134 A. 625 | Pa. | 1926
Plaintiff obtained a verdict. Defendants moved for judgment n. o. v. On August 24, 1925, the court below entered an order thus: "The motion allowed and judgment ordered to be entered in favor of defendants against plaintiff." The docket kept by the prothonotary of the Courts of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County shows this entry: "November 24, 1925. Judgment n. o. v. as order court." On November 25, 1925, plaintiff appealed to this court. Defendants have moved to quash the appeal on the ground that it was taken more than three months after the entry of final judgment. This raises two questions: (1) Has there been a final judgment? (2) If so, on what date was it entered?
The Act of April 22, 1905, P. L. 286, commonly known as the Non Obstante Veredicto Act, directs that, in disposing of the motions therein provided for, "It shall be the duty of the court . . . . . . to enter such judgment as should have been entered upon [the evidence], at the same time granting to the party against whom the decision is rendered an exception to the action of the court in that regard." Then the statute provides: "From the judgment thus entered either party may appeal." *204
The necessity for granting an exception at the time of the entry of the judgment has been superseded by section 6 of the Act of May 11, 1911, P. L. 279 (Knobeloch v. Pgh., H., B.
N.C. Ry. Co.,
The order of August 24, 1925, now before us, does not enter a judgment; it simply directs that judgment is "ordered to be entered," evidently intending that the prothonotary, or clerk of the court, should enter the formal judgment. While it is better practice under the Act of 1905 for the court itself to enter the judgment, as in the Jones Case, yet this can be done through the hand of the clerk or prothonotary when so directed by the court; but, however done, an actual judgment must be entered: Statute of Frauds, Act March 21, 1772, 1 Sm. Laws 390. Too many rights may be affected by judgments to apply to such important entries the maxim mentioned by appellee, that the law will regard as done that which ought to be done, or to follow any other loose method of procedure. A record indication, such as appears in this case, that a court intends a judgment to be entered, is not the equivalent of its enrollment, or actual entry: see Smith v. P. R. Ry. Co.,
It remains but to say, the fact that the judgment index recites a judgment as entered on August 24, 1925, is in no sense controlling. While a mistake in indexing a judgment may, under some circumstances, prove fatal so far as rights which might be affected by the judgment are concerned, yet the mere fact of listing an order as a judgment upon the index cannot turn that which is not a judgment into a judgment. The entry in the index is not the judgment, it is, as expressed in the first edition of Troubat and Haly's Practice (published in 1825), at page 244, "in addition" to the entry of the judgment in the court docket, and refers to the "judgment itself."
On the record before us no final judgment was entered until November 24, 1925, and plaintiff appealed the next day, which, of course, was within the statutory period.
The motion to quash is overruled.