Hershey v. Segro
This text of 381 A.2d 478 (Hershey v. Segro) 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.
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Appellants Frank Segro and Mary Segro contend that the court below erred in striking off a judgment of non pros entered against appellee William L. Hershey. We, however, are satisfied that the lower court acted properly and affirm.
The facts necessary to a decision are undisputed and may be summarized as follows: On December 29, 1972, appellee filed a praecipe for a writ of summons in trespass, naming Frank Segro, Mary Segro, Richard Stoll and Dorothy Stoll as defendants. No complaint having been filed, the Stolls, on February 5, 1973, ruled appellee to file his complaint within twenty days or suffer a judgment of non pros. See Rule 1037(a), Pa.R.C.P.1 The lower court subsequently granted appellee an extension of time within which to file his complaint. However, when that period passed without a complaint having been filed, the Stolls, on March 23, 1973, caused judgment of non pros to be entered of record in their favor.
On September 26, 1975, appellants by praecipe directed the prothonotary to enter a judgment of non pros in their favor because appellee had never filed his complaint; the prothonotary thereupon entered such judgment of record. On January 2, 1976, appellee filed his petition to strike off [242]*242the judgment of non pros. Appeal is taken to this Court from the order of the court below granting appellee’s petition and striking off the judgment of September 26, 1975.
It is well-established that a motion to strike off a judgment of non pros challenges only defects appearing on the face of the record and that such a motion may not be granted if the record is self-sustaining. Saint Vladimir Ukrainian Orthodox Church v. Preferred Risk Mutual Insurance Company, 239 Pa.Super. 492, 362 A.2d 1052 (1976). Our scope of review on appeal from an order striking off a judgment of non pros is distinctly delimited. "[U]nlike a review of an order granting the opening of a judgment wherein the test is whether there was an abuse of discretion on the part of the court below,2 on our review of this order we look only to the record to ascertain the presence of any defects . . . ." Cox v. Felice Perri and Sons, 412 Pa. 415, 418, 195 A.2d 79, 80-81 (1963) (footnote added). In the instant case, appellants contend that an examination of the record reveals no defects and that the order appealed from is, therefore, invalid. We disagree.
The lower court concluded that the judgment of non pros in favor of appellants had been improvidently entered because they had not first served on appellee a rule to file his complaint in accordance with Pa.R.C.P. 1037(a). Appellants take the position that it was unnecessary for them to rule appellee to file a complaint in view of the fact that this had already been done by the Stolls on February 5, 1973; reliance is placed on Donaldson v. Cohen and City of Scranton, 30 Lack.Jur. 120 (1928).
It is true, as appellants contend, that in Donaldson a judgment of non pros entered as of course in favor of one [243]*243defendant was held to inure to the benefit of all defendants. But appellants ignore the fact that a local rule of court was there involved which specifically limited to one year the time within which a plaintiff could file his complaint and expressly directed the prothonotary to enter a judgment of non pros upon a plaintiff’s failure to comply. It was because of that local rule that the prothonotary could not enter judgment in favor of one defendant, leaving suit pending against another.
We would point out, however, that there no longer can be a local rule of court which permits a defendant to enter a judgment of non pros after a specific period of delay on the part of the plaintiff in filing his complaint. Glass v. Farmers Nat. Bk. of Watsontown, 364 Pa. 186, 70 A.2d 356 (1950). Rule 1037(a) has clearly abolished that practice and Donaldson thus loses its persuasiveness. Under present rules, the power of the prothonotary to enter judgment of non pros upon praecipe of the defendant can only be exercised where the defendant has first served upon plaintiff a rule to file his complaint.
Since the instant record reveals that appellants did not rule appellee to file his complaint, the prothonotary had no authority to enter a judgment of non pros in their favor. The same, therefore, was properly stricken.
Order affirmed.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
381 A.2d 478, 252 Pa. Super. 240, 1977 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2978, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hershey-v-segro-pasuperct-1977.