HomeMy WebLinkAbout94-7010 CivilJOANN L. LINGLE and ABNER O.
LINGLE, Her Husband,
Plaintiffs
Ve
TODD CLARK SILVIS,
Defendant
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION - LAW
NO. 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
IN RE: DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO
FILE A DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL
BEFORE HESS and OLER, JJ.
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this Z~ ~ day of January, 1996, after careful
consideration of Defendant's Motion for Leave To File a Demand for
Jury Trial, and for the reasons stated in the accompanying opinion,
the motion is DENIED.
BY THE COURT,
Peter R. Henninger, Jr., Esq. JVWe~leyfl
4000 Vine Street
Middletown, PA 17057
Attorney for Plaintiffs
Dennis J. Bonetti, Esq.
2931 North Front Street
Harrisburg, PA 17110
Attorney for Defendant
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JOANN L. LINGLE and ABNER O.
LINGLE, Her Husband,
Plaintiffs
Ve
TODD CLARK SILVIS,
Defendant
IN THE COURT OF COMMON PLEAS OF
CUMBERLAND COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA
CIVIL ACTION - LAW
NO. 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
Oler, J.
For
IN RE: DEFENDANT'S MOTION FOR LEAVE TO
FILE A DEMAND FOR JURY TRIAL
BEFORE HESS and OLER, JJ.
OPINION and ORDER OF COURT
disposition in this negligence action for personal
injuries arising out of a two-vehicle accident is Defendant's
Motion for Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial. The record
includes a complaint, an answer with new matter, a reply to new
matter, the motion presently at issue, Plaintiffs' answer to the
motion, Defendant's "Supplemental Verification in Support of Motion
for Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial," and Plaintiffs'
"Stipulation," in response to the supplemental verification.
For the reasons stated in this opinion, Defendant's Motion for
Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial will be denied.
STATEMENT OF FACTS
Plaintiffs Joann Lingle and Abner O. Lingle commenced the
present action against Defendant Todd Clark Silvis and his mother
Patricia Schoffstall, by the filing of a complaint on December 14,
1994. Ms. Schoffstall was subsequently dismissed from the case.~
~ Order of Court, December 27, 1995. Because only one
defendant remains in the case, all references to the defense in
this opinion will be in the singular rather than the plural.
NO.° 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
An answer with new matter was filed on January 18, 1995, and
the pleadings were closed with the filing of Plaintiffs' reply to
new matter on February 6, 1995. This final pleading was served by
mailing it to Defendant's counsel.2 None of the pleadings was
endorsed with a demand for jury trial, nor had a separate writing
been filed containing a demand for jury trial.
Seven months passed during which no writing was filed
containing a demand for jury trial.3 On September 11, 1995,
Plaintiffs' counsel listed the case for a non-jury trial.4
The case was not called for trial, and it was stricken from
the trial list for the November trial term by order of court dated
October 18, 1995.~ The case was relisted for a non-jury trial by
Plaintiffs' counsel on November 1, 1995.6
.2 Defendant's Supplemental Verification in Support of Motion
for Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial, Exhibit A; Plaintiffs'
Response to Defendant['s] Motion To File a Demand for Jury Trial,
paragraph 1. The pleading was mailed on February 2, 1995, to
Defendant's counsel. Id.
3 Certain notices of records depositions to several persons
or entities, dated February 21, 1995, and a notice of oral
deposition, addressed to Plaintiffs and Plaintiffs' counsel, dated
April 11, 1995, did contain such a demand in the caption. See
Defendant's Supplemental Verification in Support of Motion for
Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial, Exhibit B; Plaintiffs'
Stipulation, paragraphs 2-4. These were not filed, however.
4 Praecipe for Listing Case for Trial (filed September 11,
1995).
5
1995).
Order of Court, October 18, 1995 (Sheely, P.J.).
Praecipe for Listing Case for Trial (filed November 1,
NO. 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
On November 15, 1995, Defendant's counsel filed for the first
time a writing indicating a desire for a jury trial, in the form of
Defendant's Motion for Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial.? The
motion attributed the failure to timely demand a jury trial to
inadvertence, and included an exchange of letters between
Defendant's counsel and Plaintiffs' counsel dated October 25, 1995,
and October 27, 1995, respectively, in which the latter declined to
accede to Defendant's desire for a jury trial.8
Defendant's motion for leave to file a demand for jury trial
was listed for argument by Defendant's counsel on the date it was
filed.9 Meanwhile, the motion was forwarded to the writer of this
opinion, who issued a rule to show cause upon the Plaintiffs in
response to the motion.~°
An answer opposing the motion was subsequently filed by
Plaintiffs.~ The answer avers, inter alia, that Plaintiffs have
"reasonably relied on the scheduling of the non-jury trial and have
7 Defendant's Motion for Leave To File a Demand for Jury
Trial, paragraphs 3-6 (filed November 15, 1995).
Id., Exhibits A, B.
9 Praecipe for Listing Case for Argument (filed November 15,
1995).
~0 Order of Court, November 21, 1995 (Oler, J.).
~ Plaintiffs' Response to Defendant['s] Motion To File a
Demand for Jury Trial (filed December 11, 1995).
NO.° 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
hired and scheduled experts accordingly.-~2
Argument was held on December 6, 1995. The parties have since
filed the aforesaid "Supplemental Verification in Support of Motion
for Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial''~3 and "Stipulation,,~4 to
provide a more complete record for disposition of the motion.
DISCUSSION
Under Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1007.1(a), it is
provided as follows:
In any action in which the right to jury
trial exists, that right shall be deemed
waived unless a party files and serves a
written demand for a jury trial not later than
twenty (20) days after service of the last
permissible pleading. The demand shall be
made by endorsement on a pleading or by a
separate writing.
In upholding a trial court's refusal to grant a party's
request for a jury trial raised more than twenty days after service
of the last permissible pleading, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
stated the following:
The record is clear that the
[Defendants'] demand for a jury trial, first
asserted in their pre-trial memorandum, was
made more than twenty days after the last
permissible pleading and, therefore, failed to
satisfy the .requirements of Rule 1007.1(a).
Accordingly, the lower court correctly held
~ Id., paragraph 18.
~3 Defendant's Supplemental Verification in Support of Motion
for Leave To File a Demand for Jury Trial (filed December 6, 1995).
~4 Plaintiffs' Stipulation (filed December 11, 1995).
4
NO. 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
that a jury trial had been waived. In
addition, considerations of prejudice to the
other side play no part in enforcing a waiver
of a jury trial where the provisions of Rule
1007.1(a) have not been met.
Jones v. Van Norman, 513 Pa. 572, 584, 522 A.2d 503, 509 (1987).
~In a carefully considered opinion in L.B. Foster Co., Inc. v.
Brumfield, 12 D. & C.4th 646 (Allegheny Co. 1991), Judge Wettick of
the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County declined to grant a
defendant's motion for leave to file a demand for jury trial nunc
pro tunc, where the motion was filed 25 days after service of the
last permissible pleading, where the failure to timely demand a
jury trial was attributed to inadvertence of counsel, and where no
prejudice would have accrued to the other party from a granting of
the motion. Analyzing the language of the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court in Jones, supra, Judge Wettick made this observation:
It is significant that the Jones v. Van
Norman opinion does not talk in terms of
whether or not the trial judge abused his
discretion. Instead, it concluded that the
trial court "correctly" decided this issue.
This conclusion, coupled with the provision
that considerations of prejudice are not
involved, indicate that the Pennsylvania
Supreme Court has adopted a standard requiring
at least a showing of good cause before a
trial court may extend the time for requesting
a jury trial.
L. B. Foster Co., Inc. v. Brumfield, 12 D. & C.4th 646, 649
(Allegheny Co. 1991).
on the issue of whether inadvertence of counsel would, as a
general rule, represent good cause for noncompliance with a time
limitation in a rule of civil procedure, the Pennsylvania Supreme
Court has quoted with approval this statement:
5
NO.' 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
[I]f inadvertence of counsel were a valid
reason for disregarding the time limitation
rules of our Supreme Court, then they might as
well not have any rules at all.
E.J. McAleer & Co., Inc. v. Iceland Products, Inc., 475 Pa. 610,
615', 381 A.2d 441, 444 (1977).
Without suggesting that under no circumstances would a court
be permitted to excuse a failure to comply strictly with the time
limit for demanding a jury trial under Rule 1007.1(a),X5 we do not
believe that any exigencies in the case at bar would warrant such
a result. The following order will therefore be entered:
ORDER OF COURT
AND NOW, this 3~..f~ day of January, 1996, after careful
consideration of Defendant's Motion for Leave To File a Demand for
Jury Trial, and for the reasons stated in the accompanying opinion,
the motion is DENIED.
BY THE COURT,
Peter R. Henninger, Jr., Esq.
4000 Vine Street
Middletown, PA 17057
Attorney for Plaintiffs
$/ J. Wesley Oler, Jr.
J. Wesley Oler, Jr., J.
~5 See, e.g., Dauphin Deposit Bank & Trust Co. v. Pifer, 383
Pa. Super. 275, 556 A.2d 904 (1989).
NO.' 94-7010 CIVIL TERM
Dennis J. Bonetti, Esq.
2931 North Front Street
Harrisburg, PA 17110
Attorney for Defendant
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