City of Philadelphia ex rel. Achuff v. Christman
City of Philadelphia ex rel. Achuff v. Christman
Opinion of the Court
The defendant obtained a rule to strike off the municipal lien in question. Without formal disposition of this rule, the court permitted the lien to be amended; and although a sci. fa. upon the lien was and is still pending, the defendant appealed. An appeal does not lie from the refusal to strike off the lien for the reason that there is no definitive decree or judgment. When the court strikes off a lien the case is otherwise, for its action is final: Carter v. Caldwell, 147 Pa. 370. For the same reason an appeal does not lie from an order permitting an amendment; the action being still pending. Appeals should not be resorted to when the effect is to bring cases into appellate courts by instalments; such a practice is attended with obvious disadvantages and unnecessarily delays their final disposition: Lauer v. Lauer Brewing Co., 180 Pa. 593; Yost v. Davison, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 469.
The appeal is quashed and the appellant directed to pay the costs.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- The City of Philadelphia, to the use of William H. Achuff, John H. Little, and William P. Clement, trading as Achuff & Company v. John W. Christman, Owner or Reputed Owner
- Cited By
- 5 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Amendments — Statutes liberally construed. The acts regulating amendments are to be liberally construed and an amendment will be allowed, the effect of which simply is to make clear what was imperfectly indicated. Appeals — Practice, Superior Court — Amendments—Municipal lien. An appeal does not lie from the refusal to strike off a municipal lien for the reason that there is no definitive decree, nor from an order permitting an amendment, the action being still pending.