The principal issue in this appeal is whether improper venue can be waived by one defendant in such a manner as to preclude a second defendant from interposing a successful objection to such venue. The trial court rejected such an argument, sustained preliminary objections to venue by one defendant, and transferred the action to the county in which the cause of action had arisen. We affirm.
Arneytown Trucking and Houghton filed preliminary objections challenging venue in Philadelphia. They also requested a transfer of venue to Lancaster County on grounds that it would be more convenient to parties and witnesses if the case were tried in Lancaster County. Cannel Trucking and Shifflett, however, filed an answer containing new matter; they did not file preliminary objections challenging venue.
Depositions thereafter were taken and disclosed that Arneytown Trucking did not maintain an office or telephone in Philadelphia, did not have employees in Philаdelphia, did not advertise or have customers in Philadelphia, and did not contract with businesses in Philadelphia. Its trucks, however, passed through Philadelphia and sporadically made pickups in Philadelphia. Only one percent оf its truck mileage involved travel through Philadelphia. Other depositions disclosed that Cannel Trucking also did not maintain offices and did not have employees, customers, accounts, or clients in Philadelphia. Based on the foregoing facts, the trial court sustained the preliminary objections filed by Arneytown Trucking and Houghton and transferred the matter to Lancaster County. Plaintiffs appealed.
(1) the county where its registered office or principal place of business is located;
(2) a county where it regularly conducts business;
(3) the county where the cause of action arose; or
(4) a county where a transaction or occurrence took place out of which the cause of action arose.
With respect to the bringing of an action against an individual, Pa.R.C.P. 1006(a) provides that such an action may be brought “in and only in a county in which he may be served or in which the cause of action arose or where a transaction or occurrence took place out of which the cause of action arose or in any other county authorized by law.” In the instant case, our attention must also be focused on Pa.R. C.P. 1006(c), which provides as follows:
(c) An action to enforce a joint or joint and several liability against two or more defendants, except actions in which the Commonwealth is a party defendant, may be brought against all defendants in any county in which the venue may be laid against any one of the defendants under the general rules of Subdivisions (a) or (b).
It is apparent from the foregoing that neither Houghton nor Shifflett could properly have been sued in Philadelphia. Hоughton was a resident of New Jersey, and Shifflett was a resident of Somerset County, Pennsylvania. Both of these defendants, however, could properly have been sued in Lancaster County, where the accident occurred.
The trial court found also that neither Arneytown Trucking nor Cannel Trucking regularly conducted business in Philadelphia. The evidence supports this finding. Therefore, the trial court could properly conclude, as it did, that venue could not properly be laid against either corporate defendant in Philadelphia. Because the cause of action arose in Lancaster County, however, both trucking defendants could have been sued in Lancaster County.
It is correct, as appellants argue, that a defendant’s right to object to venue is a personal privilege and may be waived so long as the court has jurisdiction to hear the matter. See: 39 P.L.E. Venue § 21. See also: Wolf v. Weymers,
Whether such a waivеr would bind other defendants and, by virtue of Pa.R.C.P. 1006(c), preclude other defendants from raising questions of improper venue has not previously been addressed by the appellate courts of this Commonwealth. The Court of Common Pleas оf Bucks County, however, has rejected an argument similar to that advanced by appellants. In Lane v. Continental Traveller, Inc., 69 Pa.D. & C.2d 523 (Bucks Co. 1975), the plaintiffs had commenced an action to recover for personal injuries against two defendants. Although venue was imprоper in Bucks County as to both defendants, neither defendant objected and thereby waived any challenge to venue. When one of the defendants joined additional defendants, however, one of the additional defendants objected and filed
The courts of other jurisdictions have achieved similar results. Thus, in Hines v. Dresser Industries, Inc.,
waiver of objection to an improper venue by one defendant will not preclude an objection to improper venue by a codefendant. The waiver of оbjection to improper venue by Dresser Industries did not serve to transform the improperly laid venue to a properly laid venue. Waiver of venue is personal to a defendant, and he may assert or waive this personal рrivilege.
Id. at 11,
The fact that one of several defendants submits to the jurisdiction of the court does not change the venue of thecause of action. It is merely a waiver of that defendant’s personal right to demand a trial of the case in the county where the venue is fixed by statute____ When the case was filed in Creek County, each defendant had a right to object, that right being personal to the respective defendаnts. When Beale appeared generally without first objecting to jurisdiction of the court because of venue, he waived his right but that could have no effect on the co-defendant, the City of Pawnee. That entry of appearance did not change the venue as fixed by statute. The municipality had the right to object which it did in proper manner at all stages possible. Its motion should have been sustained.
Id. at 207. See also: O’Brien v. Weber,
Appellants’ reliance upon this Court’s decision in Ro-Med Construction Co., Inc. v. Clyde M. Bartley Co., Inc.,
We conclude, therefore, that it would have been error for the triаl court to force Arneytown Trucking and Houghton to litigate this action in Philadelphia merely because Cannel Trucking and Shifflett, who were adverse parties, failed to object to the improper venue. That waiver did not have thе effect of establishing proper venue for all remaining defendants. To hold otherwise would be to permit one defendant to unilaterally deprive an adverse party of a personal right to object to an improper forum.
The trial court properly transferred venue to Lancaster County where the accident occurred and the cause of action arose.
Order affirmed.
Notes
. Because Shifflett could have been served in Somerset County, venue in this action could also have been laid in that county.
