LOOMIS LAKE ASS'N BY HUGHES v. Smith

531 A.2d 1152, 366 Pa. Super. 612, 1987 Pa. Super. LEXIS 9389
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 7, 1987
Docket2410; 2529
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 531 A.2d 1152 (LOOMIS LAKE ASS'N BY HUGHES v. Smith) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LOOMIS LAKE ASS'N BY HUGHES v. Smith, 531 A.2d 1152, 366 Pa. Super. 612, 1987 Pa. Super. LEXIS 9389 (Pa. 1987).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

ROWLEY, Judge:

These are consolidated appeals from an order entered in a trespass action and a summary judgment entered in an ejectment action, both of which involve the same parties and *615 the same parcel of land. Appellants, Floyd C. and Reva Smith (Smiths), were defendants in an action in trespass brought by plaintiff-appellee, Loomis Lake Association (Association), on July 9, 1976. The Association alleged that the Smiths wrongfully trespassed on property owned by the Association and caused damage thereon by removing trees and erecting a fence. The case went to trial and on September 14, 1977, the jury found for the Association awarding it nominal damages of $2.00. The Smiths filed a timely motion for a new trial. On September 28, 1979, the trial court filed an order denying the Smiths’ motion for new trial because they had failed to pursue it. Judgment on the verdict was entered by the Association on December 17, 1984. No appeal was ever taken from this judgment.

After the trial court’s denial of the Smiths’ motion for a new trial, but prior to the entry of judgment in the trespass action, the Association, in 1980, instituted an action in ejectment to oust the Smiths from the property at issue in the trespass action. The Smiths counterclaimed raising a claim of adverse possession. The Association moved for summary judgment on the issue of adverse possession based on the doctrine of res judicata.

On January 2, 1985, in an attempt to invalidate the claim of res judicata in the ejectment action, the Smiths filed a motion to open or, in the alternative, to strike the judgment entered in the trespass action erroneously alleging that the trial court had not ruled on their post-trial motion. The Smiths also claimed that they were prejudiced by the Association’s late filing of the praecipe for judgment in the trespass action. On August 8, 1985, the court, after argument on the petition to open or strike, entered the following order:

AND NOW TO WIT, this 8th day of August, 1985, the Motion for New Trial in this matter, having been filed on the 16th of September 1977, being without merit, the same are [sic] hereby dismissed and the court affirms the judgment heretofore entered by the Prothonotary on the Praecipe of the plaintiff.

*616 On August 13, 1985 the court entered the following order in the trespass action:

NOW TO WIT, this 13th day of August, 1985, this matter has lain dormant since the verdict of the jury of the 14th of September, 1977. That verdict was in favor of the plaintiff, Loomis Lake Association. Motions were filed for a new trial and never presented to the court. Such motions were usualboilerplate, (sic), raising no issues relative to the verdict of the jury. The Motions for a New Trial is (sic), therefore, dismissed nunc pro tunc. The motion to Open or in the Alternative to Strike Judgment, filed by the defendant on the 17th of Seprember, (sic) 1984, is therefore, dismissed.

The Smiths, on September 5, 1985, appealed from the August 8, 1985 order entered in the trespass action. That appeal is filed at No. 2410 Philadelphia, 1985.

On August 13, 1985, the trial court also entered summary judgment in the ejectment action in favor of the Association after concluding that all of the issues necessary to determine the title and interest of the Association to the land in question were resolved in the trespass action. The Smiths’ second appeal, at No. 2529 Philadelphia, 1985, is from this judgment. The appeals have been consolidated for disposition.

I. Appeal at No. 02410 Philadelphia, 1985 (Trespass)

Judgment was entered in the trespass action on December 17, 1984. Although appellants’ petition to open or strike the judgment was filed on January 1, 1985, within the 30-day appeal period permitted by Pa.R.A.P. 903, no appeal was ever taken from the judgment. Therefore, at the end of the 30-day appeal period, the judgment became final. Simpson v. Allstate Insurance Co., 350 Pa.Super. 239, 504 A.2d 335 (1986). Although the order of August 8, 1985, from which appellants appeal, purports to dismiss the Motion for New Trial which was filed on September 16, 1977 and to affirm the judgment of December 17, 1984, the court had already dismissed the Motion for New Trial on September 28, 1979, and the judgment had become final and no longer appealable on January 16, 1985. Therefore, the *617 order of August 8, 1985, was an unnecessary order which had no effect. Because the order affected no rights of any party and because it put no party out of court who was not already out of court, the order was not final and appealable. See: Pugar v. Greco, 483 Pa. 68, 394 A.2d 542 (1978).

However, it appears that what the trial court intended to do by the August 8, 1985 order was to deny the petition to open or strike the judgment. The order was entered following argument on the petition to open or strike the judgment which was the only matter before the court in the trespass action at that time. Within five days, on August 13, 1985, the court entered another order yet again purporting to dismiss the post-trial motion, as had the August 8, 1985 order, and specifically dismissing the petition to open or strike the judgment. Because the petition to open or strike the judgment was the only matter before the court on August 8, 1985, and because the order which was filed only five days after the August 8, 1985 order, when nothing more was pending before the court, was nearly identical to the August 8, 1985 order except that it specifically disposed of the petition which had been pending immediately before the August 8, 1985 order, it is apparent that the trial court had intended to dismiss the petition to open or strike in the August 8, 1985 order.

The Smiths’ Notice of Appeal does not say that the appeal is from the August 13, 1985 order dismissing the petition to open or strike the judgment, but only states that the appeal is from the August 8, 1985 order. However, as we have already noted, the August 8, 1985 order in fact accomplished nothing which had not already been done by a previous order, and therefore was not final and appealable. We therefore quash the appeal at No. 02410 Philadelphia, 1985. However, even if we were to consider the August 8, 1985 order as, in effect, denying the petition to open or strike, we would affirm the order.

When a judgment is entered by the trial court in a contested civil action and becomes final, such as in the trespass action in this case, it cannot ordinarily be modified, rescinded, or vacated by the trial court. Simpson v. All *618 state, 350 Pa.Super. 239, 504 A.2d 335 (1986); Hunter v. Employers Insurance of Wausau, 347 Pa.Super. 227, 500 A.2d 490 (1985).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
531 A.2d 1152, 366 Pa. Super. 612, 1987 Pa. Super. LEXIS 9389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/loomis-lake-assn-by-hughes-v-smith-pa-1987.