Galizia v. Tardino

87 Pa. D. & C. 191, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 445
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County
DecidedFebruary 11, 1954
Docketno. 166
StatusPublished

This text of 87 Pa. D. & C. 191 (Galizia v. Tardino) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Bucks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Galizia v. Tardino, 87 Pa. D. & C. 191, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 445 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Satterthwaite, J.,

This is a landlord-tenant case in which an action to recover possession of the demised premises before a justice of the peace has been removed to this court by certiorari. On the record before the justice of the peace, we believe these proceedings are fatally defective and must be dismissed.

The landlords’ complaint averred a written lease for the term of one year from March 12, 1947, rent to be [192]*192paid monthly at the rate of $50 per month, and claimed possession on two specified grounds: (1) That the term was ended, and (2) that a forfeiture resulted by reason of a breach of the conditions of the lease. It further set forth that written notice was given to the tenant on March 7, 1958, requiring him to deliver possession within 30 days. No waiver of notice under the terms of the lease was alleged, nor was any amount claimed for unpaid rent or damages for unjust detention of the premises.

The complaint was filed on April 8, 1953 and on April 11, 1953, a summons was issued substantially reciting the contents thereof. The justice held a hearing thereon on April 17,1953, and found, according to the transcript, that the complaint is “in all particulars just and true”. Judgment was entered, directing, the tenant to deliver up the premises to the landlords and ascertaining the rent in arrears at $100 to April 13, 1953, with costs. The transcript further recited that Vincenzo Galizia, one of the landlords, testified as to formalities concerning the lease given by a former owner and their purchase of the premises subject thereto, and further that February 1953 rent received by Galizis by mail on February 16th instead of 13th; it was returned; rent has been late at other times; lease terminated March 13,1953. The transcript also quoted a part of the lease, as follows:

“If Lessee shall . . . fail to comply with any of the conditions ... at the expiration of ten days from time of leaving a notice, the Lease shall absolutely determine.” The lease itself is not a part of the record.

Subsequently, the arrears in rent and costs were tendered to the constable, who apparently ignored them, the checks therefor being returned, uneashed, to this court with the other papers in the. case as a part of the record on certiorari and still remain in the file. A writ of possession was thereafter issued but not ex[193]*193ecuted. Notice of an alias writ of possession also had been served when the within certiorari became a supersedeas upon the tenant’s filing security therefor in this court.

Many of the exceptions in this case go to questions concerning the validity of the writ of possession and other matters which we deem unnecessary to decide inasmuch as the record affirmatively discloses failure of the landlords to comply with the requirements of the Landlord and Tenant Act of April 6,1951, P. L. 69, 68 PS §250.101 et seq., under which the proceedings were brought. Hence, the tenant’s thirteenth exception to the record of the justice of the peace to the effect that the proceedings were defective, illegal and void must be sustained.

Section 501 of the Act, 68 PS §250.501, authorizes a landlord desirous of repossessing the premises from a tenant to give written notice thereof in three situations: (1) Upon the ending of the term; (2) upon a forfeiture for breach of condition, or (3) upon nonpayment of rent after demand where there is insufficient nonexempt personal property on the premises to satisfy the arrearages. It further provides that in cases based on expiration of term and forfeitures, such notice shall specify the removal of the tenant within 30 days where the lease is for any term of less than one year or is indeterminate, or within three months when the lease is for one year or more. In cases based on nonpayment of rent after demand, apparently irrespective of the term of the lease, such notice shall specify the removal of the tenant within 15 or 30 days, depending upon the time of the year. Waiver of any of such notices by the terms of the lease is expressly authorized.

Section 502, 68 PS §250.502, which is the basis of the within proceedings, authorizes the landlord to file a complaint with a justice of the peace if the tenant fails [194]*194to regard such notice, the complaint to specify, inter alia, as follows:

“. . . (3) that due notice to remove has been given to the tenant or that no notice was required under the terms of the lease, (4) that the term for which the same was demised is fully ended, or that a forfeiture has resulted by reason of a breach of the conditions of the lease, or that any rent reserved and due has, upon demand, remained unsatisfied, as the case may be, . . .”

The lease presently in question was for an original term of one year, according to the complaint, and hence, prima facie, by the holdover of the tenant, must have continued on a year to year basis: Pfingstl v. Chenot et ux., 165 Pa. Superior Ct. 222. Even assuming, therefore, that the term had been legally terminated and had expired on March 13,1953, as the justice found, or that the lease had been properly declared forfeited for breach of conditions in that the tenant had failed to make timely payment of rent after 10 days’ notice from the landlords, as the lease apparently provided (an assumption which in itself is not sustained by this record), nevertheless, the three months’ notice of demand for possession required by section 501 in cases of leases for a year or more was neither given nor waived so far as the transcript discloses. In fact, the complaint avers, and the justice therefore apparently found that, only 32 days’ notice was served. We therefore believe that the record itself demonstrates that judgment for plaintiff was improper and should be reversed and vacated.

Our conclusions are the same as those reached in an almost identical situation by the Court of Common Pleas of Lackawanna County in Jankowski v. Orloske, 84 D. & C. 522, wherein that court on certiorari to an alderman held that proceedings for possession based on a six-day notice in the case of a month-to-month lease [195]*195were fatally defective, since section 501 of the 1951 Act required 30 days’ notice in such circumstances and compliance therewith was a prerequisite to proceedings under sections 502. The judgment awarding possession to the landlord was reversed on that ground alone.

This result is consistent with decisions under prior law. Three months’ notice of demand for possession was a condition precedent to action under section 12 of the Act of March 12, 1772, 1 Sm. 370, 68 PS §361 (now repealed), authorizing proceedings for possession by inquisition before justices of the peace upon the expiration of terms of one or more years or tenancies at will (Fahnestock v. Faustenauer, 5 S. & R. 173); the same was true in summary proceedings before a justice of the peace without a jury of inquisition under the Act of December 14,1863, P. L. 1125, 68 PS §364 (now repealed), also applicable under the same circumstances : Rich v. Keyser, 54 Pa. 86. The fact of such notice, like other requisites to the jurisdiction of the justice of the peace, must have been found by him and so appear from his record, else the proceedings are fatally defective on certiorari: Mikulski v. Ziolkowski, 73 Pa. Superior Ct. 72.

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Related

Pfingstl v. Chenot Et Ux.
67 A.2d 649 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1949)
Hutchinson v. Potter
11 Pa. 472 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1849)
Rich v. Keyser
54 Pa. 86 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1867)
Wilke v. Campbell
5 Pa. Super. 618 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1897)
Mikulski v. Ziolkowski
73 Pa. Super. 72 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1919)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
87 Pa. D. & C. 191, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galizia-v-tardino-pactcomplbucks-1954.