437 Pa. 114 | Pa. | 1970
Opinion by
In September of 1968 the School District of Philadelphia and Local 3, Philadelphia Federation of Teachers, AFL-CIO, entered into a memorandum agreement which provided that their collective bargaining agreement would prohibit the involuntary transfer of any
The issues now before us center on the effect of the adjudication of May 6. The Union believes that it Avas a final adjudication and argues that the trial court was without authority to enter a final order at that time.
Reviewing the record Ave acknowledge that the opinion of the trial court is not as clear as it might have been. However, Ave are unwilling to say that the mere fact that the trial judge expressed opinions as to the merits of the underlying controversy indicates that he intended his order and opinion to be a final adjudication, especially in vieAV of the fact that responsive pleadings had not yet been filed. Since Ave find that the opinion and order of May 6 disposed only of the preliminary objections, it is clear that the appellant is entitled to plead further and to have a hearing on
Since we have found that the orders of May 6 acted only as a dismissal of the preliminary objections, we quash the appeals as interlocutory.
AVe note with some regret that appellant’s counsel made no attempt to have the trial court clarify the intended effect of its OF&er and opinion, but appealed immediately.
An appeal from the denial of preliminary objections is interlocutory except insofar as the dismissal is based on a jurisdictional rationale. See, e.g., Philadelphia v. William Penn Business Institute, 423 Pa. 490, 223 A. 2d 850 (1966), and cases cited therein.