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PA Bulletin, Doc. No. 16-1802

THE COURTS

Title 231—RULES OF
CIVIL PROCEDURE

PART I. GENERAL

[ 231 PA. CODE CH. 200 ]

Order Amending Rule 237.3 of the Rules of Civil Procedure; No. 648 Civil Procedural Rules Doc.

[46 Pa.B. 6610]
[Saturday, October 22, 2016]

Order

Per Curiam

And Now, this 4th day of October, 2016, upon the recommendation of the Civil Procedural Rules Committee; the proposal having been published for public comment at 46 Pa.B. 982 (February 27, 2016):

It Is Ordered pursuant to Article V, Section 10 of the Constitution of Pennsylvania that Rule 237.3 is amended in the following form.

 This Order shall be processed in accordance with Pa.R.J.A. No. 103(b), and shall be effective January 1, 2017.

Annex A

TITLE 231. RULES OF CIVIL PROCEDURE

PART I. GENERAL

CHAPTER 200. BUSINESS OF COURTS

Rule 237.3. Relief from Judgment of Non Pros or by Default.

 (a) A petition for relief from a judgment of non pros or of default entered pursuant to Rule 237.1 shall have attached thereto a [verified] copy of the complaint, preliminary objections, or answer which the petitioner seeks leave to file.

[(b)] (b)(1) If the petition is filed within ten days after the entry of [the judgment] a judgment of non pros on the docket, the court shall open the judgment if the proposed complaint [or answer] states a meritorious cause of action [or defense].

(2) If the petition is filed within ten days after the entry of a default judgment on the docket, the court shall open the judgment if one or more of the proposed preliminary objections has merit or the proposed answer states a meritorious defense.

Official Note: Rule 236 requires the prothonotary to give notice of the entry of any judgment and to note in the docket the giving of the notice.

 The petitioner must act with reasonable diligence to see that the petition is promptly presented to the court if required by local practice.

See Schultz v. Erie Insurance Exchange, [505 Pa. 90,] 477 A.2d 471 (Pa. 1984) for the requirements for opening a judgment by default and [Pa.R.C.P.] Rule 3051 as to a judgment of non pros. Rule 237.3 does not change the law of opening judgments. Rather, the rule supplies two of the three requisites for opening such judgments by presupposing that a petition filed as provided by the rule is timely and with reasonable explanation or legitimate excuse for the inactivity or delay resulting in the entry of the judgment. The requirement of this rule for proceeding within ten days is not intended to set a standard for timeliness in circumstances outside this rule.

[A defendant who seeks to file a pleading other than an answer is not entitled to the benefit of this rule but must comply with the requirements of Schultz v. Erie Insurance Exchange, supra.]

See Rules 206.1 through 206.7 governing petition practice.

Explanatory Comment—1994

[Rule 237.3. Relief from Judgment of Non Pros or by Default.]

 Rule 237.3 governs relief from a judgment by default or of non pros. Subdivision (a) requires that a [verified] copy of the complaint, preliminary objections, or answer sought to be filed be attached to the petition for relief from the judgment. This enables the court to determine from the actual complaint, preliminary objections, or answer to be filed whether [it] the complaint alleges a meritorious cause of action [or], one or more of the preliminary objections has merit, or the answer alleges a meritorious defense.

 Subdivision (b) eases the burden of a party against whom judgment has been entered and who moves promptly for relief from that judgment. If the petitioner files a petition for relief from [the judgment] a judgment of non pros within ten days after entry of the judgment on the docket, the rule requires the court to open the judgment if the proposed complaint [or answer] states a meritorious cause of action [or defense]. If the petitioner files a petition for relief from a default judgment within ten days after entry of the judgment on the docket, the rule requires the court to open the judgment if one or more of the proposed preliminary objections has merit or the proposed answer states a meritorious defense. The rule provides a date certain from which to measure the ten-day period and the language establishing the beginning of that period is derived from Rule 1308 governing appeals in compulsory arbitration.

 Case law has imposed three requirements for opening a judgment by default: a petition timely filed, a reasonable explanation or legitimate excuse for the inactivity or delay and a showing of a meritorious defense. Rule of Civil Procedure 3051 similarly states these three requisites for opening a judgment of non pros, substituting the showing of a meritorious cause of action rather than a meritorious defense. Rule 237.3(b) presumes that a petition filed within the required ten-day period is both timely and with reasonable explanation or legitimate excuse for the inactivity or delay. In this context, subdivision (b) requires that the judgment be opened if the petitioner attaches to the petition a [verified complaint or] complaint which states a meritorious cause of action, one or more preliminary objections which has merit, or an answer which states a meritorious [cause of action or] defense. A note to the rule cautions that the rule is not intended to change the law relating to the opening of judgments in any way or to impose a new standard of timeliness in cases outside the limited circumstances set forth in the rule.

Illustrations

 In illustrations 1 through 3, the defendant has failed to plead within the required time to a complaint containing a notice to plead.

 1. Prior to receiving a notice of intention to enter a default judgment, defendant seeks an agreement with the plaintiff for an extension of time in which to plead. The parties may certainly agree to an extension of time and proceed in accordance with their agreement. However, such an agreement is really unnecessary since the plaintiff cannot enter judgment without giving the ten-day notice required by the rule and the ten-day notice cannot be waived. Defendant may plead within the time up to the date of mailing or delivery of the notice plus ten days. This period of time may be more than might be provided by any agreement. In addition, there is no danger of a judgment being entered as the required notice has not been given.

 2. Defendant has received the ten-day notice but cannot file the pleading within the ten-day period. Now, as provided by Rule 237.2, it is appropriate to seek an agreement to extend the time in which to plead since the plaintiff has given the notice which is prerequisite to the entry of judgment and actual entry of the judgment is imminent.

 3. Defendant has received the ten-day notice and obtained an agreement extending the time to plead. However, defendant does not plead within the agreed time. Plaintiff may enter judgment by default without further notice as provided by Rule 237.2 and the form of agreement set forth in Rule 237.6.

 In illustrations 4 [through 6] and 5, the plaintiff has entered a valid judgment by default against the defendant and the prothonotary has entered the judgment in the docket and noted the date thereof. Thereafter, the defendant files a petition to open the judgment.

 4. The defendant files the petition to open the judgment within ten days of the date on which the prothonotary entered the judgment on the docket and seeks leave to file the answer attached to the petition. The defendant is entitled to the benefit of Rule [237.3(b)] 237.3(b)(2) by timely filing the petition and attaching an answer. Rule [237.3(b)] 237.3(b)(2) requires the court to open the judgment upon the defendant demonstrating to the court that the filing of the petition was within the ten-day period and that the answer attached to the petition states a meritorious defense.

[5. The defendant files the petition to open the judgment within ten days of the date on which the prothonotary enters the judgment on the docket and seeks leave to file the preliminary objections attached to the petition. The defendant is not entitled to the benefit of Rule 237.3(b) because, although the petition is timely filed, the rule does not provide for preliminary objections to be attached to the petition. A defendant who wishes to file preliminary objections upon the opening of a judgment must proceed pursuant to case law and meet the standards set forth in Schultz v. Erie Insurance Exchange, 505 Pa. 90, 477 A.2d 471 (1984), cited in the note to the rule.

6.] 5. The defendant files a petition to open the judgment more than ten days after the date of entry of the judgment on the docket. The petition to open is not within the scope of Rule 237.3(b) which requires that the petition be ''filed within ten days after the entry of the judgment on the docket''. The defendant must proceed pursuant to case law and meet the standards of Schultz v. Erie Insurance Exchange, [505 Pa. 90,] 477 A.2d 471 (Pa. 1984).

 Although these illustrations use the example of the entry of a judgment by default and a petition to open the judgment, they are adaptable and thus equally applicable to the entry of a judgment of non pros for failure to file a complaint and a petition to open such a judgment.

[Explanatory Comment—2001

The amendment to the Note clarifies the procedure when a defendant, upon the opening of a default judgment, intends to file preliminary objections, a pleading not encompassed by this rule. Contrary to the holding of the Commonwealth Court in Peters Township Sanitary Auth. v. American Home and Land Dev. Co., 696 A.2d 899 (Cmwlth Ct. 1997), preliminary objections are not an appropriate attachment to a petition to open a default judgment under Rule 237.3.

Clarifying amendments have been made to the 1994 Explanatory Comment.]

Explanatory Comment—2010

 The 1994 Explanatory Comment to Rule 237.3 provides several illustrations of the application of the rule. A discrepancy exists between Illustration 1 and Rule 237.1(a)(2)(ii) governing notice of praecipe to enter judgment of non pros or by default. The 1994 Explanatory Comment provides that the defendant may plead within the time of receiving the notice of praecipe plus ten days. Rule 237.1(a)(2)(ii) states that the ten-day period shall be calculated forward from the date of the mailing or delivery of the notice. The 1994 Explanatory Comment has been amended to conform with the text of Rule 237.1(a)(2)(ii).

Explanatory Comment

 Rule 237.3 governing relief from judgment of non pros or by default has been amended in two respects. Current Rule 237.3(a) requires a verified copy of a complaint or answer, which the petitioner seeks leave to file, be attached to the petition for relief. The amendment removes the requirement that the copy be verified. It was reported to the Committee that both pro se litigants and attorneys often fail to attach a verified copy. The purpose of Rule 237.3 is to give a litigant who promptly responds to the entry of a judgment under this rule the ability to prosecute or defend a case. The rule does not achieve its purpose if a litigant is barred from doing so by a technical requirement.

 The current rule was amended in 2001 to allow a party to attach a complaint or answer only to the petition for relief; the use of preliminary objections was prohibited notwithstanding the decision in Peters Township Sanitary Auth. v. American Home and Land Dev. Co., 696 A.2d 899 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1997) (holding preliminary objections are an appropriate attachment to a petition to open a default judgment under Rule 237.3). Rule 237.3 has been amended to permit the use of preliminary objections as a pleading that may be attached to a petition for relief from default judgment. By allowing the use of preliminary objections, the amendment is intended to give a defendant the same opportunity to file a responsive pleading after the entry of a default judgment that is afforded to him or her prior to the entry of a default judgment.

 Clarifying amendments have been made to the 1994 Explanatory Comment and the 2001 Explanatory Comment has been deleted.

By the Civil Procedural
Rules Committee

WILLIAM SHAW STICKMAN, IV, 
Chair

[Pa.B. Doc. No. 16-1802. Filed for public inspection October 21, 2016, 9:00 a.m.]



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