Levin v. Shapiro by Levin

455 A.2d 130, 309 Pa. Super. 223, 1983 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2352
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 7, 1983
Docket889
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 455 A.2d 130 (Levin v. Shapiro by Levin) 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
Levin v. Shapiro by Levin, 455 A.2d 130, 309 Pa. Super. 223, 1983 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2352 (Pa. Ct. App. 1983).

Opinion

McEWEN, Judge:

We here consider an appeal from an order which sustained the Preliminary Objections of appellees and dismissed the complaint of appellant for lack of service. We affirm.

Appellant filed a complaint in trespass against appellees on March 16, 1972, alleging a claim for personal injuries sustained as a result of an alleged assault and battery on June 23, 1970 by appellees Samuel Levin, the ex-husband of appellant, and Allan Shapiro, the stepson of Samuel Levin. At the time the action was commenced Allan Shapiro had not yet attained his majority and the complaint against him named Marilyn Shapiro Levin, his mother, as his parent and natural guardian. The complaint listed the addresses of appellees, Samuel Levin and Allan Shapiro as 791 Barnes Willow Lane, Huntingdon Valley, Montgomery County, *226 Pennsylvania. The sheriff attempted to make service at this address within the thirty day period after the complaint was filed but was unsuccessful. Appellant then timely reinstated the complaint and directed the sheriff to serve Samuel Levin and Allan Shapiro at their residence, “Apartment 833 Meadowbrook Drive, Huntingdon Valley, Pennsylvania.” The order for service completed by the sheriff indicated that service was attempted on a number of occasions and was finally made on May 18, 1972, to a Mrs. Levin, at “Apt. 504, 833 Meadowbrook Drive, Huntingdon Valley”, which, of course, differs somewhat from the address that plaintiff had designated to the sheriff. The return of the sheriff listed the relationship of the Mrs. Levin served with the complaint as wife of Samuel Levin and person in charge of Allan Shapiro.

Appellant filed, almost two years later, on May 6, 1974, a praecipe for the entry of a default judgment for failure to file an answer to the complaint. The default judgment was entered and a notice of the entry of the default judgment was mailed to Samuel Levin at 791 Barnes Willow Lane, Huntingdon Valley. Appellant had the matter listed for trial for assessment of damages on February 27, 1980, almost six years after the entry of default judgment. Appellees received a notice dated February 14, 1980 from the Court Administrator of Montgomery County that the case was listed for trial for February 27, 1980. Appellees claimed that they did not have any knowledge of the existence of the lawsuit until the receipt of this notice from the Court Administrator and at that time engaged counsel who filed a petition to strike or in the alternative to open the judgment. Appellant filed a responsive pleading and the court directed depositions to be taken within thirty days. Appellees took the depositions of seven person, including themselves.

Carl F. Burkhart, a deputy sheriff of Montgomery County, testified that his territory for service of process included the Meadowbrook Apartments and that there is no address known as Apartment 504, 833 Meadowbrook Drive, Hun *227 tingdon Valley. He claimed that such an address was non-existent explaining that there could be either an apartment 504 Meadowbrook Drive or an apartment 833 Meadowbrook Drive but that there could be no combination of the two. He further testified that the street address for each apartment on Meadowbrook Drive is the same as the apartment number. It was established during the deposition of deputy sheriff Burkhart that Joseph Pergine, the deputy sheriff who had served the complaint, had died in the interim. Counsel for the parties agreed during the course of this deposition “[t]hat the deputy sheriff that filled it [the order for service] in wrote in the apartment 504 where the service was made” as well as the other data in a different color ink than that used for the 833 Meadowbrook Drive address set forth in the order for service. (R. 115a).

Richard Fare, the first deputy prothonotary of Montgomery County, testified that the office of the prothonotary mailed the notices of entry of judgment to appellees in envelopes prepared by appellant. These notices were addressed to appellees at the Barnes Willow Lane address.

The deposition of Rita Ann Jobs, the general manager of Meadowbrook Apartments, established that neither the manager nor the person in charge of the apartments lived in apartment 504 and confirmed that every person who lives in the Meadowbrook Apartments has an address of Meadow-brook Drive and that each apartment has a street address which corresponds to the number of the apartment. She further confirmed that the address of apartment 504 in the Meadowbrook Apartment complex would have an address of 504 Meadowbrook Drive and that apartment 833 would have a corresponding street address of 833 Meadowbrook Drive. Mrs. Jobs further testified that, from the time when she became assistant manager of the complex in January 1975, she had personal knowledge that the tenants who resided in apartment 504 Meadowbrook Drive were another Samuel Levin and his wife Florence and that they were original residents and became tenants in 1969 or 1970 when the complex was built. Her testimony was that this other *228 Samuel Levin, together with his wife Florence, resided in apartment 504 on May 18, 1972, the date of service of the complaint but could not produce records to confirm her testimony since they had either been discarded or destroyed in a flood.

Appellee Samuel Levin testified that he resided in the Meadowbrook Apartment complex from September of 1971 to September of 1974, and that his address was 833 Meadowbrook Drive during that period. He testified that he never lived at apartment 504 and that his ex-wife knew where he lived in the complex and had visited him several times there. He further testified that it was not until mid-February of 1980 that he became aware of the existence of the instant lawsuit when he received an envelope from the Montgomery County Court Administrator which contained the civil trial list for February 27, 1980.

Marilyn Levin, the wife of Samuel Levin, testified that she was employed fulltime for a corporation located in New Jersey and had never taken a day off from the time she was employed in 1967 to the time of her deposition on April 24, 1980. She denied that she had ever been served with a copy of the complaint and confirmed that on the purported date of service her address was apartment 833, 833 Meadow-brook Drive.

Allan Shapiro, stepson of Samuel Levin, testified that he first became aware of the lawsuit in March of 1980 and further corroborated the addresses at which he had lived with his stepfather and mother.

The Common Pleas Court ordered the judgment opened on November 14, 1980 and appellee thereafter filed Preliminary Objections challenging, inter alia, the jurisdiction of the court, on grounds that proper service of the original complaint had never been made. Appellees further requested that the court dismiss the complaint for the reason that the statute of limitations for reinstatement of the complaint had long since expired. The trial court concluded that service was not made at the residence of the defendant on the basis of a stipulation by the parties during the deposi *229 tion of deputy sheriff Burkhart to the effect that apartment 504 Meadowbrook Drive was the place where service was actually made.

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Bluebook (online)
455 A.2d 130, 309 Pa. Super. 223, 1983 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2352, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/levin-v-shapiro-by-levin-pasuperct-1983.