Opinion by
Appellant contends that the lower court abused its discretion in dismissing its petition to open confessed judgment.
On March 17, 1966, the appellant-lessee entered into a written lease to rent the business property located at 715 Lancaster Avenue, Bryn Mawr, Montgomery County, from the appellee-lessor. Pursuant to the terms of the lease, the monthly rental of $551.75 was due on the fifteenth day of each month. The lease further provided that the lessee would not be in default until and unless the lessor gave the lessee written notice of default and the lessee failed to remedy the default within fifteen days after receipt of such notice. If the default was not remedied within the fifteen day period, the lease empowered the lessor to confess judgment for the balance of the rent due for the unexpired term of the lease.
*245 On February 22, 1974, the appellant received written notice that the rent due February 15, 1974, had not been paid. Believing the rent check to have crossed in the mail with the notice of default as had occurred in the previous month, the appellant took no action. On March 28, 1974, the appellee confessed judgment for $46,200.00, the balance of the rent due for the term of the lease, plus attorney’s fees. On April 18, 1974, appellant filed its petition to open judgment, which was dismissed on February 24, 1975. This appeal followed.
A petition to open a judgment by confession is an appeal to the discretion of the lower court.
Wolgin v. Mickman,
*246
Appellant contends that it has raised the meritorious defense of payment because a rent check was made out to the order of the appellee on February 5, 1974, and to the knowledge of the appellant, his secretary mailed the rent check, along with rent checks for twenty-six other markets, in accordance, with the appellant’s customary office procedure. Under Pennsylvania law, when a letter is mailed, there is a presumption of receipt.
Berkowitz v. Mayflower Securities, Inc.,
Evidence of a business custom, if regularly conducted and uniform, is often received in evidence. “Thus it is usually held that when a letter has been written and signed in the usual course of business and placed in the regular place of mailing, evidence of the custom of the establishment as to the mailing of such letters is receivable as evidence that it was duly mailed.” McCormick, Evidence, §195 at 464 (2d ed. 1972); See also Fed. R. Evid. 406 (a). While there is some disagreement as to whether such evidence alone is sufficient to show that the letter was mailed, “the more reasonable view is that the evidence is sufficient.”
2
McCormick, supra at 465, n. 18. See
Simpson v. Jefferson Standard Life Insur. Co.,
The order of the lower court dismissing the petition to open is reversed.
Notes
. There is no contention that the appellant failed to act promptly by petitioning to open the judgment within three weeks of learning that the judgment had been confessed.
. Professor McCormick notes that the testimony of the employee who does the mailing would only be cumulative since, considering the modern volume of corporate correspondence, he could not be expected to remember posting a particular letter or emptying the mail tray on a particular day and probably could only reiterate the executive’s description of the office practice. McCormick, Evidence, §162 at 343, n. 13 (1954).
