Irwin v. Hanthorn
Irwin v. Hanthorn
Opinion of the Court
A scire facias sur mortgage was issued by the plaintiff against the defendants and upon the trial of the issue a verdict was rendered for the defendants. The plaintiff appealed to this court from the judgment entered thereon, and the judgment of the court below was affirmed (1 Pa. Superior Ct. 149). A fi. fa. was afterwards issued to collect the costs. Upon the plaintiff’s petition alleging “that the costs in said case have never been taxed or the amount due ascertained by any process of law whatever ” the court granted a rule to show cause why the execution should not be set aside. From the order discharging this rule the present appeal was taken on October 16, 1896.
The defendants excepted to the sufficiency of the bail on the appeal bond, and on October 21, 1896, a judge of the court below made the following order: “ After hearing, I decline to approve within bond because not signed by the plaintiff, and the insufficiency of the surety offered.” The effect of this order was to leave the appeal in the same condition as if no bail had been entered; and under the Act of June 24, 1895, P. L. 212, an appeal to this court was not effectual for any purpose unless bail for costs of the appeal was given: Marks v. Baker, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 167; Page v. McNaughton, 2 Pa. Superior Ct. 519. Doubtless the court might, and perhaps ought to have permitted the plaintiff to enter new bail within a reasonable time after the original bail was adjudged insufficient, if proper application had been made; but the record brought up to us fails to show that such application was made, or that a new bond was filed or tendered; and, of course we must be guided by the record.
Even if the motion to quash were not to prevail we would be unable to sustain the assignments of error. The complaint is, that the execution for costs was improvidently issued, because, as we are asked to assume, they had not been taxed by the prothonotary. But whether or not there was such taxation of them, as, in the absence of exception and appeal from the
Appeal dismissed at the cost of the appellant.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Benjamin Irwin, Assignee v. James F. Hanthorn and Ellen Hanthorn
- Cited By
- 2 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Practice, Superior Court — Appeals—Sufficiency of bail. Under the act of 1895 an appeal to the Superior Court was not effectual unless bail for the costs of the appeal be given, and an appeal was dismissed where the judge of the court below, on exception taken to the sufficiency of the bail bond, made the following order: “After hearing I decline to approve wilhin bond, because not signed by the plaintiff, and the insufficiency of the security offered.” Appeal — Practice, C. P. — Execution for costs. An appeal will not be sustáined assigning error in ah execution for costs based on the assumption that they had not been taxed by the prothonótary where the record of the proceedings prior to the execution has neither been printed nor brought up, and. where there is no allegation that the appellant filed exceptions or made any effort to have the legality of the costs adjudicated in the regular way. Costs — Taxation—Practice, C. P. Conceding that the court has the inherent power to determine in a summary way the legality of costs, the orderly and usual method of invoking the exercise of the power is by filing exception, entering a rule to have the costs taxed or relaxed before the prothonotary, and appealing from his decision to the court of common pleas.