The issue in this appeal is the validity of a waiver of trial by jury entered in a civil action in order to obtain a delay in the commencement of trial. The trial court held that the waiver was valid and denied a request to withdraw it immediately prior to commencement of a nonjury trial. We find no error in the trial court’s ruling and affirm the judgment entered on the verdict of the court.
On August 20, 1979, a vehicle owned by Liquid Carbonic Corporation (Liquid Carbonic) and driven by Larry J. Wise, one of its employees, was involved in a collision with an automobile operated by Andrew P. Rodney. Rodney and his wife, Anna, brought a trespass action against both Wise and Liquid Carbonic to recover damages for injuries sustained by the husband-plaintiff as a result of the accident. The trespass action was heard by a board of arbitrators, which entered an award in favor of the defendants, Wise and Liquid Carbonic. The Rodneys filed a timely appeal and requested trial by jury in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County.
The case was scheduled for trial on Monday, March 12, 1984. On Friday, March 9, 1984, the Rodneys’ attorney moved for a continuance because of a scheduling conflict. The motion was granted by the calendar control judge who rescheduled the case for April 4, 1984. In the order granting the continuance appeared the judge’s handwritten notation that the case was “to [be] heard nonjury upon the consent of all parties.” The Rodneys subsequently changed their minds, and their lawyer informed opposing counsel that they again desired a jury trial. In an effort to confirm the nonjury status of the impending trial, counsel for the appellees requested that the Rodneys sign a written agreement to proceed nonjury. The Rodneys refused. Thereafter, Wise and Liquid Carbonic filed a motion to compel the Rodneys to elect between a jury and nonjury trial. The
Prior to commencement of trial on April 4, 1984, counsel for the Rodneys informed the trial judge that Rodney had changed his mind and now wished to withdraw his consent to a nonjury trial. Rodney’s request was denied, and the case was thereupon tried before the court sitting without a jury. After hearing all of the evidence, the judge entered a verdict in favor of Wise and Liquid Carbonic. Exceptions 1 were filed which alleged, inter alia, that appellants had been deprived of their right to trial by jury. The trial court dismissed the exceptions and directed that judgment be entered on the verdict. This appeal followed.
Section 25 of the Schedule to Article V of the Pennsylvania Constitution provides, inter alia, that “[u]ntil otherwise provided by law, the parties, by agreement filed, may in any civil case dispense with trial by jury____” (Emphasis added). The Rodneys argue that this section required, at least by implication, a written agreement waiving the right to jury trial. Because their consent to proceed nonjury was not reduced to writing, they argue, it was not an effective waiver. Appellants’ argument, however, ignores the fact that this constitutional provision, as allowed by its specific terms, was suspended by a contrary rule of law enacted by the legislature as part of the Judiciary Act of 1976, as amended. This statutory provision, appearing at 42 Pa.C.S. § 5104(a), provides as follows:
Except where the right to trial by jury is enlarged by statute, trial by jury shall be as heretofore, and the right thereof shall remain inviolate. Trial by jury may be waived in the manner prescribed by general rules. (Emphasis added).
The pertinent general rule is found in Pa.R.C.P. 1007.1. It provides that a trial by jury will be deemed waived unless it is affirmatively requested. See also:
Dream Pools of Pennsylvania v. Baehr,
That appellants agreed orally to waive the right to trial by jury is clear. This fact appears unequivocally from the order of court granting the requested continuance. This order recites specifically and unequivocally that the case was to be tried nonjury upon consent of all parties. The record of the nonjury trial also contains an admission by appellants’ attorney that his clients, when seeking a continuance, had agreed to waive jury trial and proceed nonjury.
The voluntariness of the Rodneys’ waiver was not impaired because it had been made to obtain a delay in the start of their trial. The right to trial by jury may be waived as part of an express agreement.
Warden v. Zanella,
The decision of the Supreme Court of California in
Hawes v. Clark,
... it is plain that the defendant is not in a position to complain of its [the court’s] action. He got the benefit of one part of the stipulation, — that is, the transfer of the cause to another department of the court than the one in which it was peremptorily set for trial, — and secured about a month’s delay, which seemed to be his prime object, and should not be allowed to avoid the accompanying burden of a trial by the court without a jury, which he had in open court, by his counsel, waived.
Id.
at 275,
Like the defendant in
Hawes,
the Rodneys agreed to waive trial by jury in order to obtain a delay in the com
Appellants argue alternatively that although they initially consented to waive a jury trial, they later “rescinded [their] ratification of [the calendar control judge’s] non-jury direction.” Appellants’ Brief at 12. Simply stated, they contend that they effectively withdrew their earlier consent to proceed nonjury. We disagree.
As a general rule, where a party has expressly consented to waive a jury trial, an application to withdraw the waiver is addressed to the sound discretion of the trial court.
Ladner v. Forman,
Appellants’ attempted withdrawal of their jury waiver was inadequate for two reasons. First, because they made no formal attempt to withdraw their waiver of trial by jury until the day of the nonjury trial,
4
the granting of a demand for a jury trial at that late date would have caused unnecessary delay. This would have caused prejudice to Wise and Liquid Carbonic who already had incurred the expense of bringing out-of-state witnesses to court for trial. Second, when the Rodneys finally raised the issue with the
It seems clear, under these circumstances, that the trial court did not abuse its discretion by denying the Rodneys’ belated request to empanel a jury.
The order entering judgment is affirmed.
Notes
. As the trial court correctly observed, Pa.R.C.P. 227.1 now provides that the appropriate label for such post-trial motions is "Motion for Post-Trial Relief.”
. Cf. Warden v. Zanella, supra (where this Court held that an attorney’s decision to proceed nonjury was a strategic decision binding on his client).
. Although the trial court reached the same conclusion in its opinion, it did so by relying on this Court’s decision in
Warden v. Zanella, supra.
We do not find
Warden
controlling. There defendants had originally requested a jury trial in a motion to quash service. Plaintiffs later filed a Certicate of Readiness representing that the trial would be nonjury. Defendants failed either to challenge this statement or to renew their demand for a jury trial either before or during the trial. This Court found that defendants
impliedly
had waived their right to jury trial
by failing to make a timely demand. Id.
. The Rodneys maintain in their brief that during the hearing of appellees' motion to compel the Rodneys to select between a jury and nonjury trial, the judge stated that “if it was the Appellant, Andrew Rodney’s desire to have his case heard before a jury, and he had previously elected to do so, then the matter must be so heard." Appellants’ Brief at 6. The appellants assert that it was therefore their understanding that the case would be held before a jury, and that no written order was necessary to confirm this fact. They contend that
Appellants’ version of the facts is not supported by the record. Moreover, appellants’ misconception of the law does not excuse their failure to act. It is a fundamental principle of the law that “[t]he court speaks by its order, and effect must be given according to its terms, but not extended beyond its terms, and ordinarily an order will not be construed as going beyond the motion in pursuance of which it is given.” 60 C.J.S. Motions & Orders § 64 (1969). See also: 56 Am.Jur.2d Motions, Rules & Orders § 29 (1971). As noted previously, the order of March 28, 1984 merely denied appellees’ motion to compel the Rodneys to choose between a jury and nonjury trial. The order neither referred to nor purported to affect the earlier order directing appellants to proceed nonjury. Both orders, therefore, were valid according to their terms until modified, vacated, or reversed. 60 C.J.S. Motions & Orders § 64 (1969). A party who believes that an order is improper must either "obtain a stay, move to set it aside, or take other steps to eliminate its burdensome effect.” Id. Having failed to do so, appellants’ dissatisfaction with their agreement to waive a jury trial remained unrecognized in the eyes of the law until it was formally raised at trial.
