68 Pa. Super. 514 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1917
Opinion by
' Plaintiff sued'appellant and two others on a lost judgment note. February 21, 1917, judgment was entered for want of an answer.' April 24, a fi'. fa',, issued against appellant,' who filed a petition to have the judg
Was appellant entitled to a jury trial?
Section 12, of the Act of July 12, 1913, P. L. 711, provides, inter alia: “Every statement of claim, before it shall be received by the prothonotary, shall contain on the back thereof, an endorsement, signed by plaintiff or his counsel, as MIoavs : ‘Jury trial demanded/ or ‘It is agreed that this case be tried by a judge without a jury/’ If plaintiff demands a jury trial he shall, at the time of filing his statement, pay to the prothonotary a jury fee of four dollars. Every ansAver, where plaintiff has not demanded a jury trial, shall contain, on the back thereof, a similar endorsement; and if defendant demands a. jury trial, he shall, at the time of filing his answer, pay to the prothonotary a jury fee of four dollars....... Except as modified by this act, or its own rules duly adopted by a majority of the judges, the practice and procedure in the municipal court shall be the same as the practice and procedure in the Courts of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County.”
No new practice is prescribed by the act for the hearing of questions of fact upon the opening of a judgment,
The act provides “if both parties, as aforesaid, have filed agreements that the case may be tried by a judge without a jury, it shall be so tried, under such rules of procedure as the court shall prescribe.” This language contemplates an express waiver, and unless a litigant has affirmatively assented in the manner prescribed by the act, he has the right, before trial, to demand that his case be tried by a jury.
The judgment is reversed and the record remitted with a procedendo.