Opinion by
The appellant filed its petition in the court below praying for an order to vacate and set aside a certain judgment of record in that court, as well as an order awarding a new trial of the issue, the trial of which resulted in the judgment referred to. A formal answer was filed and
From the record the following facts appear: Joseph Ferrara and May Ferrara brought an action of trespass in the court below to recover damages for personal injuries sustained by the said May Ferrara by reason of the negligent operation of one of defendant’s trains. It was averred in the statement of claim that plaintiffs were duly married and, therefore, joined in one action in accordance with the provisions of our statute upon the subject. The trial resulted in separate verdicts in small sums for each of the parties and separate judgments in their favor followed. Upon appeal to this court Ferrara v. Railroad, 71 Pa. Superior Ct. 290, the judgments were affirmed.
On the trial of the case the defendant offered some-proof, challenging the averment in the statement that plaintiffs were married. The trial judge submitted that question in a proper charge and the jury disposed of it by their verdicts for the plaintiffs. Later on an information was made against both of the parties plaintiff in the action referred to charging them with having committed perjury in testifying that the marriage relation existed between them. Indictments were found and tried and both of the defendants therein were convicted. Upon consideration of a motion for a new trial on the part of Joseph Ferrara, the present appellee, the court below was not satisfied the evidence produced warranted the conclusion he had wilfully sworn falsely and the verdict of guilty as to him was set aside, and a new trial was granted. As a result of that trial he was acquitted and so the record stands.
These matters affected not the right of the plaintiff May Ferrara to recover, because she sued on account of the injuries suffered by herself and her right to recover in no way rested upon the existence of the marriage state.
The question we now have before us is whether the learned court below was guilty of such a manifest abuse of discretion in refusing to vacate the judgment in favor of Joseph Ferrara as to demand a reversal of the order by the appellate court.
It is too late to doubt the power of a court to purge its records of judgments or decrees resting on fraud or perjury. The exercise of such power is but the exercise of the right of self-defense and is abundantly sustained both by reason and authority. It would naturally be expected that the courts themselves would be jealous of the purity of their own judgments and vigilant in the exercise of every power necessary to keep them untainted. Where they are not moved to act, it must be a clear case in which the exercise of the wide discretion with which they are clothed will be reviewed by an appellate court. The attitude of the appellate courts in such cases is Well stated by Mr. Justice Dean in Gazzam v. Reading, 202 Pa. 236: “We, therefore, start with the assumption, that the trial judge who heard fully the whole case, as well as the motion for a new trial, sitting, as appellant argues, as a chancellor, in equity, in the exercise of discretion, considered the petition insufficient to warrant him in setting aside, not only his own judgment entered on the verdict of a jury, but á judgment of this court. While his decree is not conclusive upon us, yet it certainly has persuasiveness.”
Now, it is established that May Ferrara suffered personal injuries by the negligent operation of the train of the present appellant company. The amount of money expended by her or for her in the payment of doctors’ bills, hospital bills and the like, the defendant was legally liable to pay as part of the compensation for the injury she had suffered. At the time of her injury she was living with the present appellee openly as his wife. She
The appeal is dismissed at the cost of the appellant and the order or decree of the court below is affirmed.