Opinion by
This appeal is from an order refusing the defendant’s motion for judgment on the pleadings which consisted of a complaint in assumpsit, an answer to the merits also setting forth an affirmative defense under new matter and a reply to the new matter. As the order is manifestly interlocutory, its appealability was raised at bar and the ensuing discussion has since been supplemented by further briefs of the parties. The
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defendant, contending that snch an order is appealable, relies upon the ruling in
Colonial Securities Co. v. Levy (No. 1),
In
O’Hara v. Parrish et al.,
Four years later, the ruling in O’Hara v. Parrish et al., was rejected by this court in the Colonial Securities (Wo. 1) case, supra, for the assigned but obviously irrelevant reason that a 1929 amendment of Sections 15 and 17 of the Practice Act of 1915 had intervened. That the cited amendment (Act of April 22, 1929, P. L. 627) did not have the slightest bearing on the rationale of the decision in O’Hara v. Parrish becomes evident upon a moment’s reflection. All that the amendment of Sections 15 and 17 did was to add the term “new matter” to the category of “set-off or counterclaim” for which a defendant could move for judgment for want of a reply or want of a sufficient reply under Section 17 of the Practice Act both as originally enacted and as amended. The opinion in the Colonial Securities case, then reasoning from the unchanged language of the Practice Act of 1915 that a motion by a defendant for judgment for want of a sufficient reply to new matter was the equivalent of a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, concluded that a refusal of judgment for want of a sufficient reply to new matter was by analogy appealable under the Act of 1874 which authorizes an appeal from a refusal of judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense.
The legislative intent thus imputed to the Act of 1874 in the
Colonial Securities
case was not only a patent anachronism but it flew directly in the face of the limited scope which this court had ascribed to the Act of 1874 in
Smith v. Scholl,
The instant appeal is, as already stated, the first taken to this court from an order refusing a defendant judgment for want of a sufficient reply to new matter since the decision in the
Colonial Securities
case, cit. supra. While the motion to quash the appeal in that case was refused (
There have been but two such appeals to the Superior Court since the decision in
Colonial Securities Co. v. Levy (No. 1),
supra. In one of those appeals
(Gehret v. Mitten Bank Securities Corporation,
Nor are appeals from such interlocutory orders likely to be determinative of the litigation to which they relate. Colonial Securities (No. 1), supra, declared that “. . . a refusal [of judgment for want of a sufficient reply to new matter] will not be reversed unless the pleadings demonstrate, or show beyond doubt, that the appellant was entitled to the judgment asked.” The extension of the right of appeal to such interlocutory orders in the Colonial Securities (Wo. 1) case was justified on the ground that “this statutory construction affords equal rights under like circumstances to ail parties . . . .” The error inherent in that statement resides in the fact that the “circumstances” are not alike as to “all parties”. Nor can they be. When a plaintiff moves for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense, 2 he seeks something which, if granted, will make an end of the litigation whereas, when a defendant moves for judgment for want of a sufficient reply to a set-off, counterclaim or new matter, the judgment, should his motion be granted, would not necessarily terminate the action. Indeed, the judgment which a defendant would obtain by such procedure might be entirely wiped out by a judgment later obtained by the plaintiff following a trial of the issues *119 under Ms complaint. Colonial Securities (No. 1) plainly so recognized. It was there suggested that “in all cases where such a judgment [for the defendant] is entered and issues not covered by the new matter must go to trial, the courts can, and, where appropriate should, protect the original plaintiff by staying proceedings on the judgment against him until final judgment is entered on the issues required to be tried.” Thus, the defendant would have the benefit of the lien of his summary judgment pending ultimate disposition of the litigation although, upon final adjudication of all issues, he might turn out to be the net debtor. A plaintiff enjoys no such privilege by virtue of a rule for judgment for want of a sufficient answer (i.e., affidavit of defense) to his complaint. When a judgment is entered on such a motion, it is dispositive of all issues in the case.
The Practice Act of 1915, as amended, has since been suspended by Rule 1452 of the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure which now supply (Rule 1017 et seq.) the rules governing pleadings in actions in assumpsit. In this connection it is interesting to note that the new Rules have not carried forward the language of Sections 15 and 17 of the Practice Act of 19.15, as amended, from which the analogy to a motion for judgment for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense was drawn in the Colonial Securities (No. 1) case, supra, and for which a right of appeal from the refusal of the defendant’s motion for judgment for want of a sufficient reply to new matter was accorded by adaptation of the Act of 1874, supra.
This court has uniformly declared, by what our present Chief Justice recently termed “a veritable multitude of decisions”, that an interlocutory order or decree is not appealable unless expressly made so by statute: see
Stadler, Admr., v. Mt. Oliver Borough,
373 Pa.
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316, 95 A. 2d ,776, at p. 318 ante and cases there cited. That the order with which we are here concerned is interlocutory is not open to dispute. It is equally clear, notwithstanding what was said in the
Colonial Securities (No. 1)
case, there is no statute which expressly makes appealable an order refusing a defendant’s motion for judgment for want of a sufficient reply to new matter. The instant appeal must therefore be quashed. The Act of 1874, supra, which is still extant, can have application only to an order refusing a plaintiff’s motion in an action of assumpsit for judgment on the pleadings consisting of the plaintiff’s complaint and the defendant’s answer, being the respective equivalents of a statement of claim and an affidavit of defense: cf.
Rohm & Haas Company v. Lessner,
Appeal quashed.
Notes
See
Brennan v. Huber,
A motion for judgment on the pleadings is now the terminology for the procedure: Rule 1034 Pa. R.C.P... The. statement of claim has become a complaint and the affidavit of defense, an answer: see Rule 1017 of the Pa. R.C.P. which prescribes the appropriate pleadings in an action of assumpsit.
