Potts v. Harmer

19 Pa. Super. 252 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1902

Opinion by

Rice, P. J.,

Interrogatories and rule to answer were served on the garnishee on November 29, 1899, and under the standing rule of the court below the plaintiff was entitled to judgment if answers were not filed within fifteen days thereafter. Judgment was entered by default on January 8,1900. Apparently the garnishee was in default and the judgment regular. But the garnishee showed that pursuant to negotiations between the attorneys a draft of the answers proposed to be filed by the garnishee was submitted to the plaintiff’s attorney on or about December 27, and on December 28 he returned them to the garnishee’s attorney with the following letter: “ I return herewith the rough copy of answers to interrogatories, which you left with me this morning, and I want to call your attention to the fact that the title of the case is not correct, .... I would also request you to set out in detail the dates when the various orders amounting to $1,378.90 were given by Mr. ‘ Harmer, when they were received by you, and the date of *254actual acceptance,, and also state specifically by whom they were each accepted. Trusting that the above will meet with your approval, and that you wnl see that, your answers are filed this week. I remain,” etc. Even if the letter of the plaintiff’s attorney of December 27 (printed in the appellee’s paper-hook)!,, be. left out of consideration, the letter above quoted makes if, reasonably certain that strict compliance with the; rule requiring answers, to he filed within fifteen days after service of the interrogatories had been waived. It, is, too plain u for- argument, that after that letter was delivered the- plaintiff could not immediately fall back on the original rule, to answer, and, without giving the garnishee an opportunity to comply with his request, enter judgment, by default., The rule, requiring all agreements of counsel touching the, business, of the court to be, in writing has no application-.. The, waiver of the default and of the right to take judgment forthwith is sufficiently evidenced by the. writing, above quoted. True the, letter expressed the hope that the garnishee would comply with the request to file such answers as the plaintiff desired within the, week,, hut this cannot reasonably be construed as an unequivocal notice to the garnishee that judgment would be taken against, her if she was unable to do so. If, the letter had not contained the-request for more detailed information, or had contained an unequivocal demand that, the answers he filed that- week, the garnishee might, and doubtless would have, filed the, answers already prepared or applied to the court for an extension of time. In the circumstances, she was justified in. inferring, from the letter as a. whole that she would be allowed a, reasonable time within which to, obtain the information, which the plaintiff requested to, he set. forth in the answers* or, if the plaintiff preferred not to wait, that he, would notify her. The answers were filed, on January 11, 190,0,, and in view of the, nature of the detailed information which the plaintiff called for* we cannot say that the court erred in holding that they were filed within a reasonable time-, and that, the, default, was excused. To have held otherwise would have worked the manifest, injustice, of compelling the garnishee, t,o- pay more than $1,00,0 dollars, when* according to her answers, the balance due from her to the defendant was, at the most, less than $400., The. courts are more liberal* and for good reasons, in relieving garnishees • *255from defaults than the original parties. See 10 P.. & L. Dig, of Dec. 159.90. The court was fully justified in exercising that power in the present case.

In answer to the suggestion that the rule, should not have been to strike, off or set, aside, but to, open,, the- counsel for the appellee say that the, rule framed by them and presented to the court below “ was in effect and substantially a rule to open the judgment, its purpose being to have the answer of the garnishee admitted and the issue brought to trial.” To open a judgment, however, is not to set it aside, and the opening of it deprives it of no, quality but maturity for execution: Gallup v. Reynolds, 8 Watts, 424. But in view of' the above concession of counsel, it is unnecessary to prolong discussion upon this point. The order is amendable here so, as, to conform, to what counsel claim It to be in effect. See King v. Brooks, 72 Pa. 868.

• The order is amended so as to read, judgment, opened, instead of judgment set aside, and as thus amended is affirmed.

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