Locey v. Sterling Motor Truck Co.

156 A. 730, 102 Pa. Super. 148, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 145
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 11, 1931
DocketAppeal 2
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 156 A. 730 (Locey v. Sterling Motor Truck Co.) 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
Locey v. Sterling Motor Truck Co., 156 A. 730, 102 Pa. Super. 148, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 145 (Pa. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

On April 22, 1929 Sterling Motor Truck Company of Pittsburgh, a Pennsylvania corporation having its principal place of business in the City of Pittsburgh, agreed to sell to E. H. Locey of Mansfield, Tioga County, Pennsylvania, under a conditional sales contract in writing, a new Sterling motor truck. The contract was made at. Pittsburgh and provided for a substantial down payment by the buyer and the giving of thirteen notes aggregating $3,429. The truck was delivered to the buyer pursuant to the contract, and the latter made the down payment and paid the first note when it came due on June 2, 1929. He refused to make the subsequent payments as they fell due and the motor truck company thereupon demanded the return of the truck, as provided in the contract. Locey refused to deliver up the truck, and, the motor truck company then brought an action of. replevin against him in Tioga County to No. 174, September T., 1929, giving bond with an approved surety company, and the sheriff made return that he had. seized and replevied the truck on July 25, 1929, and had turned over the same to A. B. Dunsmore, Esq., attorney for the motor truck company in the replevin action.

On July 27, 1929 Locey caused this fraudulent debtor’s attachment under the Act of March 17, 1869, *151 P. L. 8, as amended by the Act of May 24, 1887, P. L. 197, to be issued against Sterling Motor Truck Company, which the sheriff of Tioga County returned as served personally on A. B. Dunsmore, garnishee, by handing him in Wellsboro, Tioga County, Pa., on Thursday, July 25, [sic] 1929 at 4:45 o’clock P. M., a true and attested copy of the original writ and by making known to him the contents thereof, and attached one D W 15-64 Sterling Motor Truck, bearing serial No. 15W622 and motor No. 191,126.

" The grounds for the attachment set forth in the plaintiff’s affidavit, in addition to the averment that the defendant was justly indebted to him in the sum of $2,420, were (1) that the defendant fraudulently contracted the debt in suit, in that it had fraudulently represented said motor truck so purchased under said conditional sale agreement to be a new truck equipped with a Heil body, of the value of $5,489, and by virtue of said representations had secured from the plaintiff the payment of $2,420 on account of the purchase price, whereas after the delivery of the truck the plaintiff had found out that the truck was not new, as represented, but second hand, and .that the body was not a Heil body but one of cheaper and poorer construction; with certain defects of construction therein specified, and that said truck was not worth over $2,000; and that plaintiff had on discovery of said fraud rescinded the contract and demanded the return of the payments made by him, but the defendant had refused to refund the same or any part thereof; and (2) that the defendant was about to remove its property out of the jurisdiction of the court with intent to defraud its creditors and particularly the plaintiff. Bond with approved corporate surety in the sum of $4,840 was filed by the plaintiff prior to the issuance of said attachment.

On August 20, 1929 the defendant’s bond, conditioned as provided in the third section of the Act of *152 1869, with corporate surety in the sum of $4,480, was filed and approved by the court.

Ón September 20, 1929 plaintiff’s statement of claim was duly filed with the following endorsement thereon: “And now, September 20, 1929, the within statement of claim served on me this above date. A. B. Duns-more, of Attys. for defendant.”

On September 27, 1929 defendant filed a motion for leave to enter an appearance de bene esse and file a motion to quash the writ of attachment and for leave to take a rule to show cause why the attachment should not be dissolved; and the same day leave was granted by the court as prayed for.

On September 27, 1929 defendant’s attorneys entered an appearance de bene esse and moved to quash the writ. No motion to dissolve the attachment was filed at that time, nor was any notice of the motion for leave to enter an appearance de bene esse or to quash the writ given the plaintiff in the attachment.

On November 11, 1929 plaintiff took judgment against defendant for the sum of $2,499.86 for want of an affidavit of defense. The same day a petition for rule to dissolve the attachment was filed by the defendant, in which the fraud alleged by the plaintiff was specifically denied; and a motion made by plaintiff to set aside the order of September 27,1929, granting defendant leave to enter an appearance de bene esse and move to quash the writ of attachment.

On November 15,1929 the defendant moved to strike off the judgment entered on November 11th for want of an affidavit of defense; and on December 31st, plaintiff filed his answer to the rule to dissolve the attachment, of which “A. B. Dunsmore of Attys. for defendant” acknowledged service in the identical language used for the service of plaintiff’s statement of claim.

On February 25, 1930 the court below (1) dismissed the rule to quash the writ of attachment; (2) dis *153 charged the rule to strike off the judgment; (3) continued the motion to dissolve the attachment and the hearing thereon, pending appeal to this court.

The defendant appealed from the order of the lower court as to (1) and (2) above.

. We have stated the complicated facts involved in this appeal in detail, in order that a full understanding of the questions involved might be had.

• In our opinion the controversy rests on the effect to be given the filing by défendant óf the bond provided for by section 3 of the Act of 1869, and the “service” of the plaintiff’s statement of claim.

The bond provided for by the third section of the Act of 1869, unlike the defendant’s bond in foreign attachment, does not cause a dissolution of the attachment. In an opinion by our Brother Cunningham in Com. v. Tomashefsky, 93 Pa. Superior Ct. 104, we pointed out that the purpose of the bond was to prevent the manual seizure and retention of the defendant ’s property by the sheriff, and to enable the defendant or person in possession to retain that, possession. See also, Com. v. Sisler, 196 Pa. 147, 148; Fernau v. Butcher, 113 Pa. 292.

If the writ of attachment was irregularly issued, or illegally served or. any other material defect appears in the process, the defendant may move to quash the writ. If the defendant denies the allegations of fraud contained in the plaintiff’s affidavit for the attachment, he may move to dissolve the attachment; and on the hearing pursuant to such motion the court may on proper cause shown, whether that cause appear from the face of the original affidavit, or from evidence dehors that paper, dissolve the attachment: Sharpless v. Ziegler, 92 Pa. 467, 470; Com. v. Burns, 14 Pa. Superior Ct. 248, 255; and the burden is on the plaintiff to sustain his averments of fraud: Ibid, p. 257; If the court dissolves the attachment because fraud was insufficiently alleged or proved, the attach *154

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 A. 730, 102 Pa. Super. 148, 1931 Pa. Super. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/locey-v-sterling-motor-truck-co-pasuperct-1931.