Lyon v. Pittsburgh, Allegheny & Manchester Traction Co.

169 A. 229, 312 Pa. 584, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 754
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 2, 1933
DocketAppeals, 221 and 222
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 169 A. 229 (Lyon v. Pittsburgh, Allegheny & Manchester Traction Co.) 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
Lyon v. Pittsburgh, Allegheny & Manchester Traction Co., 169 A. 229, 312 Pa. 584, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 754 (Pa. 1933).

Opinion

Opinion by

Me. Justice Simpson,

November 27, 1933:

Upon a judgment recovered by him against the Pittsburgh, Allegheny & Manchester Traction Company, hereinafter called the Manchester Traction Company, plaintiff issued an attachment sur judgment, summoning the United Traction Company of Pittsburgh and the Pittsburgh Railways Company, as garnishees. Interrogatories were filed, and the garnishees’ answers thereto were held sufficient to defeat plaintiff’s rule for judgment upon them. Subsequently, and without discontinuing the prior writ, a second attachment sur judgment was issued against the same garnishees, which they unsuccessfully moved to quash. New and more searching sets of interrogatories were filed by plaintiff; each of the garnishees made answer thereto; the court below made absolute plaintiff’s rules for judgment on the answers, and each garnishee is prosecuting one of the present appeals. The judgments must be affirmed.

The statement of questions involved, which limits the scope of the appeal (Oil City Nat. Bank v. McCalmont, 303 Pa. 306; Keller v. N. J. Fidelity & Plate Glass Ins. Co., 306 Pa. 124), raises but two points: (1) Should the court below have quashed the second writ of attachment, because the prior attachment had not been discontinued when the second was issued? and (2) Was the *586 garnishees’ liability for the rent they agreed to pay, and which was attached herein, cancelled by instructions from the president of lessor (the defendant) who was also president of the lessee (the United Traction Company) to the accounting officer of both, to treat the rent as dividends on lessor’s stock (all owned by lessee) to be retained by lessee, which procedure, though admittedly never authorized by any formal resolution of the board of directors of defendant, had, it is alleged, been acquiesced in for years?

For their first contention, appellants rely solely on Frazier v. Berg, 306 Pa. 317, 324, where we held that an attachment execution “binds all property belonging to the defendant or money due him, in the hands of a garnishee, which the latter receives up to the time of trial.” We reaffirm that conclusion, but it is far from sustaining the contention of appellants. In Kase v. Kase, 34 Pa. 128, 131, it is said that attachment executions, “as collateral processes, are under the control of the court, as in other cases where several remedies are employed for the same debt or injury. And, as execution, this particular process is under the control of the court so far as to see that it is not used vexatiously, and that the garnishee shall run no risk of being compelled to make double payment.” So, too, in Pontius v. Nesbit, 40 Pa. 309, where, as here, a second attachment was issued, we said (page 311) : “The only objection to it was the pendency of the prior attachment. That was no valid objection. Both writs of attachment were execution process; and the general rule is that you may have as many forms of execution as the law will afford, and may pursue them all at the same time until satisfaction be obtained on one of them.” The situation in the two cases last cited was not exactly the same as here, but the controlling principles are the same, and will be here applied.

The fact that the court below and this court agree herein that appellants cannot, even on their own show *587 ing, prevent a summary judgment, is conclusive proof that the issuance of the second writ was not a vexatious proceeding, and this was the important question on the motion to quash. No reason exists why a litigant should be forced to a jury trial in a situation like that which appears here, with the resultant delay in obtaining justice, and in expense to the Commonwealth as well as the parties, only to find at the trial that there is nothing for the jury to pass upon. The constitutional mandate that “justice [shall be] administered without......delay” (Constitution of Pennsylvania, article I, section 11) forbids such a conclusion, and our judicial procedure, as far as possible, is made to accord with that provision. Indeed, as we will later show, the only way appellants escaped summary judgments on the first attachment was by asserting as a fact what was only their mistaken opinion, clearly made to appear so when the real situation, upon which they based that opinion, was forced upon the record by the more searching interrogatories filed on the second attachment.

The second question involved must likewise be answered antagonistically to appellants. By an agreement between defendant and the United Traction Company, the former “granted, demised and leased” to the latter, for a period of 950 years, all its (defendant’s) “franchises and property however held and whether then or thereafter acquired, with the right to fix, collect and retain the tolls realized from operating the road,” the latter agreeing to pay defendant “a net annual rental of $2.05 a share semiannually,” and to pay also “the principal and interest accrued and to accrue, as the same becomes due and payable, of all bonds now outstanding,” including therein “1,495 bonds (as yet unpaid) of the Manchester [Traction Company] each for the sum of $1,000 due October 1, 1930, with interest thereon at the rate of 5% per annum payable on the first day of April and October in each year. The intention of the parties hereto being that United [Traction Company] assumed *588 and agrees to pay bonds in the aggregate face value of $1,500,000, and the interest thereon as it matures.” Plaintiff’s judgments in these cases are for the principal “due and payable” on twenty of those bonds, with interest from the date they fell due, so that this appellant, if it pays, will only be doing exactly what it expressly agreed to do.

As already pointed out, appellants’ only answer to this liability is that the stipulated annual rent of $2.05 per share, which was agreed to be paid to defendant, and is the basis of the judgment against it, was cancelled in the way hereinafter stated. In the answers to interrogatories in the first attachment, it was averred that there was an agreement to cancel that obligation, and this averment caused the court below to refuse judgment on the garnishees’ answers. In the present attachment, appellants were forced to state exactly what the fact on this point was, and this showed there was no agreement whatever. The answers to the interrogatories state that “the said verbal agreement took the form of instructions from Mr. Callery, the then president of both the defendant and the garnishee, to this deponent, the then accounting officer of both companies, to treat the said rental of $2.05 a share as dividends on the stock of defendant [all of which was owned by this garnishee] to be retained by the garnishee, and that the said verbal agreement was not formally authorized by a resolution of the board of directors of the defendant.” Nor, so far as appears, was it ever authorized, either formally or informally, by any competent authority.

A direction to treat the rental as dividends, especially as no time was mentioned, is far from being an agreement to thus alter the original written agreement, effective for the full term of the lease. The language above quoted would appear, instead, to be a bookkeeping direction from the president to the accounting officer covering a single dividend then due and unpaid. “To treat

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Bluebook (online)
169 A. 229, 312 Pa. 584, 1933 Pa. LEXIS 754, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lyon-v-pittsburgh-allegheny-manchester-traction-co-pa-1933.