Opinion by
Aрpellees commenced an action in equity seeking to enjoin appellant from trespassing upon and interfer *545 ing with, appellees’ use of their land. The chancellor made an adjudication and entered a decree nisi granting the relief prayed for in the complaint. This appeal followed the dismissal of appellant’s exceptions and the entry of a final decree in accordance with the decree nisi. At oral argument, this court requested counsel to file supplemental briefs on the issue of the рropriety of proceeding in equity.
We agree with the appellant that “the kernel of the controversy is the legal title to land”, and thus equity is an improper form of action. Thе proper proceeding to try title to land is an action of ejectment at law, rather than an injunctive proceeding in equity. Although the form of plaintiffs-appellees’ complaint indicates that the instant case is a suit to enjoin a continuing trespass, the record reveals that such is not the situation.
Attached to both the complaint and the answеr, as exhibits, are deeds into the respective parties. Defendant’s answer, paragraph 3, puts in issue the question of title to the tract over which the alleged trespass oсcurred. Further, defendant in her answer requests the court to enjoin the plaintiffs from trespassing on the same tract of land. Moreover, the chancellor himself treated the action as one to try title, tracing in his findings the chain of title of each of the parties, and holding in his conclusions of law (2) that the plaintiffs are the owners of the tracts of land at issue.
Therе is no doubt in our mind that this is an action to try title to land, which should properly be heard at law.
However, we hold that once the chancellor has adjudicated the case on thе merits, any objection to the propriety of a case being heard in equity comes too late. Pa. R. C. P. 1509(c) provides: “The objection of the existence of a full, comрlete and adequate non-
*546
statutory remedy at law shall be raised by preliminary objection. If the objection is sustained, the court shall certify the action to the law side of the Cоurt.
If not so pleaded, the objection is waived.”
(Emphasis ours). The procedure outlined in the Rule had been followed since long before the adoption of the Rule. In
Penna. Railroad Co. v. Bogert,
The
Bogert
case recognized that there is a difference between jurisdiction (subject matter) and what it termed “jurisdiction of equity”. It is unfortunate that
Bogert
and many other cases have used the term “jurisdiction” when referring to the propriety of a case being heard by a court of equity. “The test of jurisdiction is the сompetency of the court to determine controversies of the general class involved, and whether the court had power to enter upon the inquiry, not whether it might ultimately dеcide that it could not give relief in the particular case.” E.g.,
Drummond v. Drummond,
We do not mean to imply that, absent a preliminary objection, a court sitting in equity must hear the case where there exists an adequate, non-statutory remedy at law. On the contrary, we agree with the procedure now followed by trial courts as it is outlined in Goodrich-Amram, supra, at page 70: “The language of [1509(c)] provides for an absolute waiver of the objection if it is not pleaded. This could mean that the court in equity would be authorized, by default, to decide cases where only legal rights are invоlved. The court will, however, usually decline to [hear the case in equity] in such cases, despite the waiver. The court will, sua sponte, rule that the issue should properly be disposed of by an action at law, e.g., an action of ejectment, and will transfer the case to the law side of the court for disposition.”
Nor do we mean to imply that the defendant in еvery case by failure to make a preliminary objection waives his right to assert the existence of an adequate remedy at law. We can imagine cases where a wеll-pleaded complaint indicates the propriety of proceeding in equity; yet the evidence submitted by the plaintiff discloses only a legal claim. Under these circumstanсes, it would be unreasonable to expect the defendant to object by preliminary objection that an adequate remedy at law exists. Cf.
Cella v.
Davidson,
Failure to object at that stage, and submission of his own case would indeed constitute a waiver of the objection. And since the defect is non-jurisdictional, аs we have stated, the reviewing court is not required under Rule 1032(2) to dismiss the action. Such a result is consonant with reason and justice, for no valid purpose is served in allowing the defendant a second chance and further burdening our courts.
We are not unaware that this Court in the past has not always been consistent in its treatment of this problem of an adequate remedy at law. We have not only spoken the language of jurisdiction, but we have treated the matter as one of jurisdiction upon occasion. For instance,
Jones v. Amsel,
On the merits, the decree of the court below must be affirmed. Appellants make several contentions, none of which impress us. They claim first that the chancellor has rewritten the plaintiffs’ deed on the basis of a “forced” survey. In essence, this is a contention that the decree was not supported by the evidence. It is a commonplace that the findings of the chancellor, affirmed by a court en banc, have the weight of a jury verdict and will not be disturbed on appeal if there is evidence to support them. Without detailing the extremely complex exhibits introduced by the parties, suffice it to say that there was evidence from which the chancellor could find that appellees were the owners of the disputed tract, described sufficiently in the adjudication in finding 2.
Nor did the court below commit any error of law. Appellant contends that the court ignored the rule that he who claims under a prior deed from a common grantor must prevail. However, the evidence is that the deeds out frоm the common grantor to appellees’ and appellant’s predecessors in title were on the same day, and the record does not reveal which was prior. Nor did the court below ignore the rule that monuments must prevail over courses and distances. Indeed, the very basis of the holding below was that any other result would ignore the position of Stony Creek Road.
Decree affirmed, costs on appellant.
