165 A. 854 | Pa. | 1933
Argued March 27, 1933. This is an appeal from the judgment of the Court of Common Pleas of Cambria County dismissing the petition of defendant, after an appearance de bene esse, for a rule to show cause why service upon him as administrator of the estate of Harry A. Kessler, deceased, should not be set aside.
On June 10, 1932, Harry A. Kessler was seated on the front seat of a truck which he owned and which was being operated along the Frankstown Road, Johnstown, by his employee under his direction. Plaintiffs claim that the truck was negligently operated and by reason thereof it crashed into and demolished certain buildings of the plaintiffs and that it also inflicted personal injuries on Frank Wiesheier, one of the plaintiffs. The accident also caused the death of defendant's intestate, Harry A. Kessler, and the defendant was duly appointed by the Register of Wills of Philadelphia County administrator *382 of Kessler's estate. Both Kessler and defendant resided in Philadelphia. A summons in trespass against the administrator was issued in Cambria County and the writ was served on defendant in Philadelphia County by the sheriff thereof who had been deputized for that purpose by the sheriff of Cambria County under the Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 751. In defendant's petition to show cause why the service should not be set aside, he sets forth that the court acquired no jurisdiction over him by the service because the Act of Assembly under which service was attempted "does not provide for service upon a nonresident administrator of a decedent, there being no allegation that the administrator was concerned or connected in any manner with the accident out of which the action arose." Plaintiffs filed an answer admitting the allegations as to the manner of service but denying that the service was invalid.
The Act of June 22, 1931, P. L. 751, 812, section 1208, provides, inter alia: "Civil actions for damages. All civil actions for damages, arising from the use and operation of any vehicle, may. . . . . . be brought. . . . . . in the county wherein the alleged damages were sustained. . . . . . in the court of common pleas of said county, and service of process. . . . . . may be made by the sheriff of the county where the suit is brought deputizing the sheriff of the county wherein the defendant or his registered agent resides, or where service may be had upon him under the existing laws of this Commonwealth, in like manner as process may now be served in the proper county. . . . . ."
It is clear that service such as was herein effected would have been valid if made on Harry A. Kessler in Philadelphia during his lifetime. At common law the action would not have survived his death. In this State actions for trespass to real property and all personal actions, except actions for slander and for libels, may be maintained against executors and administrators of decedents against whom such actions could have been maintained *383 had the decedent lived. Section 35 (b) of the Fiduciaries Act of June 7, 1917, P. L. 447, 20 P. S., section 772, provides: "Executors or administrators shall have power, either alone or jointly with other plaintiffs, to commence and prosecute all actions for mesne profits or for trespass to real property, and all personal actions which the decedent whom they represent might have commenced and prosecuted except actions for slander and for libels; and they shall be liable to be sued, either alone or jointly with other defendants, in any such action, except as aforesaid, which might have been maintained against such decedent if he had lived. (1925, May 2, P. L. 442, section 1)."
In Strain, Admr., v. Kern,
The foregoing is in accord with the well established rules of interpretation. "It is always to be presumed that a statute was intended to have the most reasonable and beneficial operation that its language permits": 25 R. C. L., section 255, page 1018; Orlosky v. Haskell,
As we said in Orlosky v. Haskell, supra, section 1208 of the Act of May 1, 1929, P. L. 905, 997 (reënacted in section 1208 of the Act of 1931, supra), "was an enlarging not a restricting act." The vast amount of traveling in late years done by persons in automobiles and the numerous injuries inflicted by motor vehicles operated by such itinerants has made it the policy of the law, as evidenced in recent statutes and decisions, to bring tort-feasors who are nonresidents of the county in which torts are committed by them within the jurisdiction of the courts of those counties. To give the statute under consideration complete effect in all cases we must hold that when the alleged tort-feasor dies before suit is brought, service of process may be made upon his administrator or executor in the county in which the latter resides.
Appellant quotes the following from Coleman's App.,
If it imposes a hardship on a nonresident of a county to come to that county to defend an action brought against him there, it is equally a hardship to compel an *386
injured party to pursue a person causing his injury, or that person's legal representative, into a distant county in order to sue him there. See Garrett v. Turner,
There is a choice of construction of the act before us and the court below properly preferred that construction most consonant with its purpose.
The judgment is affirmed.