Opinion by
The plaintiff appeals from an order granting a new trial. The decision turns on a point of procedure and not on whether there was abuse of discretion in granting the new trial, the point usually presented in appeals from, such orders. The plaintiff transportation company sued to recover for damage to its trolley car resulting from collision with defendants’ concrete-mixer ■ truck. The jury found for plaintiff. Defendants’ motions for judgment n. o. v. and for a new trial were overruled by the court in banc and judgment on the verdict was entered January 5, 1948, during the December term of the court below. Thereafter on March 25, 1948, during March term, the December term order, refusing a new trial and directing judgment on the verdict, was superseded by an order granting a new trial, the order chai *328 lenged by the present appeal. The question is whether the trial court had sufficient control of the judgment during March term to enable the court then to grant a new trial.
Rule 209 of the common pleas of Delaware County provides, “There shall be four terms of court to be known as the March, June, September and December terms, commencing respectively on the first Monday of March, June and December and the third Monday of September, and each continuing until the beginning of the following term.”
On February 13, 1948, in December term, after their new trial motion had been dismissed and judgment had been entered on the verdict for plaintiff, defendants petitioned the court for “a rule to show cause why the court should not hear re-argument of the motions of the defendants for judgment n. o. v. and a new trial.” On that petition the court granted a rule to show cause, returnable March 1, 1948. No stay of proceedings was granted nor did the court set aside its order of January 5 refusing the new trial motion. The judgment remained undisturbed. On February 28, the plaintiff answered the rule. Thereafter the court made an order that “the defendants above named, having presented a petition to show cause why the court should not hear reargument of the defendants’ motions for judgment n. o. v. and for a new trial, and the court having allowed a rule thereon returnable March 1, 1948, and the matter having come on for argument before the court en banc, it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the said rule be and the same is hereby made absolute, and the court will hear reargument of the said motions on Tuesday, March 9, 1948, at 10:00 o’clock A. M.” In other words, the court in the March term, decided to hear reargument on March 9th. The effect of the rehearing was to reinstate the motion for a new trial. Meanwhile, in the absence of a stay of proceedings, the order refusing a new trial and the *329 judgment entered January 5, pursuant thereto, remained in effect.
According to the common pleas rule 209, the March term of the court began on Monday, March 1,1948. The situation presented by the record on March 2nd was
(1) that during December term judgment had been entered and, with the ending of the term, had passed out of the control of the court at the end of that term; and
(2) that during the next, or March, term, the court ordered rehearing of the motion finally disposed of in the preceding term. On March 2nd, when the court allowed the reargument of the new trial motion the court had lost control of the judgment entered during the preceding term,
Fisher v. Railway Co.,
The case relied -on to support the order,
Kingsdorf v. Frank Gamburg, Inc.,
supra, when carefully examined, supports the appellant. On page'87, the opinion of the Superior Court states, “On January 23, 1940, within the term of the entry of the judgment, the defendant obtained a rule to show cause why a reargument of the rule for a new trial should not be granted, on the ground of after-discovered evidence, including. . . . Following an answer filed by the plaintiff to this rule, and the taking of depositions in support of it, and oral argument on the rule, the -court, on March 30,1940, made the rule absolute and granted a new trial. The motion having been made within the term, no objection can be made that it was: not finally disposed of until a subsequent term’: Lance v. Bonnell,
We have examined the record in that case, and we find that on defendant’s petition “a rule is granted to show cause why a reargument should not be granted . . . and why a new trial should not he granted . . . because of after discovered evidence . . .” (italics supplied). It will be observed that the order involved more than mere leave to reargue. The rule ordered two things: first, to show cause why the reargument of the first motion for a new trial should not be had; and, second, something not involved in the first motion for a new trial and, in fact originating thereafter, to show cause why a new trial should not ■ he granted on the ground of after-discovered evidence. The court, in the second quotation made above from the opinion uses the words “the motion for a reargument' of this rule.” While that phraseology identified the rule, it did not mention the rule to show cause why a new trial should not be granted for after-discovered evidence, a-reason not considered in the first motion; it was on this second ground that the trial court had granted the new trial. The order to show cause why there should not be reargument did not, of itself, continue the control of the court into the next term but-the order to show cause why there should not be a new trial for after-discovered evidence, did continue the power of the court because the order was made during the term in which the judgment was entered.
*332
In the case at bar, unlike tbe procedure in tbe
Kingsdorf
case, the court granted a rule to show cause wby the court should not bear reargument, not a rule to show cause wby a new trial should not be granted. Tbe court may at any time during tbe term grant a new trial, or at a subsequent term, if the court has properly retained control over tbe judgment. But unless such control has been reserved, tbe law prohibits action after tbe term, unless, as the cases cited above show, there is extrinsic fraud, clerical error, or tbe like. A defeated party cannot set aside this limitation on tbe court’s power by applying for and obtaining a rule to show cause why a rehearing should not be bad, returnable at some future term, without also obtaining a'stay of proceedings. The question has most frequently been presented in applications for rehearing followed by appeal taken after tbe expiration of the statutory time fixed for appeals. A motion for reargument does not extend tbe time for appeal:
Real Estate & Mortgage Co. v. Duquesne Light Co.,
Tbe order granting tbe new trial is reversed and tbe record is remitted with instructions to reinstate tbe judgment for tbe plaintiff.
