Parliament Industries, Inc. v. William H. Vaughan & Co.

459 A.2d 720, 501 Pa. 1, 1983 Pa. LEXIS 528
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 27, 1983
Docket81-3-472
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 459 A.2d 720 (Parliament Industries, Inc. v. William H. Vaughan & 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
Parliament Industries, Inc. v. William H. Vaughan & Co., 459 A.2d 720, 501 Pa. 1, 1983 Pa. LEXIS 528 (Pa. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

FLAHERTY, Justice.

On December 27, 1977 Parliament, appellant herein, filed a complaint in confession of judgment in the Court of *4 Common Pleas of Lehigh County. 1 Attached to the complaint were four promissory notes, each in the amount of $87,533, maturing respectively on December 28 of 1977,1978, 1979, and 1980. The notes specify that each was to be paid in four equal installments commencing on March 28 of the year in which each note was due. The second, third and fourth notes specify additionally that interest on the unpaid balance of each is “payable beginning March 28, 1977 and each succeeding quarterly period thereafter until the principal is paid. ...” At the time the complaint was filed, two quarterly payments on the first note had been made in the amount of $43,766.50, the complaint alleged defaults in payment of principal on the first note and defaults in payment of interest on the others, and presumably because of an acceleration clause also contained in each of the notes, the amount of the judgment entered was $306,365.50, which represented the unpaid balance of all four notes.

Vaughan, appellee herein, filed a petition to strike and/or open judgment, and on August 2,1978 the Court of Common Pleas denied the petition to strike and Vaughan appealed to the Superior Court. On December 1, 1980 the Superior Court reversed in part and affirmed in part, reducing the confessed judgment by the principal amounts of the second, third and fourth notes, that is, by the amount of $262,599, thus reducing the amount of judgment to $43,766.50, which represented the unpaid balance of the first note. Parliament petitioned for reargument and on April 23, 1981 the Superior Court ordered the original panel to reconsider its final order. On June 12, 1981 the Superior Court panel reaffirmed its original final order. From this reaffirmance Parliament petitioned for allowance of appeal and we granted allocatur.

The initial matter raised by Vaughan is whether Parliament’s petition to this Court for allowance of appeal was timely filed. Vaughan argues that Pa.R.A.P. 1113(a) *5 provides that a petition for allowance of appeal shall be filed within 30 days, or, if an order under Rule 2545 has been entered, within 60 days of the entry of the order of the Superior Court. 2 Since Parliament’s petition for allowance of appeal was not filed until July 15, 1981, Vaughan asserts that Parliament was at least five months late, since the first order of the Superior Court was entered on December 1, 1980. Parliament, on the other hand, asserts that it is appealing from the second order of the Superior Court, entered June 12,1981, and that as to the June 12,1981 order, its appeal is timely.

Our determination of the timeliness of the appeal has not been made easier by the fact that Parliament has conducted the procedural aspect of its appellate case somewhat recklessly. Pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1701, an appellant ordinarily would preserve the timeliness of his petition for appellate review and his petition for reconsideration by filing two simultaneous petitions, one for allowance of appeal and one for reconsideration or reargument. 3 If this had been done, *6 Rule 1701 would protect the appellant regardless of what the lower court did: if the lower court entered its order for reconsideration within the time allowed for appeal, the appeal period would begin to run anew from the entry of the order after reconsideration (thus, giving appellant a chance to file an appeal from the reconsideration order); but if the lower court failed to enter an order granting or denying reconsideration within the appeal period, the petition for allowance of appeal already filed would become operative. Thus, appellant’s right to appeal would be preserved even if (as in this case) the lower court did not enter an order within the appeal period. 4

*7 Parliament, however, did not file simultaneous petitions for allowance of appeal and for reargument, but instead filed only for reargument. Had the Superior Court not granted reconsideration (which we treat as a grant of reargument), Parliament would have been unable to pursue this appeal, for the time for petitioning for allowance of appeal from the December 1,1980 order (January 30,1981) had long passed by the time Parliament filed its petition for allowance of appeal on July 15, 1981, and there would have been no second order to appeal from. It was, therefore, fortunate for Parliament that the Superior Court granted reconsideration, thus giving Parliament a second order, that filed after reconsideration, to appeal from. Absent that fortuitous event, Parliament would now be out of court.

Arguably, appeals such as the instant one should be regarded as untimely on the grounds that the rules contemplate an appellate practice in which orderliness requires a timely filing for allowance of appeal from the first order of the Superior Court either by filing for allowance of appeal only or by filing for reconsideration and for allowance of appeal under old Rule 1701. Such an argument is particularly plausible in this case since Parliament’s brief in the “Order in Question” section states that both orders are involved in the appeal; and because Parliament in its “Statement of the Case” section declares: “The appeal to the Supreme Court is only on the Order of the Superior Court reducing the second judgment by the amount of $262,599.” Notwithstanding these difficulties, we recognize that confusion has been generated by old Rule 1701, 5 and a *8 plain reading of old Rule 1113 gives Parliament a right to appeal from “the order . .. sought to be reviewed” within 30 days, whether or not he had preserved his right to petition for allowance of appeal from the first order of December 1, 1980. Thus, while Parliament’s methodology is not a model of appellate practice, we decline to hold that the appeal is untimely.

Going to the merits of the case, the question before us is whether the Superior Court was in error in determining that Vaughan’s petition to strike judgment should have been granted as to the second, third and fourth notes. Since a petition to strike may be granted only for a defect appearing on the face of the record, our concern, is whether the record as filed by Parliament at entry is adequate to sustain the judgment, or is defective in some way. Malakoff v. Zambar, Inc., 446 Pa. 503, 288 A.2d 819 (1972); Northway Village v. Northway Properties, 430 Pa. 499, 244 A.2d 47 (1968); Kros v. Bacall Textile, 386 Pa. 360, 126 A.2d 421 (1956); Baederwood Shopping Center v. St. George, 262 Pa.Super.Ct.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

K & S Joint Ventures v. OPC Mining Co.
Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2016
PNC Bank v. Bluestream Technology, Inc.
14 A.3d 831 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2010)
Progress Grange 96 v. Centre County Board of Assessment Appeals
3 Pa. D. & C.5th 233 (Centre County Court of Common Pleas, 2007)
JBG/Rosenfeld Retail Properties v. Anspach
803 A.2d 783 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2002)
International Land Acquisitions, Inc. v. Fausto
39 F. App'x 751 (Third Circuit, 2002)
Crum v. F.L. Shaffer Co.
693 A.2d 984 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1997)
Resolution Trust Corp. v. Copley Qu-Wayne Associates
683 A.2d 269 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1996)
Peoples Bank v. Dorsey
683 A.2d 291 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1996)
County of Allegheny v. McCullough
659 A.2d 40 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 1995)
Germantown Savings Bank v. Talacki
657 A.2d 1285 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1995)
Kohlman v. Western Pennsylvania Hospital
652 A.2d 849 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1994)
FIRST NAT. BANK OF JERMYN v. Bahara
650 A.2d 1060 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1994)
Manor Building Corp. v. Manor Complex Associates, Ltd.
645 A.2d 843 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1994)
Learn v. Hibbard
19 Pa. D. & C.4th 16 (Crawford County Court of Common Pleas, 1993)
Guzman v. Cooper
616 A.2d 705 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1992)
Welz v. Stump
588 A.2d 47 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1991)
Davis v. Woxall Hotel, Inc.
577 A.2d 636 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1990)
Reichert v. TRW, INC.
561 A.2d 745 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1989)
C-Rich Co. v. Davis
556 A.2d 413 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 1989)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
459 A.2d 720, 501 Pa. 1, 1983 Pa. LEXIS 528, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parliament-industries-inc-v-william-h-vaughan-co-pa-1983.