Sanner v. United States Transfer Co.

193 A. 830, 127 Pa. Super. 191, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 203
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 19, 1937
DocketAppeal, 236
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 A. 830 (Sanner v. United States Transfer 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
Sanner v. United States Transfer Co., 193 A. 830, 127 Pa. Super. 191, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 203 (Pa. Ct. App. 1937).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, P. J.,

Omar R. Sanner and Margaret A. Sanner, his wife, suffered injuries, on April 14,1934, while riding in their automobile, by a collision with a trailer attached to a tractor owned by B. J. Stettler, trading as U. S. Transfer Company. Averring that the collision was due to the negligence of Stettler’s driver, they brought their action of trespass and recovered verdicts of $1611.08 and $500, respectively, on which judgments were duly entered.

They then issued attachment in execution summoning The Ocean Accident & Guarantee Corporation, Limited, as garnishee, based on the proposition that the garnishee had issued a policy of insurance to Stettler, covering property loss and personal damage caused by the negligent operation of the trailer aforesaid, and obtained a verdict on which judgment was entered. The garnishee has appealed.

*194 The appellant has filed twenty-eight assignments of error. Most of those relating to the admission or rejection of evidence are not in conformity with onr rules of court and will be disregarded. We cannot be expected to hunt through a printed record of 250 pages in order to find out the name of the witness and where, in the notes of testimony, the evidence complained of was admitted or rejected, in order to get the context and the circumstances attending its admission or rejection. Rule 26 governs, and requires that the question or offer —the name of the witness, of course, being given, so that the context may be examined — as well as the objection thereto and the evidence admitted or rejected be quoted verbatim, unless the quotations are over a page long, in which event Rule 36 applies and it will be sufficient to state the facts briefly and refer to the pages in the record where they may be found; but where this course is pursued the matter referred to must be enclosed in brackets in the record and the number of the assignment placed opposite the first bracket. This means, as respects assignments complaining of the admission or rejection of evidence, that the matters complained of must be enclosed in brackets and numbered in the notes of testimony forming part of the record. The appellant complied with neither of these rules. No help is given us by referring in the assignment to the rule for a new trial, which furnishes neither the name of the witness nor a verbatim quotation of the testimony objected to, set out in its context and attendant circumstances.

However, we have carefully read the testimony in the record, in connection with the assignments of error — as well as was possible without the identification required under our rules — and we find no reversible error in the admission or rejection of evidence on the trial. It is too clear to require discussion that an unsigned carbon copy of a letter or document could not be admitted in *195 evidence, without proof that the original was not obtainable; that a self-serving letter from the garnishee to the defendant in the trespass action could not be received to the prejudice of the plaintiff, — if the subject matter was relevant in this proceeding, it had to be proved by witnesses, the same as any other testimony; that testimony of the garnishee’s officers and agents that the driver of the tractor-trailer, over three weeks after the accident, pointed out to them a different tractor from the one insured by the garnishee as the one he was driving at the time of the accident, could not be received to corrohorate the evidence of the driver; that an unsigned and incomplete copy of a policy issued by another insurance company covering a different tractor from the one insured by the garnishee, was not admissible in evidence in this proceeding. The issue in the case, leaving out, for the present, the matter referred to near the close of this opinion, was whether the tractor and trailer of the defendant, Stettler, which were being operated by his driver, Silvus, at the time of the collision with the Banners, were insured by the garnishee’s policy IT. C. 196330. If they were, plaintiffs were entitled to a verdict; if they were not, the garnishee was entitled to a verdict. Evidence as to the insurance of other tractors and trailers of the defendant by other insurance companies was not relevant to this issue.

The assignments of error do properly raise two main questions: (1) The question of jurisdiction over the garnishee; (2) whether under the evidence in the case the garnishee was entitled to judgment non obstante veredicto because of lack of any proof that the tractor hauling the trailer which collided with the plaintiffs was insured by the garnishee. We will consider them in that order.

(1) When the garnishee was served with the writ of attachment in execution by the sheriff of Allegheny County, who was deputized by the sheriff of Cambria *196 County, and, likewise, wlien the alias writ was served by the sheriff of Dauphin County on the Insurance Commissioner of Pennsylvania, who thereupon notified the garnishee by telegram and registered mail, the garnishee entered its appearance de bene esse and raised the question of jurisdiction by petition under the Act of March 5, 1925, P. L. 23. The court, on February 10, 1936, discharged the rule to set aside service of the writs of attachment execution. The garnishee took no appeal within fifteen days thereafter, but appeared and defended on the trial. It is now too late to raise the question of jurisdiction growing out of the service of the writ. The question raised related to jurisdiction over the defendant personally (See Cuberka v. Penna. Slovak R. & G. C. Union, 126 Pa. Superior Ct. 605, 193 A. 828), not of the cause of action—the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County had jurisdiction of an attachment in execution levied to satisfy a judgment obtained in that court; and the Act of 1925, supra (sec. 3), specifically provides, “A failure to appeal within the time specified [15 days] will be deemed a waiver of all objections to jurisdiction over the defendant personally.” The rule is otherwise as respects jurisdiction of the cause of action, which may be raised on final judgment: Wettengel v. Robinson, 288 Pa. 362, 136 A. 673. In so ruling, we are not to be understood as holding that the service on the garnishee was improper. We simply hold that in the circumstances here present the garnishee cannot now question it.

(2) The real question at issue is whether there was any competent evidence in the case that the tractor which was hauling the trailer was covered by the garnishee’s policy when the trailer collided with plaintiffs’ car.

There is no question that the garnishee issued its policy of insurance, U. C. 196330, to B. J. Stettler, etc., covering an Autocar tractor, motor number 50948, *197 model 1932, for one year from November 1, 1933; or that the said policy, by a rider attached, was extended to cover a Fruehauf trailer, number C-25310, model 1933, B274, for the same term. Nor is there any doubt that this Fruehauf trailer C-25310, B274, bearing a New York 1934 license tag, TEL 193, was the trailer which the jury found had collided with the plaintiffs’ car. The only question was whether the tractor which was pulling it was the Autocar tractor, model 1932, number 50948, which was insured under the policy just mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 A. 830, 127 Pa. Super. 191, 1937 Pa. Super. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sanner-v-united-states-transfer-co-pasuperct-1937.