Plaintiff sued defendant in assumpsit and the court sustained defendant’s affidavit of defense in lieu of demurrer, and granted leave to file an amended statement within 30 days: 32 Berks 290. Plaintiff thereupon filed an amended státement of claim. Defendant again demurred, and the court, in an opinion filed January 15, 1941, again sustained the affidavit of defense in lieu of demurrer and again granted plaintiff leave to file an amended statement of claim within 30 days: 33 Berks
The suffering of a voluntary nonsuit by plaintiff at any time before adjudication upon the merits, but not later than verdict or binding instructions, is a matter within the absolute discretion of the plaintiff, whether before or at trial: McLughan v. Bovard, 4 Watts 308, 316; Haviland v. Fidelity Insurance Trust & Safe Deposit Co., Exec., 108 Pa. 236, 243; Felts v. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad, 170 Pa. 432, 436-437; Crumley et. al. v. Lutz et al., 180 Pa. 476, 479; James et al. v. Bream et al., 263 Pa. 305, 310; Axelrod et al. v. Howell, 328 Pa. 297; Cherniak, etc., v. Prudential Insurance Co. of America, 339 Pa. 73; Danforth v. Danforth, 40 Nev. 435, 166 Pac. 927, 928 (Nevada 1917), citing Poyser v. Minors, 7 Q. B. Div. 329.
“It is quite clear that a plaintiff may take a nonsuit on the trial whenever he thinks proper. At common law he might do so at any time before the verdict was actually recorded, and the only restriction of the right by our statute, is that which requires it to be exercised before the jury announce their readiness to deliver the verdict. But a discontinuance, is not a nonsuit, though the difference in their legal effect is slight. A greater distinction exists in the mode of applying them, the one being subject to the discretion of the plaintiff, the other of the court. The plaintiff has a right to suffer a nonsuit before or at the trial, and to deny it to him would be error, but a discontinuance may be allowed or refused according to the discretion of the court, which is not assignable for error. We cannot doubt it was a discontinuance and not a nonsuit, the counsel asked in this case, and the court had a right to refuse it”: Evans’ Admr. v. Clover, 1 Grant (Pa.) 164, 169 (1854), Woodward, J.
And now, to wit, February 18, 1943, the rule is discharged without prejudice..
