24 A.2d 703 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1941
Argued October 14, 1941.
This is an action in assumpsit brought by plaintiff to recover for goods sold and delivered to defendant. Plaintiff obtained judgment for the amount of his claim before a magistrate on December 12, 1940. On January 16, 1941, defendant presented its petition to the municipal court for leave to file an appeal nunc pro tunc. On the following day a rule to show cause was issued. The petition set forth that defendant had no knowledge or notice of the entry of the judgment until after the time allowed for an appeal had elapsed. Plaintiff filed an answer. It appears from the petition and answer that a summons in assumpsit was regularly issued from the magistrate's court and duly served upon defendant, commanding it to appear before said magistrate on December 5, 1940. At that time the case was continued until eleven A.M. on December 12, 1940. At the continued hearing defendant did not appear, and judgment was entered for plaintiff and against defendant. Cf. Cawley v. Bohan,
An appeal from a magistrate's court is regulated by the same law that applies to an appeal from a justice of the peace. Marcusv. Cohen et al.,
Defendant has filed a motion to quash the appeal to this court on the ground that the order of the court below was not a final order or judgment, and consequently not appealable. See Yost v.Davison,
There can be no extension of time for taking such an appeal as in the present case as a matter of indulgence, nor can the law fixing the period within which such an appeal shall be taken be arbitrarily overridden. Defendant's petition contains no substantial allegation to support the action of the court below, and gives no satisfactory explanation of defendant's failure to take an appeal within the statutory period. It is not sufficient that defendant merely averred that it had no knowledge or notice of the entry of the judgment by the magistrate, and there was no other reason given for its neglect and delay. Rudy v. Troup,
We fail to find anything in the record proper which would justify the court below in allowing an appeal nunc pro tunc. In doing so there was a clear abuse of discretion; for this reason we are constrained to reverse the order.
The order of the court below is reversed, and the record is remitted with the direction that the appeal from the magistrate's judgment be stricken off.