92 Pa. Super. 363 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1927
Argued October 26, 1927. Section 12 of the Act of April 19, 1901, P.L. 88, relating to replevin and regulating the practice where the writ of replevin is issued, provides: "The Courts of Common Pleas may make general rules governing the proceedings under this act, not inconsistent herewith." Under this authority the Courts of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County have adopted Rule 68, as follows: "In all actions of replevin, in which the defendant does not claim ownership of the property replevied but claims a lien upon the property or a right therein under distraint for rent, the defendant shall assert such claim in his affidavit of defense, in like *365 manner and form as is required for counterclaims in actions of assumpsit under the Practice Act; and thereafter the same practice and procedure shall be had as in such actions, and judgment may be entered against the plaintiff for want of a reply or for an insufficient reply, as the case may require."
The plaintiff disputes the validity of this rule and appeals from a judgment entered under it for want of a sufficient reply to the claim for rent set up in the affidavit of defense.
The practice prescribed in the Replevin Act of 1901 is not well adapted to actions in replevin growing out of distraints for rent, and for some time after its passage there was some doubt as to whether the act applied to such cases. We held in Drumgoole v. Lyle,
The validity of the rule being upheld, we are of opinion that the learned court below committed no error in entering judgment against the plaintiff for want of a sufficient reply. Under the special provisions of the lease here involved, when the landlord gave notice of his intention to raise the rent for the *367
ensuing year, the continuance in possession of the premises by the lessee amounted to an implied agreement to pay the increased rental: Mitcheson v. Barth,
We are of opinion, however, that the order of the court did not justify the assessment of damages for defendant in excess of $1,500, the amount for which he distrained, and made claim in his affidavit of defense, and for which the court below entered judgment. It is accordingly reduced to fifteen hundred dollars, as of date of January 25, 1927, and as so modified is affirmed.