Schenck v. Goodman

98 Pa. Super. 384, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 203
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedOctober 16, 1929
DocketAppeal 3
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 98 Pa. Super. 384 (Schenck v. Goodman) 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
Schenck v. Goodman, 98 Pa. Super. 384, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 203 (Pa. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

Opinion by

Keller, J.,

This case raises the question whether an appeal from the judgment of a magistrate duly filed in the municipal court should be stricken off because the notice of the term and number to which it was filed, required by its rule of court, was sent the attorney for the adverse party by ordinary mail, instead of being served in the manner provided by law for the service of a summons, or by registered mail.

*386 The rule referred to, No. 23-a, provides as follows: “The party filing an appeal from the judgment of a magistrate shall, within 72 hours thereafter, serve a written notice to the adverse party, or his attorney, of the term and number to which the appeal is filed, and the pleading and procedure shall thereafter be the same as in like cases commenced in the municipal court. ’ ’

The same question came before us in Sporkin v. MacBride, 95 Pa. Superior Ct. 71, where speaking through our Brother Trexler, we said: “The rule of court provides no such penalty for a departure from its demands and such penalty not being provided for, the striking off of the judgment seems unauthorized, Nicholson v. Schaffer, 94 Pa. Superior Ct. 318.” It is true that in that case a general appearance had been entered by the party moving to strike off the appeal, which is not the case here; but our decision, reversing the action of the court below, was based on both grounds.

The insistence of counsel for appellee has led us to consider the subject again, with the. result that we find no breach of the rule justifying the action of the court below.

The rule does not say how notice shall be given the adverse party, or his attorney, beyond that it shall be in writing, nor what shall be the effect of a failure strictly to comply with its provisions. It would seem that if such a drastic penalty had been contemplated, as a final judgment in the case, — for, that is what striking off the appeal amounts to — the rules of court should have been specific both as to how service was to be made and the penalty that would follow the slightest infraction or neglect of the rule; but in both respects they are silent. We held in Nicholson v. Schaffer, supra, that the provision in the Practice Act of 1915, P. L. 483, that the defendant’s affidavit of *387 defense shall he served on the plaintiff or his counsel (Sec. 12) did not carry with it a warrant to enter judgment against defendant if he filed a sufficient affidavit but failed to serve it as directed. It was a “default which ordinarily would be relieved against”: Spinelli v. Costello, 271 Pa. 204, 205, and should not he so construed as finally to conclude a defendant with a meritorious case, and certainly not where the court had not adopted a rule specifically imposing such a penalty for its default. The punishment should “fit the crime.” In recent years our Supreme Court has relaxed the stricter, more technical practice in force in earlier times.

The warrant for the action of the court below is sought to he found hy reference to two other rules, one of its own and the other of the court of common pleas.

Rule 1 of the municipal court provides: “Except as herein provided, the rules of practice and procedure of the courts of common pleas of Philadelphia County shall govern.” As appeals from magistrates’ courts are not filed in the common pleas, there is no specific rule there governing the subject under discussion.

Rule 93 of the courts of common pleas provides: “Except where an Act of Assembly or rule of court otherwise directs, all notices, pleadings and papers required to he served on the adverse party shall he served on his attorney of record, if he has one, and, if not, then on the party himself, in the manner provided hy law for the service of a summons; if he cannot he thus served, then hy registered letter, or in actions begun hy capias, hy serving his hail to the sheriff, or special hail, if any.”

A careful reading of this rule does not satisfy us, in the absence of a definite pronouncement on the subject hy the courts of common pleas of Philadelphia County, whose rule it is, that the directions as to the *388 manner of service apply to any case except where there is no attorney of record and service must be made on the party himself. In the phrase after the semicolon, beginning “if he cannot be thus served, then by registered mail, or, in actions begun by capias, by serving his bail to the sheriff, or special bail, if any,” we think it apparent that the pronoun, “he,” refers to the party himself and not to his attorney of record; not only because of the context, referring to his bail to the sheriff, or special bail, in actions begun by capias, but also because service could always be had on the attorney of record either personally or at his office, and hence there would be no reason for providing for such a contingency with regard to him. If this is so, it follows that the phrase “in the manner provided by law for the service of a summons” is applicable only to service on the party himself, and that the rule does not attempt to prescribe the manner in which the attorney of record shall be served, provided only he is actually served.

The purpose of the rule is two-fold: (1) To provide that where there is an attorney of record all pleadings, notices and subsequent papers in the case shall be served on him, instead of on the party; (2) where no appearance has been entered, to provide how such papers shall be served on the party himself if he can be found in the jurisdiction, and if not so found, to authorize service of such subsequent papers by registered mail, etc.

The consequences of any other interpretation would be too onerous to be inflicted by inference. For “the manner provided by law for the service of a summons” is fixed by the Act of July 9, 1901, P. L. 614. It requires the writ to be served on a defendant by handing a true and attested copy thereof to him personally, or by handing a true and attested copy thereof to an adult member of his family at his dwelling house, or *389 to an adnlt member of the family with which he resides, or to the manager or clerk of the hotel, inn, apartment house, boarding-house, or other place of lodging at which he resides; and it is only if, upon inquiry, his place of residence in the county is not ascertained, or if for any cause an attempt to serve at his residence has failed, that service may be made at his office or place of business, by handing a true and attested copy to his agent, partner or the person for the time being in charge thereof. Surely it was not intended to provide that papers in the case could not be served at an attorney’s office or place of business unless upon inquiry his residence in the county could not be ascertained, or an attempt to serve them at his residence had failed. Such a construction would run counter not only to common practice but to common sense, and yet that is what it comes to, if the phrase above referred to is applied to service on the attorney of record.

Service on the attorney by registered mail likewise could not be resorted to unless personal service, or service at his residence, and also service at his office were not possible.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 Pa. Super. 384, 1930 Pa. Super. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schenck-v-goodman-pasuperct-1929.