Court Opinion

ID: 6230355
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-02-17 20:20:30.63228+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:57:50.373560
License: Public Domain

The opinion of the court was delivered by
Armstrong, J.
Courts have an undoubted right inherently, as well as by Act of Assembly, to establish rules to regulate their practice, and for the purpose of expediting the determination of suits, when such rules are not. inconsistent with the constitution and laws of the Commonwealth. Their object is to facilitate business, prevent unnecessary delay, and promote substantial justice. When they fail of this they cease to accomplish their legitimate purpose. In Burkhart v. Parker, 6 W. & S. 481, Justice Huston observes: “ There is no doubt of the propriety and even necessity of some established rules regulating the practice of courts. There is, however, much doubt as to whether many of the rules in our Courts of Common Pleas do not more frequently obstruct and destroy the administration of justice than- promote it. Rules of court, and even Acts of Assembly on the same subject, have been held not to extend beyond the letter; nor to extend to cases within the letter, but not within the spirit.”
The rule of court in Blair county provides that the plaintiff, having filed his declaration, &c., “ shall be entitled to judgment on the third day of the term next succeeding that to which the process is returnable, when the term is for one week, and on the second Monday of the term when the same is to continue two weeks, or on any motion day afterwards, unless the defendant, or some person for him, shall have made affidavit of defence, and filed the same before judgment be asked for in court.” On the 4th of August, being the second Monday of July Term, 1858, on motion of the plaintiff below, the court entered judgment against the defendant for want of affidavit of defence under the rules .of *518court. On the same day affidavit of defence was filed;, yet the court, on a rule to show cause, refused to open or take off the judgment, and this is assigned for error here.
The plaintiff had the whole of Monday, and at any point of time on that day, to ask for judgment, and could not have asked it earlier. Why then should not the affidavit he regarded as in time, if filed on the same day ? Is it possible that if immediately after the judgment is asked, an affidavit disclosing a good defence is filed, it could not avail because it did not precede the motion ? Such might be the letter of the rule, but it would be an assassination of its spirit. How long it was from the motion for judgment, till the filing of the affidavit, does not appear. It may have been immediately. The law knows no fractions of a day: 11 Mas. R. 204; Blacktone’s Com. 1 vol. 114. In Bigelow v. Wilson, 1 Pick. 494, it is said, “ the time of executing a deed used in the statute, means, in legal acceptation, the day of the delivery. This day, in a legal sense, is an individual point of time, there being no fractions of a day.” In Brown v. Brown, 3 S. & R. 496, it is said, “ in computing the twenty days' allowed for appeal, the day on which the award is filed is excluded, as it may Be returned on the last hour of that day, and the utmost latitude of construction should prevail, as it is in favour of the constitutional right of the party to have his cause tried by á jury of the country.” The plaintiff may have chosen any point of time throughout the day, even the last hour, to move for judgment; and in this event it is possible the affidavit would have preceded the motion. If the affidavit be filed on the first day that the plaintiff is entitled to ask for judgment, it will be in time. And this, it is understood, accords with the usage, generally where this rule prevails. It is too sharp a practice to count on the fractions of á day, or insist on mere precedence to prevent the defendant from a fair trial of his cause. A meritorious defence is entitled to a favourable construction of the rule.
There is another view in which this case may be considered. On the day the writ issued, the plaintiffs entered a rule to choose arbitrators on the 15th March, 1856, who were to meet on the 14th of April ensuing. On the 3d of May judgment was confessed by defendant’s attorney, with the right’ of appeal, as if an award had been made. And on the 13th of May an aippeal was regularly entered and the usual affidavit filed. Did not the plaintiff’ by these proceedings, and by accepting a confession of judgment by the attorney, with the right of appeal to defendant, when he might have insisted on an award by the arbitrators, waive his right to judgment for want of affidavit of defence? In O’Neal v. Rupp, 10 Harris 395, Justice Knox says, “ the right to a judgment for insufficiency in the affidavit of defence may be waived. A party who intends to ask for judgment on account of an affi*519davit of defence, must do so before he takes any further steps in the cause subsequent to the affidavit which are calculated to mislead the defendant, and it is too late to move for judgment for this reason, after a rule to plead entered, and a rule to arbitrate entered on the part of the plaintiff and stricken off.” In Hosmer v. Humphrey, 2 Miles 28, “ where there was a defective affidavit, and the plaintiff subsequently files a narr. and asks and obtains a plea from defendant, it amounts to a waiver of his previous right under the act to have judgment.” And “ when there has been a hearing before arbitrators, and an award in favour of the defendant, this is sufficient ground for dispensing with the affidavit of defence:” 4 Bin. 428. It was also held in Lusk v. Garrett, 6 W. & S. 89, that, “ after a cause has been referred to arbitrators and an award made, and appeal by defendant, the plaintiff cannot sign judgment for want of affidavit of defence.” In that case the plaintiff contended he was within the letter of the law. But, said Justice Huston, “so he would have been if the case was still before arbitrators. And so he would have been if the arbitrators had reported in favour of the defendant.” And the facts of this case are scarcely distinguishable from the one now under consideration. The object of the rule was to prevent delay where there was no just defence, not to obstruct or impede the proper administration of justice. It gives to the plaintiff (8 S. & R. 253) “ extraordinary advantages.” In Hoffman v. Lock, 7 Harris 57, Justice Black says, “ a cause is not beyond the power of the court until arbitrators are actually chosen.” It follows, that after that, it is, until brought back by appeal. It must be remembered that the plaintiff took out the rule to refer. He it was that ousted the jurisdiction of the court for the time being. He might have remained passive and have taken the benefits the rule was intended to give him. But these he chose to forego for the chance, perhaps, of an earlier award, and a lien upon real estate. But if the power of the court was lost by the plaintiff’s rule to choose arbitrators, it was also suspended for the purposes of the defendant; and from the 15th of March till the 3d of May he had no day in court. During this period he may have lost advantages quite equal to those gained by the plaintiff. In O’Neal v. Rupp, Justice Knox says, “ there is no hardship in holding that a plaintiff may waive his right to question the sufficiency of an affidavit of defence.” In the case before us, the plaintiff having ruled the cause out of court, and the defendant having appealed and taken the oath prescribed by law, and necessary to entitle himself to a trial by jury, it will be no hardship to hold that the plaintiff has elected to accept this oath, in place of that required by the rule of court, and therefore waived the right to question its sufficiency.
Judgment reversed and procedendo awarded.