Opinion
December 14, 1965.
March 24, 1966.
Appeals — Premature — Judgment not entered on verdict — Appeal from refusal of new trial or judgment n.o.v. — Notice to Bar.
1. Where no judgment is entered on the verdict prior to appeal, the appeal is premature and will be quashed.
2. An appeal does not lie from the refusal of a new trial or of judgment n.o.v., but from the judgment entered subsequent to the court's disposition of the after-verdict motions.
3. The Bar is given further notice of the requirement that judgment must be entered on the verdict before an appeal is taken.
Before ERVIN, P.J., WRIGHT, WATKINS, MONTGOMERY, JACOBS, and HOFFMAN, JJ. (FLOOD, J., absent).
Appeal, No. 618, Oct. T., 1965, from order of Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County, No. 62-8609, in case of Marvin Vending Corp. to the use of Model Vending, Inc. v. Eddie H. Bieber and Pauline Bieber, individually and trading as Pauline Eddie's Snack Bar. Appeal quashed.
Assumpsit and counterclaim by defendants. Before HONEYMAN, J.
Verdict directed for defendant on counterclaim; verdict for plaintiff on its claim; order entered refusing defendants' motion for judgment n.o.v. and for new trial. Defendants appealed.
Philip Shuchman, for appellants.
Lawrence Mazer, for appellees.
WRIGHT, J., filed a concurring opinion.
Argued December 14, 1965.
This was an action in assumpsit for an alleged breach of a vending machine contract. After a trial, the plaintiff obtained a verdict of $3,000. The defendants filed motions for a new trial and for judgment n.o.v. The court below entered the following order: "AND NOW, this 10th day of June, 1965, after oral argument before the Court en banc and upon consideration of the brief filed, the motions for a new trial and judgment non obstante veredicto are refused." The defendants then appealed to this Court.
The trial judge directed a verdict in favor of the defendants on their counterclaim but that verdict is not involved in this appeal.
The record shows that there was no judgment entered on the verdict prior to the appeal. It follows that this appeal is premature.
It was said in Simpson v. Pa. Turnpike Com., 384 Pa. 335, 121 A.2d 84: "An appeal does not lie from the refusal of a new trial [or judgment n.o.v.] but from the judgment entered subsequent to the court's disposition of after-verdict motions. Accordingly, any litigant, feeling aggrieved by a trial court's refusal of his motion for a new trial [or for judgment n.o.v.], should himself, if necessary, cause a judgment to be entered on the undisturbed verdict in order that he might properly perfect an appeal. The verdict fee which he would be required to pay would, if he should ultimately prevail, be taxed to his credit as part of the costs. As the instant appeal is obviously abortive, we cannot do otherwise than dismiss it."
Scarcely a session of this Court is held without one or more cases of this nature appearing on the argument list. This involves useless time and expense to the attorneys involved, the court, the prothonotary and even the printing company which prints the paper books.
In a footnote to Menyo v. Sphar, 409 Pa. 223, 224, 186 A.2d 9, Mr. Chief Justice BELL called the attention of the Bar to this requirement but in Denmon v. Rhodes, 416 Pa. 568, 207 A.2d 860, he was required to apply the rule and quash that appeal because it was premature. See also Bodick v. Harcliff Mining Company, 207 Pa. Super. 159, 214 A.2d 735.
All that my brother WRIGHT says in his concurring opinion is true. Notwithstanding the numerous opinions by both of our appellate courts, many lawyers apparently are not familiar with the rule. The majority feel that this additional opinion is therefore necessary for further notice to the Bar.
The record is remanded to the Court of Common Pleas of Montgomery County without prejudice to the right to enter a judgment on the verdict.
Appeal quashed and record remanded.
It has been our proud boast, and rightly so, that we are following the recommendation of the Bar Association that unnecessary opinions should not be filed. Adoption of such a policy was imperative in view of our greatly increased case load. In 1953, my first year on this court, we disposed of 291 Journal numbers. The corresponding number for 1965 was 788. These figures do not include the many appeals which are processed without being formally called for argument.
It is my view that the opinion which is being filed in the instant case is entirely unnecessary. Judge HOFFMAN settled the question in Bodick v. Harcliff Mining Co., 207 Pa. Super. 159, 214 A.2d 735, filed December 8, 1965. All that is now required is a per curiam order such as was entered December 17, 1965, in Toff v. Rohde, No. 755 October Term 1965. I concur only in the result, and do so for the reason set forth in my concurring opinion in the Bodick case.