.P. 2252(b) did not mandate automatic dismissal of the action against the additional defendant. Rather, the additional defendant, to avail himself of a remedy, was required, under Rule 1037(a), first to rule the original defendant to file his Complaint. Absent the original defendant’s compliance with this rule within 20 days of entry upon him, the additional defendant then had to trigger the second tier of relief provided by Rule 1037(a), i.e., he had to praecipe for the entry of a default judgment against the original defendant. The Alexander court held that the additional defendant could not seek his remedy by filing preliminary objections after the original defendant’s complaint had been filed, even though untimely.

Employing this analogy instantly, we hold that appellee was required to invoke her remedy under Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1006 before appellants filed their untimely Complaint in Common Pleas Court. Rule 1006 speaks in terms of striking the appeal. This, in our view, contemplates a situation where the Complaint has not yet been filed. Once appellants had filed their Complaint, it was then too late for appellee to seek relief under Rule 1006, even though the Complaint was unseasonable. She had, by then, lost the race to the Courthouse.

[504]*504We repeat, Rule 1006 is not self-enforcing. Its effect is not automatically triggered even if, after 20 days have passed, an appellant has not filed his Complaint. In that event, it is incumbent upon an appellee to proceed under Rule 1006 to strike the appeal from the record. Rule 1006 only provides for the striking of an appeal filed pursuant to Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1002. We discern no language in Rule 1006 which encompasses within its terms the striking of an untimely filed Complaint, as well, nor will we read any such requirement into a Rule which clearly on its face provides for a method by which an appeal is to be stricken from the record for failure to comply with Pa.R.C.P.DJ. 1004 A. As we have stated earlier, this rule mandates the filing of a Complaint within 20 days of the taking of an appeal from the judgment of a District Justice.

Just as the Alexander court refused to hold that then Pa.R.C.P. 2252(b) called for automatic dismissal of the original defendant’s claim against the additional defendant unless the latter first invoked the procedures available under Pa.R.C.P.

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Bluebook (online)
524 A.2d 987, 362 Pa. Super. 499, 1987 Pa. Super. LEXIS 7791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friedman-v-lubecki-pasuperct-1987.