Opinion by
This is an appeal by plaintiffs from an order and decree of the court below entering judgment of non pros in an action of assumpsit.
Defendant obtained from tbe court 4 months’ extension of time in which-to file an affidavit of defense. The case was ordered on the trial list for September, 1938 and again for November, 1938; when then called for trial, and after some testimony had been taken, counsel for defendant contended that the statement of claim should be amended to add two additional persons as plaintiffs to the one originally named, and he moved for the withdrawal of a juror and continuance of the case. The court granted the motion and in March, 1939 an amended statement of claim was filed. The case was listed for trial in April, 1940, but was again continued on defendant’s application on. the ground that one O’Hare, alleged to be a material witness for defendant, was ill in a- hospital, and defendant’s counsel admits that he did not at any time thereafter inform plaintiffs’ counsel that O’Hare had become available as a witness. In December, 1941 the United States entered the world war and, because of the belief of plaintiffs’ counsel that they could not proceed without the testimony of one Sproul, who was in the military service until 1946, no further attempt was made to bring the case to trial until January, 1948, when plaintiffs’ counsel conferred with the court and with counsel for defendant in regard to placing the case once, more on the trial list. A conference was scheduled for February, 1948, but counsel for defendant then informed, plaintiffs’ counsel that they intended to file a petition for non pros. In June, 1948 plaintiffs’ counsel requested de
It has been 'repeatedly declared that the question of "granting a non pros on ¿¿count of a plaintiff’s laches is addressed to the discretion of the trial court, with which discretion, unless abused, an appellate court will not interfere:
Potter Title & Trust Co., Administrator, v. Frank,
The principles governing the entry of a judgment of non pros for failure on the part of the plaintiff diligently to prosecute his case are well established. There is no fixed rule as to the length of delay that will bar him from proceeding:
Pennsylvania R. R. Co. v. Pittsburgh,
It might be sufficient to rest the decision in the present case upon the last stated principle, namely, that delay will not be held against a plaintiff if no damage results therefrom to the defendant. It is true that defendant here claims that it has been harmed by reason of the fact that four witnesses whom it would have produced at the trial have died since the institution of the suit; one of these was O’Hare, because of whose illness defendant secured a continuance in 1940 and who died in 1942; the others were McGregor, one Richards and one Myers. Richards died in 1941, Mc-Gregor in 1942, and Myers in 1947. It is clear, however, that any delays that occurred in the progress of the
There is considerable merit in plaintiffs’ claim that the war was responsible for much of their delay. For several years during its course Sproul, who had been the trustee in the reorganization proceedings and who, it is alleged, had participated in the transactions between plaintiffs and defendant, was in Africa or other remote places abroad. Defendant argues that plaintiffs could have taken Sproul’s depositions, but that was no doubt problematical. Plaintiffs point out that because of war conditions there were so few cases tried in Indiana County during the war period that civil jury trials were conducted there in only four weeks of the entire five years from 1942 to 1947, and undoubtedly during that period great numbers of cases were allowed to lie fallow in all the counties of the Commonwealth. It also appears that much of the delay in the present instance was due, not to plaintiffs themselves, but to the procrastination of their counsel, — a fault not wholly uncommon, perhaps, in the legal profession. The theory on which a non pros is entered is
On the whole, a reading of the record in this case gives one the impression that neither side was consistently concerned with bringing the proceedings to a conclusion. Apparently defendant itself did not call up its petition for a hearing until nearly 9 months after plaintiffs had filed their answer thereto, to which it may be added that the court itself did not hand down its decision thereon until more than 6 months after the hearing. While the delays of the law have long been the subject of just criticism, and while the course of the present proceedings would scarcely serve as a model of expedition, it is our opinion that, under all the circumstances revealed in the record, judgment of non pros should not — even within the broad limits of the discretionary power of the court below — have been entered.
Order and decree reversed with a procedendo.
