Gerovica v. Dzelalia
This text of 27 A.2d 707 (Gerovica v. Dzelalia) 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.
Opinion
Opinion by
This action, originally commenced in equity, was subsequently certified to the law side of the court. It was brought to recover the sum of $1900 with interest. Defendant appeals from the refusal of his motion for *603 a new trial. 1 The assignments of error raise three questions: (1) Whether the verdict was against the weight- of the evidence; (2) whether the court erred in refusing defendant’s motion to amend the counterclaim by incorporating a demand for an accounting; and (3) whether the court committed reversible error in any of specified portions of its charge.
(1) Defendant conducted a wholesale beer business. According to plaintiff’s evidence, on or about June 5,1933, defendant needed cash and plaintiff loaned him $800 and went to work for him as a deliveryman and salesman at a stipulated salary of $15 per week. The suit was to recover the loan and an unpaid balance of salary of $1,100.
Defendant acknowledged receipt of the $800 and claimed it was accepted in lieu of a bond to protect him against misappropriation of funds by plaintiff. He admitted the contract of hire, but denied there was a balance due and counterclaimed $2,379.40, which he alleged represented shortages in plaintiff’s accounts over and above the $800 deposit and wages agreed upon.
It is not contended the evidence was insufficient to sustain the verdict; there was no motion for judgment n. o. v. And when a lower court refuses a motion for new trial on the ground that the verdict was against the weight of the evidence, that is the end of the matter in the absence of a clear abuse of discretion. Heaver v. Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company, 120 Pa. Superior Ct. 520, 526, 183 A. 110.
(2) On September 4, 1940, after defendant had filed his original and' an amended affidavit of defense and counterclaim, he presented a motion for leave to amend the counterclaim by striking off a statement of account which he, defendant, had attached to the counterclaim, *604 and including in its stead a demand that “plaintiff be required to render an accounting.” The court made an interlocutory order refusing this motion. The ruling was reconsidered on defendant’s motion for new trial. We find no reversible error in the refusal of the motion.
The Practice Act of May 14, 1915, P. L. 483, sec. 11, as amended by Act of May 26,1937, P. L. 895, sec. 1, 12 PS 393, gives to a defendant in a counterclaim th'e right to ask for an account where plaintiff has received moneys in any capacity “for which he is bound to account to the......defendant,” or if the defendant is unable to state the exact amount due him “by reason of the ...... plaintiff’s failure to account to him.” But under the evidence in this case, plaintiff kept no separate accounts of the moneys he received as defendant’s employee. The undisputed testimony was that the order book, the slips for beer collected from the brewery, and the receipts for expenses, were turned over to defendant at the end of each day. According to plaintiff’s testimony, he also turned over the money at the end of each day; according to defendant, this was done once or twice a week. But laying aside this dispute as to when the money was turned over, the fact is that the accounts were kept by defendant, not plaintiff, and that an accounting showing the amount due was actually rendered to defendant every day during the course of the employment. We agree with the court below that the pleading contemplated by the Practice Act, as amended, is wholly inapplicable to the case now before us.
(3) The case was submitted to the jury in a fair and comprehensive charge in which the evidence and the applicable principles of law were discusséd in considerable detail. Only a general exception was taken. The objections now raised are obviously afterthoughts, and they could very easily have been obviated if the *605 court’s attention bad been called to them at tbe time; some deal with, parts of tbe charge pertaining to tbe amount of tbe counterclaim with wbicb we have no legal concern since tbe verdict was for tbe plaintiff in tbe full amount of his claim with no deductions whatever. It is contended that some are examples of “fundamental error” and therefore cognizable without specific exception.
It would unduly prolong this opinion to discuss them separately and in detail. We have carefully considered them all. It is our conclusion that those wbicb might be considered fundamental are entirely without merit and those wbicb are not fundamental could have been corrected easily if tbe court’s attention bad been called to them.
Judgment is affirmed.
The action was originally against husband and wife. A nonsuit was entered as to the wife which plaintiff did not move to take off.
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27 A.2d 707, 149 Pa. Super. 601, 1942 Pa. Super. LEXIS 423, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerovica-v-dzelalia-pasuperct-1942.