Opinion by
Beaver, J.,The trial in the court below was in an action of trespass for an illegal distraint for rent alleged to be in arrear, under the provisions of the act of March 21, 1772.
The plaintiffs below in their statement, acknowledging themselves as the tenants of one E. W. Senft, allege that he “then and there wrongfully and injuriously seized, took, and distrained certain goods and chattels, to wit, one black horse of the plaintiffs, then found being in and upon the said premises, with the appurtenances, of the value of one hundred and forty dollars, and sold said .black horse on the 8th day of September 1908, as such distress as aforesaid, by color of said act, for certain rent, to wit, the sum of fifty dollars, then and there pretended by plaintiffs’ landlord, E. W. Senft, to be in arrear and due said E. W. Senft, for the said demised premises, with the appurtenances; whereas at the time of the making of the said distress and sale, as aforesaid, no rent was in arrear or due to the defendant, for or in respect of said premises, with the appurtenances.”
The third section of the Act of March 21, 1772, 1 Sm. L. 370, provides: “That in case any distress and sale shall be made by yirtue of this act, for rent pretended to be in' arrear and due, when in truth no rent shall appear to be in arrear or due to the person or persons distraining or to him or them, in whose name or names, or right, such distress shall be taken as aforesaid, that then the owner of such goods and chattels distrained and sold as aforesaid, his executors or administrators, shall and may, by action of trespass, or upon the case, to be brought against the *521person or persons so distraining, any or either of them, his or their executors or administrators, recover double the value of the goods or chattels so distrained and sold, together with full costs of suit.”
The distinct allegation of the plaintiffs was that at the time of the distress complained of there was no rent due said landlord and that, therefore, the distress was not only illegal, but that in an action of trespass they were entitled to recover double the value of the goods or chattels dis-trained and sold, together with costs.
The principal question involved in the case was one of fact — Was any rent due from the plaintiffs to their landlord at the time when the defendant, as the bailiff of the landlord, made the distress complained of?
The testimony, the admission of, and the refusal to strike which from the record, is complained of in the first, second, third, fourth and sixth specifications of error, relates to this question. The testimony, as it seems to us, was relevant and material and was properly admitted. It went directly to the issue involved and tended to show that the plaintiffs held the demised premises for a period of six months after the original lease made to them by Hershey, the former owner, expired, the same having been extended for six months, by an understanding between Hershey’s agent who sold the property to Senft, the landlord, which was communicated to the tenants. The landlord, it is true, endeavored to establish a direct lease or at least a verbal understanding between him and his tenants in regard to their continued occupancy of the premises after April 1, 1908, when the lease with their former landlord expired. This, however, was denied by the plaintiffs, and the question depended to a large extent upon the testimony of P. H. Hershey, the attorney in fact of the previous owner, who was a competent witness 'and whose testimony was relevant and material to the-issue.
The fifth assignment of error relates to the refusal of the court to strike from the record the statement made by *522the court of which complaint is made: "Well, he took it away [a blanket] and after that he is' responsible for it, unless he had a right to take it. The man lost his blanket, and he hag a right to recover, unless you show a defense,” and the testimony relating thereto. Whether this testimony was properly admitted and the statement of the court growing thereout was proper is of little practical value, because in the answer to the defendant’s second and third points the jury were not allowed to consider the question of the value of halter and blanket, for which the plaintiffs claim in their statement. These points and their answers were as follows: "Second. If the jury find from the evidence that the halter and blanket were not sold, the plaintiffs cannot recover, the value of such halter and blanket. By the Court: We answer this point as follows: This point is affirmed. Third. Even if the jury find that the halter and blanket were sold by the defendant, the plaintiff cannot recover in this suit, because the halter and blanket were not a part of the distress and, consequently, cannot be recovered for in this suit. By the Court: We .answer this point as follows: This point is affirmed.” The assignment may, therefore, be disregarded.
The seventh assignment relates to a paragraph in the charge of the court which is simply a statement of the act under which the plaintiffs claim and the amount of damages to which they are entitled thereunder, which seems to us to be entirely proper, so far as it goes, and is in accordance with our case Of Thomas v. Gibbons, 21 Pa. Superior Ct. 635. There is no distinct affirmance in the plaintiffs’ statement that they seek to recover double damages under the act referred to, although the act is specifically referred to in the statement, and the damages are evidently placed at double the amount of the value of the property sold, but this question was not raised in the court below and is not complained of in any of the assignments of error. We do not, therefore, consider the failure of the plaintiffs to specifically claim the measure *523of damages provided for in the statute, as is intimated in Thomas v. Gibbons, 21 Pa. Superior Ct. 635, to be necessary. There is, however, no serious denial of justice herein, because, as is said in the case just cited: “Such a distress, however, being wholly without authority, is a trespass throughout, and the tenant is not confined to an action on the statute, but may sue at common law for the damages actually sustained. ... In such action, the landlord’s liability for exemplary damages, as in all cases of trespass, depends on the circumstances, and is to be determined by the jury, under proper instructions by the court.”
The eighth assignment of error relates to the refusal by the court of the defendant’s fourth point, which was: “If the jury find from the evidence that the plaintiffs had notice of the distress and that they did not sue out a writ of replevin, the plaintiffs have no standing in a suit of trespass, and the verdict must be for the defendant.”. The court answered this point: “This point is not correct and is refused.” T,he action of trespass is specially set forth in the provisions of the act of 1772 already quoted as the proper remedy and we, therefore, see no error in the answer of the court to this point.
The ninth and tenth specifications of error relate to the defendant’s fifth and sixth points which requested binding instructions for the defendant, and the eleventh to a motion for judgment non obstante veredicto, which were refused. The real question involved being essentially one of fact, these points and motion were properly refused.
The twelfth assigns the refusal of the court to grant a new trial, which is not the subject of an assignment of error. The record shows no motion to strike off said refusal, upon which the question could be properly raised.
Taking the case as a whole and viewing it from the different assignments of error as presented, we see no reversible error, and the assignments are, therefore, all dismissed.
Judgment affirmed.