Opinion by
This appeal brings up questions under the new Rules of Civil Procedure. Appellant complains that his petition to join an additional defendant was denied.
Plaintiff, Martha A. Rau, while riding in her automobile, driven by Thomas D. McBride, was injured by collision with another car operated by defendant at the intersection of Eleventh and Ruscomb Streets, Philadelphia. Plaintiff averred facts from which defendant’s negligence might be found by a jury and sought recovery for personal injuries and damage to her car. Defendant, Manko, by his answer, denied the negligent operation alleged. Pursuant to Rule 2252,
The additional defendant answered by admitting that he drove plaintiff’s car and denying the averments of fact from which his negligence conld be found. Later, he moved “that the entire proceedings against him should be dismissed” for the following reasons:
“1. The plaintiff has not filed a Supplementary Statement of Claim, and under Buie 2258 of the Pennsylvania Buies of Civil Procedure, is thereby precluded from any recovery against the additional defendant.
“2. As between the original defendant and the additional defendant, the petition is defective in that it avers in the alternative that the alleged negligence of the additional defendant was ‘either the sole cause, or a major contributing cause of said collision.’
“3. The petition is further defective in that it does not aver that the additional defendant is either alone liable to the original defendant, or is liable over to him, or is jointly or severally liable with him, as required by Buie 2252 of the Pennsylvania Buies of Civil Procedure. On the contrary, the purpose of the petition, as set forth in the ninth paragraph thereof, is to protect ‘the right of contribution’ of the original defendant.”
Buie 2258,
It appears by the additional defendant’s motion to dismiss that he was fully advised by the state of the record, that is, by plaintiff’s statement of claim and her refusal to claim against him, and by the transaction averred by the defendant, that the single charge to be met by him at the trial was whether he and the original defendant were jointly liable.
"When the parties appeared before the learned court for pre-trial conference pursuant to Rule 212,
“This grounding of liability in the alternative is not
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permitted by the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure, ...” The learned judge quoted from the Note which follows Rule 2252,
Rule 2252, for the joinder of additional parties, provides that a defendant “may petition the court for leave to join as an additional defendant any person not a party to the action, or any party named therein who has not been validly served, who may be alone liable or liable over to him for the cause of action declared upon or jointly or severally liable therefor with him.” The words quoted are substantially the same as the corresponding provision in the amendment of June 22, 1931, P. L. 663, to the Act of April 10, 1929, P. L. 479, both of which are suspended by the Rules.
It is true that the amending Act of June 25, 1937, P. L. 2118, provided for joinder of an additional defendant “alleged to be alone liable or liable over to him
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for the cause of action declared on or jointly or severally or in the alternative liable therefor with him,” and that the statute has been suspended. This amendment included much more than the mere addition of the words “or in the alternative”; other provisions enlarged third party procedure, and it is perhaps fair to say that it ivas these other provisions that had resulted in quite general dissatisfaction with such procedure as developed after and pursuant to the amendments of 1937. This dissatisfaction, we think, did not result from the effect of the words “or in the alternative,” because, prior to the Act of 1937, conclusions in the alternative were accepted under the amendments of 1931:
Clineff v. Rubash,
Rule 2252 provides for joinder in several classes of cases: when an additional defendant (1) may be alone liable (2) or liable over (3) or jointly liable. The facts constituting the transaction as averred in defendant’s petition may enable the jury to find that the additional defendant is in class 1 — alone liable; or in class 3— jointly liable with the defendant. The result of plaintiff’s election not to file a supplementary statement
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against the additional defendant is that she cannot recover against him, but that fact, standing alone, does not take him out of the case. The defendant has the right to keep him in to enforce contribution if the jury find against both. The statement in the Committee’s note to Rule 2258 that “If the defendant joins an additional defendant on the ground that the latter is alone liable to the plaintiff but the plaintiff files no supplementary statement there will be no party in the action asserting any claim against the additional defendant and he should therefore be dropped from the record,” applies between a plaintiff and the original defendant but cannot apply when an issue between the two defendants is for trial. The Rule does not and was not intended to enable a plaintiff, who has no control over the litigation between the defendant and the additional defendant,
4
to prevent adjudication of their rights: see
Shapiro v. Philadelphia,
One of the purposes
5
of third party procedure is to avoid multiplicity of suits by adjudicating in one suit the rights and liabilities of all the parties to a single transaction which constitutes the cause of action, and the Rules should, if possible, be construed to accomplish that purpose. While plaintiff’s election removed the possibility of the additional defendant’s being held alone liable to the plaintiff, we still have to consider whether proof of the facts averred would support a finding of joint liability of the two defendants. In consid
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ering this question, it is to he observed that plaintiff’s statement of the cause of action shows liability in the defendant, and the defendant avers facts showing liability in the additional defendant who answers that not he, but the defendant was the negligent party. If the jury finds joint or concurrent negligent acts, the law declares the actors joint tort-feasors:
Hughes v. Pittsburgh Transportation Co.,
Much of common law pleading has been modified and superseded by statute and rule. The pleader must state a cause of action to which the law involved may be applied and, by the pleading, must notify the adverse party of what to meet. Here there is no want of notice; defendant’s petition and additional defendant’s answer have clearly advised each other of their respective positions and have presented a single issue. There is no uncertainty about it and McBride’s answer shows that he was in no doubt about the issue. 6 There is no factual inconsistency in defendant’s position which should deprive defendant of the benefit of Rule 2252. He does not allege the facts of the transaction, the foundation of the cause of action, in the alternative. The Rule does not prohibit the statement of alternative conclusions of law from the facts averred. 7 Either that must be per *25 mitted or the use of third party procedure must he unreasonably restricted, although the purpose of the Rules was quite the contrary.
In
Majewski v. Lempka,
If the jury, on all the evidence, finds against both defendants, the original defendant will have the right to enforce contribution
9
in this suit even though plain
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tiff can take nothing by the verdict against McBride. Buie 2262(b), provides: “In every action in which an additional party has been brought upon the record, the court or the jury, as the case may be, in addition to any general verdict or finding, shall make such specific findings as will determine the liabilities of all parties inter se. The judgments entered in such action shall determine the liabilities of all parties inter se.” The court has power to control the form of the verdicts and also the judgments. Compare
Boosel v. Agri. Ins. Co.,
Appellee relies on obiter dicta in
Hoffman v. Repp,
Prior to the adoption of the Buies, the right to add a defendant, within the terms of the Act of 1929 and amendments, was absolute; the Rules now vest discretion in the court to grant such petitions when “the court deems the joinder of the additional defendant will not unreasonably prejudice the additional defendant or any other party to the record”: Buie 2252(e). The inquiry whether an additional defendant or any other party to the record will be unreasonably prejudiced by the *27 joinder will cover a wide field since the ultimate purpose is to join, if possible, all the parties to the single transaction giving rise to the cause of action.
In this case, so far as appears, the petition should have been granted.
Order reversed, petition reinstated, record remitted for further proceedings.
Notes
The authority to grant the motion was found in Rule 212, providing: “In any action the court, of its own motion or on motion of any party, may direct the attorneys for the parties to appear for a conference to consider: (a) The simplification of the issues; ...(£) Such other matters as may aid in the disposition of the action. The court may make an order reciting the action taken at the conference. . . . Such order when entered shall control the subsequent course of the action unless modified at the trial to prevent manifest injustice.”
See also King v. McQuade, 38 D. & C. 269; Scott, Combination of Issues and Parties (1936) 10 Temp. L. Q. 406, 411.
Compare Rule 2258, supra, which creates a new feature in third party procedure in this Commonwealth, where it is expressly provided that plaintiff’s supplemental pleading need not be consistent with his statement of claim.
Compare
First Nat. Bank of Pittsburgh v.
Baird
For a general statement of tbe purposes, see
Vinnacombe v. Phila.,
The use of the disjunctive is not necessarily evidence of uncertainty: see Hanlrfn, Alternative and Hypothetical Pleadings (1924) 33 Yale Law Journal 365. It has been suggested that in case of doubt the advisable procedure is to plead in the conjunctive. Bennett, Bringing in Third Parties by the Defendant (1935) 19 Minn. L. Rev. 163, 192n. See also Clark, Code Pleading (1928) 273 et seq.
The record shows no more pleading of facts in the alternative than appears in the ordinary case in which a defendant by answer denies the negligence charged against him and avers that plaintiff was guilty of contributory negligence, though plaintiff cannot be said to have been guilty of contributory negligence if the defendant was not negligent. In
Kemerer v. Johnstown Bank,
This case has been followed in Abraham v. National Biscuit Co., 89 F. (2d) 266 (C. C. A. 3d, 1937), overruling Yellow Gab v. Rodgers, 61 F. (2d) 729 (C. C. A. 3d, 1932).
Compare
Horbach’s Admr. v. Elder,
