Vesta Coal Co. v. Jones

92 Pa. Super. 30, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 254
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 1, 1927
DocketAppeal 488
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 92 Pa. Super. 30 (Vesta Coal Co. v. Jones) 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
Vesta Coal Co. v. Jones, 92 Pa. Super. 30, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 254 (Pa. Ct. App. 1927).

Opinion

Opinion by

Cunningham, J.,

On August 1,1918, William Jones, appellant herein, was in the employ of The Vesta Coal Company, the appellee, which company by a lease executed on that date demised to him a dwelling house owned by it and designated as No. 138 at Mine No. 6 of Denbo, Washington County, Pennsylvania. The term of the lease was one month and if the lessee held over he was to be ‘ ‘ considered as holding from month to month. ’ ’ Among other covenants in the lease we find the following upon the part of appellant: “The lessee agrees to work for The Vesta Coal Company while he occupies the premises on the same terms as other similar workmen are there employed; and if he should quit or be discharged, he agrees to move from and yield up and give peaceable possession to the lessor within ten (10) days thereafter...... And if possession shall not be .surrendered when the lessor is entitled to it under this agreement, it may commence an action in ejectment for the premises and the lessee hereby authorizes and empowers any attorney of the Court of Common Pleas of said County in which said action is commenced to appear for him or any person in possession under him, accept service of the writ and forthwith confess judgment in such action, for which this shall be his warrant; upon which judgment a writ of habere facias possessionem may at once issue to restore possession of the premises to the lessor, its successor and assigns, with a clause of fi. fa. for the collection of costs. All errors and defects in such judgment and the proceeding therein are hereby waived and no writ of error, ob *32 je.ction or exception shall be taken thereto; and all exemption laws are waived as to costs.”

The tenancy continued until June 27, 1927, upon which date notice was served by appellee, as lessor, upon appellant, as lessee, notifying and requiring him to quit and deliver up quiet and peaceable possession of the premises within ten days in compliance with the provisions of the lease. Upon the failure of appellant to surrender possession, counsel for appellee and an attorney, acting upon this occasion for appellant under authority alleged to have been conferred upon him by the above quoted provisions of the lease, entered into an agreement in writing for an amicable action of ejectment and filed the same on July 11, 1927, in the office of the Prothonotary of the Court of Common Pleas of Washington County. This agreement also contained a confession of judgment in ejectment against appellant, together with a statement of the grounds therefor. Attached to the- agreement were: a copy of the lease, verified by affidavit; a copy of the notice to quit; a certificate of service of the original; and an affidavit to the effect that appellant had failed and refused to deliver possession of the premises. No praecipe was filed or summons issued and the confession of judgment was simultaneous with the entering of the agreement for the amicable action. The portions of the paper filed which are material to the question argued before us read:

“It is hereby agreed that the above action be entered as if a summons had been regularly issued out of said Court at the suit of the plaintiff against the defendant, on a certain lease, a true, copy whereof is hereto annexed, and had been duly served, and so returned by the Sheriff; and that judgment be entered thereon for plaintiff, without appeal, writ of error or objection or exception.
“This judgment in ejectment for said premises, is entered upon the determination of the said lease, by *33 virtue of the default of the said tenant, 'William Jones, in the non-performance of his agreement, in ceasing to work for said plaintiff; and in pursuance of the terms of said lease by which said plaintiff reserved the right to re-enter at- any time after ten days’ notice, said notice of intention to re-enter having been served upon the defendant upon the 27th of June, 1927, a true copy of said notice being hereunto annexed, whereby the said lease has absolutely ceased and. determined, which absolute ceasing and determination of the said lease, the said lessor hereby declares and avers.”

Notice of the entering of the judgment and to- the effect that a writ of hab. fa. would be issued thereon unless appellant removed from the premises within six days was accepted by counsel retained for appellant on July IB, 1927. Thereupon appellant presented his petition to the court below averring that the entry of the 'judgment was irregular and unlawful for a number of specified reasons and praying that it be stricken off. The issues raised by the application to strike off the judgment were exclusively of law and after argument and consideration the court below, in an opinion by Brownson, P. J., dismissed the petition and this appeal followed. Pursuant to leave granted at bar counsel for appellee filed a motion to quash this appeal upon the ground that appellant, under the provisions of the lease, had waived his right to have the judgment entered against him in the court below reviewed by an appellate court. An examination of the record in this appeal discloses that appellant’s petition was not an appeal to the equitable powers of the court below to open the judgment, to the end that appellant might have an opportunity to present a meritorious defense before a jury, but was a proceeding upon the law side of the court to strike it off by reason of certain alleged irregularities appearing on the face of the record: O’Hara v. Baum, 82 Pa. 416. The following quotation from the brief of the learned counsel for appellant sum *34 marizes his argument upon the merits: “¥e contend that the record shows on its face that the agreement is not in conformity with the statute [Section 40 of the Act of June 13, 1836, P. L. 572, 579] and is not within the power granted under the warrant of attorney in the lease and that the judgment as entered is illegal and invalid.” The specific matters upon which they relied at the argument in this court were that the lease contemplated the filing of a praecipe, the actual issuing of a summons and an acceptance' of service thereof before a judgment could lawfully be confessed. The question raised by the motion to dismiss this appeal is identical with that involved under a similar motion in the case of Consumers Mining Company v. Smaile Chatak, No. 535 April Term, 1928, in which we filed an opinion on November 23, 1927, stating at length our reasons for dismissing the appeal in that case. There, as here, no writ was issued prior to the confession of the judgment in ejectment and the language of the waiver in that case was “all errors and defects in such judgment and in the proceeding thereon are hereby waived, as well as all stay and exemption laws now or hereafter in force, and no writ of error, objection or exception shall be taken thereto.” Here it is “all errors and defects in such judgment and the proceeding therein are hereby waived and no writ of error, objection or exception shall be taken thereto.” It was earnestly contended in that case and in the case at bar that there is a distinction, in so far as appellate proceedings are concerned, between appeals to review a refusal to open a judgment and those taken to review a refusal to strike it off; that a proceeding to open, being an appeal for the exercise of equitable powers, was, prior to the Act of May 9, 1889, P. L.

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Bluebook (online)
92 Pa. Super. 30, 1927 Pa. Super. LEXIS 254, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vesta-coal-co-v-jones-pasuperct-1927.