Opinion by
The plaintiff, Essex Packers Limited, sued Ethel Kiseeker and her husband, Percy K. Kiseeker, as co-partners, trading under the fictitious name, Darby Sea Food Company, for the unpaid balance due for merchandise sold by the plaintiff to the company. The defendants filed separate answers. Ethel Kiseeker denied that she was a co-partner with her husband in the company or that she had any interest whatsoever in the business. Percy K. Kiseeker likewise denied any business partnership with his wife and averred that he was the sole owner of the business being conducted under the trade name, Darby Sea Food Company. He further defended on the merits, alleging that the goods sued for were of inferior quality. At trial Percy K. Kiseeker withdrew his defense to the merits and permitted judgment to be entered against him individually for the full amount of the plaintiff’s claim with interest. The trial was then proceeded with to determine whether Ethel Kiseeker was also liable for the debt as a part owner of the business. The single issue was as to who was or were the owner or owners of the business and consequently liable for its ■ debts. .The term' “defendant”, as used hereinafter, will refer to Ethel Kiseeker only.
*353 Apart from proving the unpaid indebtedness, the plaintiff offered in evidence a record of the registration of the Darby Sea Pood Company filed in the office of the Prothonotary of Delaware County on April 4,1923, under the fictitious names Act of June 28,1917, P. L. 645, as amended. The registration showed, inter alia: “5. The name of the agent, if any, through which said business is to be carried on or conducted in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, with his address is: Percy K. Kisecker, 27 N. 10th Street, Darby, Pa. 6. The signatures of all parties interested follow: Ethel Kisecker.” The plaintiff supplemented this with the testimony of the Deputy Prothonotary of Delaware County who testified that his search of the records in the Prothonotary’s office had failed to reveal any withdrawal or cancellation by Ethel Kisecker of her registration as the owner of the Darby Sea Pood Company. The plaintiff also offered a record of the registration of the Darby Sea Pood Company filed in the office of the Prothonotary of Delaware County on October 14, 1847, under the fictitious names Act. This registration showed, inter alia: “5. The name of the agent, if any, through which said business is to be canned on or conducted in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, with his address is: -. 6. The signatures of all parties interested follow: P. K. Kisecker.”
A motion for a compulsory nonsuit having been refused, Ethel Kisecker testified, in defense, that she had not been connected with the business of the Darby Sea Pood Company for twelve or thirteen years and that it had been conducted solely by her husband, According to the court en banc, “there were various inconsistencies and contradictions in her testimony which indicated that at most there was a loose family relationship in the conduct of the business.” The defend *354 ant introduced in evidence a certificate showing that on October 14, 1947, she had filed in the office of the Secretary of the Commonwealth a signed statement, under oath, setting forth that on January 1, 1947, a dissolution of the business theretofore carried on under the trade name of Darby Sea Food Company had been effected and requesting that her registration be can-celled which had accordingly been done. The defendant also offered in evidence a certificate of the Secretary of the Commonwealth that P. K. Kisecker had registered on October 14, 1947, to do business under the name of Darby Sea Food Company and a like certificate of the Prothonotary of Delaware County that P. K. Kisecker had registered in that County on October 14, 1947, to do business under the same fictitious name.
The learned trial judge submitted the case to the jury under instructions that the uneancelled registration of Mrs. Kisecker as the owner of the business trading under the name of Darby Sea Food Company, on file in the Prothonotary’s office of Delaware County, raised a rebuttable presumption that she continued to own the business at the time here involved and that, if the presumption was not overcome in the minds of the jury by the defendant’s testimony, it was sufficient to justify the jury in finding the defendant liable. The jury returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff and against Mrs. Kisecker who moved for a new trial and for judgment n.o.v. The court en banc granted the motion for a new trial but refused the motion for judgment n,o.v. Both the defendant and the plaintiff appealed the new trial order. The defendant also assigns for error the refusal of her motion for judgment n.o.v.
The refusal of judgment n.o.v. for the defendant must be affirmed. The motion did not comply with the requirements of the Act of April 22, 1905, P. L. *355 286, as amended (12 PS §681). The point was not argued by counsel, either orally or by brief, although it is suggested in the opinion for the court en banc. In any event, it cannot be ignored as we shall hereinafter see. Section 1 of the Act of 1905 provides that “Whenever, upon the trial of any issue, a point requesting binding instructions has been reserved or declined, the party presenting the point may within the time prescribed for moving for a new trial, or within such other or future time as the court shall allow, move the court to have all the evidence taken upon the trial duly certified and filed so as to become part of the record, and for judgment non obstante veredicto upon the whole record; whereupon it shall be the duty of the court, if it does not grant a new trial, to so certify the evidence, and to enter such judgment as should have been entered upon that evidence . . . .” The record in the instant case discloses that the jury’s verdict Avas rendered on January 15th and that on January 18th the defendant filed her motion for judgment n.o.v. The time prescribed under local rule of court for moving for a new trial is “within four days after verdict”. 1 The defendant had not, however, presented to the trial judge a written request for binding instructions. Such a request is required to be presented before the close of the argument to the jury: see Act of March 24, 1877, P. L. 38, Section 1, 12 PS §678. The docket entries show that on January 31st, sixteen days after the jury’s verdict, counsel for the respective parties submitted to the trial judge a stipulation that the defendant should be permitted to file a point for binding instructions nunc pro tunc. Presumably, the stipu *356 lation was approved as the defendant thereupon filed the supplemental motion for judgment n.o.v. here involved.
In
Reichner v. Reichner,
*357
It is not open to question that the requirements of the Act of 1905, supra, must be scrupulously complied with in order to give the court jurisdiction to enter a judgment n.o.v.: cf.
West v. Manatawny Mut. F. & S. Ins. Co.,
Nor can the want of a timely presentation of a point for binding instructions be later supplied by a
nunc pro tunc
filing. The case of
Leonard Company v. Scranton Coca-Cola Bottling Company,
It follows that the defendant’s motion for judgment n.o.v. was technically defective and, for that reason alone, is not sustainable. We therefore do not have for decision the substantive questions of law inherent in the record relative to the seemingly conflicting separate registrations of the same fictitious trade name in the respective name of each of two persons as the sole owner of the business.
The defendant is in no position to complain of the granting of the new trial. The order was entered on her own motion. It is manifest that the plaintiff also is incapable of showing that the court below was guilty of a palpable abuse of discretion in granting the new trial. See
Bellettiere v. Philadelphia,
Order affirmed.
Notes
Rule 186 of the Rules of the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County adopted-January 19, 1950, at No. 701, December Term 1949, of said court.
