44 A.2d 767 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1945
Argued October 24, 1945. Appellant's motions for new trial and for judgment n.o.v. were dismissed by the court below, and he then appealed to this court. He now complains, for the first time, of the procedure in which he had acquiesced.
Appellant foreclosed on a mortgage given to him by Dora Specktor to secure the principal sum of $3,200 upon certain premises in the city of Philadelphia. The mortgage bore the date of May 31, 1923, and was duly recorded. Harry Lovitz and Lillian Lovitz, his wife, have been the owners of the mortgaged premises since April 1, 1942. On October 25, 1944, appellant issued a writ of scire facias sur mortgage averring as default a failure to pay interest which became due on May 31, 1925, and semi-annually thereafter, and named Dora Specktor as mortgagor, and the appellees, Harry Lovitz and Lillian Lovitz, as real owners. The latter filed an affidavit of defense and a counterclaim for forfeit and damages under the Act of May 28, 1715, § 10,1 1 Sm. L. 94, 96,
It was on the counterclaim and the reply that a trial was held before SLOANE, J., and a jury. At the trial appellant admitted that the mortgage had been paid on January 8, 1924, and that it had not been satisfied of record. In July 1944, appellees requested that appellant satisfy the mortgage, and it appears that a similar request had been made in January, 1924. The case was submitted to the jury for the determination of the amount of penalty, if any, to be imposed upon appellant. The jury rendered a verdict of $1,600 in favor of appellees.
Appellant's principal contention is that the court below on its own initiative should have dismissed the action. Counsel's argument is based on a minor premise that the method of bringing appellant into court on the counterclaim was such fundamental error that the trial court should have refused to proceed. The major premise would seem to be that the court had no jurisdiction.
A question of jurisdiction is generally fundamental, but here the alleged defect is procedural in character. "The objection . . . is not to the judicial power of the court, but to the mode in which the case is brought before it": Susquehanna CountyAuditors' Report,
The objection does not affect the merits. The case was consentably tried on the merits. The proceeding2 had the same result as an action in assumpsit, which is now a method utilized for recovery under the Act of May 28, 1715, 1 Sm. L. 94,
No complaint was made as to the procedure followed or as to the jurisdiction of the court below. These matters have been raised for the first time on the appeal to this court. It is now too late. "The rule that consent cannot give jurisdiction applies only to the jurisdiction of the cause of action or subject matter, not to jurisdiction of the person, or jurisdiction based on matters of procedure": Susquehanna County Auditors' Report,
supra,
Appellant relies upon Porter v. Levering et al.,
The remaining questions relate to the refusal of the court below to grant appellant a new trial. The first alleged error is the exclusion of certain testimony by the trial judge. Appellant's argument is to the effect that the excluded testimony would have shown what efforts were made by appellant to ascertain whether payment of the mortgage was in fact made. The excluded testimony was that of a witness, a judgment searcher, who was called to testify that he made inquiries of two title companies in Philadelphia to ascertain whether they had a record of a settlement for the mortgaged property. It does not appear that this testimony had any bearing on the case. If material, such testimony was inadmissible as hearsay. We find no error in the court's ruling to this effect.
We are unable to find any merit in appellant's contention that the trial judge committed reversible error *328
in his charge to the jury. We need not comment on the vagueness of the subject matter of the eighth assignment of error. Apparently counsel for appellant at the trial was desirous of having the trial judge charge on the basis of certain statements in Werner et ux. v. Automobile Finance Co.,
In Graham v. Mt. Airy Building Loan Ass'n, supra,
Finally, by his argument, appellant submits that the amount of the verdict was excessive, and on that ground a new trial should have been granted. In the Graham case the verdict was for more than half the amount of the mortgage. In the present case the verdict was for one-half. Nowhere in the record does there appear any justification for appellant's conduct. The evidence discloses a palpable attempt to again collect on his mortgage which had been paid in full, and which had remained unsatisfied and quiescent for twenty years. Appellees were embarrassed and hindered in the sale of their property *329
by the presence of the unsatisfied mortgage. In addition, there is nothing to indicate that appellant's refusal or failure to satisfy the mortgage was the result of an honest doubt. In theWerner case, Mr. Justice PARKER had said (
Judgment is affirmed.