J-A20028-22
2022 PA Super 186
FLETCHER GRADY IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF PENNSYLVANIA
Appellee
v.
BRIAN NELSON AND LISA ANN NELSON
APPEAL OF: BRIAN NELSON
Appellant No. 2115 EDA 2021
Appeal from the Order Entered September 10, 2021
In the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County
Civil Division at No: 2017-09268
BEFORE: STABILE, J., DUBOW, J. and PELLEGRINI, J.*
OPINION BY STABILE, J.: FILED OCTOBER 21, 2022
In this personal injury action, Appellant, Brian Nelson, appeals from an
order denying a petition to strike and/or open a default judgment entered
against him in the amount of $1,000,000.00. We conclude that Appellant was
entitled to have the judgment stricken, as two fatal defects existed on the face
of the record as of the date of judgment. There is conclusive evidence that
Appellee, Fletcher Grady, served the complaint and judgment notices on a
non-existent address, thus depriving Appellant of notice that this action was
pending against him. Appellee’s ten-day notice of intent to enter a default
judgment also did not substantially comply with the language required under
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* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
J-A20028-22
Pa.R.Civ.P. 237.5 and 237.1. Accordingly, we reverse the order denying
Appellant’s petition to strike and remand for further proceedings.
This action rests upon the following allegations. James Cannavo was a
lessee in a nonresidential property owned by Appellant in West Chester,
Pennsylvania. On November 1, 2015, while inside the property, Cannavo shot
Appellee, causing serious internal injuries. Cannavo was subsequently
convicted of attempted murder and is serving a sentence of 25-50 years’
imprisonment. It does not appear that Appellant was at the property at the
time of the shooting. Appellee alleges that Appellant was negligent for leasing
the property to Cannavo, whom Appellant knew was a dangerous person who
drank, abused substances, and engaged in unlawful activities.
The record, as of the date judgment was entered against Appellant,
provides the following.
On September 28, 2017, Appellee commenced this action via a writ of
summons against Appellant and his wife, Lisa Ann Nelson.1 The record
includes a sheriff service form directing the Sheriff to serve Appellant and his
wife with the writ of summons at “1075 Price Street” in West Chester. The
form listed two alternate addresses in West Chester for service, 510 High
Street and 1234 West Chester Pike (Appellant’s business address). On
October 24, 2017, a deputy sheriff attempted to serve Appellant and his wife
at 1075 Price Street but was unable to make service. On the service form
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1 Lisa Ann Nelson was later dismissed from this action.
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relating to Appellant, the deputy sheriff wrote, “Price St. address does not
exist.” On the service form relating to Appellant’s wife, the deputy wrote, “No
such number on Price St. No such address found on Chescoviews. Better
address needed.”
The deputy telephoned Appellant and left a voice message. The
following day, the deputy served the writ of summons on Appellant at a
different address, 706 East Gay Street in West Chester.2
On July 31, 2018, Appellee filed a complaint alleging that Cannavo shot
Appellee at 1075 Price Street, and that Appellant was liable for negligence in
leasing the premises at 1075 Price Street to Cannavo. The complaint alleged
that Appellant resided at 1075 Price Street. The affidavit of service averred
that counsel for Appellee served the complaint on Appellant by regular mail
on July 31, 2018. Attached to the affidavit was a letter from counsel enclosing
the complaint, endorsed with a notice to plead, and addressed to Appellant at
1075 Price Street.
On August 27, 2018, counsel for Appellee mailed Appellant a notice of
intent to enter a default judgment in ten days due to Appellant’s failure to file
an answer to the complaint. The address on the notice of intent was 1075
Price Street. The first sentence of the notice stated, “You are in default
because you have failed to take action required of you in this case.” This
language was different from the text required by the applicable rule of civil
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2In his subsequent petition to strike the judgment, Appellant averred that this
address was a Wawa convenience store in West Chester.
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procedure that provides, “You are in default because you have failed to enter
a written appearance personally or by attorney and file in writing with the
court your defenses or objections to the claims set forth against you.”
Pa.R.Civ.P. 237.5.
On September 7, 2018, Appellee filed a praecipe for entry of default
judgment against Appellant. On the same date, Appellee filed a certification
identifying Appellant’s address as 1075 Price Street. The prothonotary
entered judgment in favor of Appellee and against Appellant and sent a
Pa.R.Civ.P. 236 notice of the default judgment to 1075 Price Street. This
notice, as well as all other notices sent by the prothonotary to the Price Street
address, were returned to the prothonotary’s office as undeliverable.
Following entry of judgment, the court scheduled an assessment of damages
hearing for March 15, 2019. On March 22, 2019, the court entered a verdict
for Appellee in the amount of $1,000,000.00.
Over two years later, on June 21, 2021, Appellee served Appellant with
a notice of deposition in aid of execution of judgment for the first time at
Appellant’s business address, 1234 West Chester Pike. Appellant retained
counsel3 and filed a petition to strike or open judgment on July 21, 2021.
Appellee filed a timely answer to the petition.
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3It does not appear from the record that Appellant retained counsel until this
point in the case.
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On September 10, 2021, the court entered an order denying Appellant’s
petition to strike or open judgment. In relevant part, the order stated, “A
petition to strike a default judgment will only be granted where there is a fatal
defect that is apparent from the face of the record. . . . We find no such
defect.” Order, 9/10/21 at n.1 (citation omitted). Appellant filed a motion for
reconsideration, which the court denied on October 4, 2021.
On October 7, 2021, Appellant filed a timely appeal to this Court. Both
Appellant and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
Notably, the trial court stated in its Rule 1925 opinion:
Upon further examination, the trial Court believes it erred in not
striking the judgement [sic]. The gist of [Appellant’s] Petition is
that he did not receive service of the Complaint, notices for entry
of default judgment or trial notices addressed to him at 1075 Price
Street, West Chester, PA 19320. An examination of the record
reflects that in an attempt to serve [Appellant], the Office of the
Chester County Sheriff filed an Affidavit of Service Return on
October 11, 2017 that the 1075 Price Street address does not exist
and that alternative addresses for service on [Appellant] should
be 510 South High Street, West Chester, PA or 1234 West Chester
Pike, West Chester, PA. Nonetheless, counsel for [Appellee]
continued service of all documents on [Appellant] at the 1075
Price Street address.
In addition, all the trial notices sent by the trial Court to
[Appellant] at the 1075 Price Street address were returned by the
Post Office with the label “Return to Sender-No Such Number
Unable to Forward.” As such, it appears that there is a fatal defect
in all service on [Appellant] subsequent to the service of the initial
Writ and associated documents.
Opinion, 12/6/21, at 2-3 (footnote omitted).
Appellant raises the following issues in this appeal:
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1. Should the Court remand this matter to the trial court for entry
of an amended order consistent with the trial court’s Rule 1925
opinion?
2. Did the trial court abuse its discretion or commit an error of law
when it denied [Appellant’s] Petition to Strike Off or Open Default
(“Petition”), where a substantial defect in the procedures in this
case, and a breakdown of the judicial system, resulted in entry of
a $1 million judgment against [Appellant] without notice or any
other basic due process?
3. Did the trial court abuse its discretion or commit an error of law
in denying [Appellant’s] Petition to Strike?
4. Did the trial court abuse its discretion or commit an error of law
in denying [Appellant’s] Petition to Open?
Appellant’s Brief at 4-5. Since we find the third issue dispositive, we limit our
analysis to that issue.
An appeal regarding a petition to strike a default judgment
implicates the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure. Issues
regarding the operation of procedural rules of court present us
with questions of law. Therefore, our standard of review is de
novo and our scope of review is plenary.
A petition to strike a judgment is a common law proceeding which
operates as a demurrer to the record. A petition to strike a
judgment may be granted only for a fatal defect or irregularity
appearing on the face of the record. [A] petition to strike is not a
chance to review the merits of the allegations of a complaint.
Rather, a petition to strike is aimed at defects that affect the
validity of the judgment and that entitle the petitioner, as a matter
of law, to relief. A fatal defect on the face of the record denies
the prothonotary the authority to enter judgment. When a
prothonotary enters judgment without authority, that judgment is
void ab initio. When deciding if there are fatal defects on the face
of the record for the purposes of a petition to strike a [default]
judgment, a court may only look at what was in the record when
the judgment was entered.
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Penn National Mutual Casualty Insurance Company v. Phillips, 276
A.3d 268, 273-74 (Pa. Super. 2022) (citations and indentations omitted).
Further, “[w]here a fatal defect or irregularity is apparent from the face of the
record, the prothonotary will be held to have lacked the authority to enter [a]
default judgment and the default judgment will be considered void.” Keller
v. Mey, 67 A.3d 1, 4 (Pa. Super. 2013). A litigant may seek to strike a void
judgment at any time. Domus, Inc. v. Signature Building Systems of Pa,
LLC, 252 A.3d 628, 640 (Pa. 2021).
In this case, a fatal defect existed on the face of the record at the time
of entry of judgment as evidenced by the sheriff’s return of service: the use
of a non-existent address, 1075 Price Street, for service of the complaint and
judgment notices. One of the fundamental objectives of the Rules of Civil
Procedure is to ensure that litigants receive proper notice of all proceedings.
The duty to make proper service begins with service of original process.
Sharp v. Valley Forge Medical Center and Heart Hospital, Inc., 221 A.2d
185, 187 (Pa. 1966) (rules relating to service of original process “must be
strictly followed”). This duty continues throughout all stages of the case.
Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 440 provides, “Copies of all legal papers
other than original process filed in an action or served upon any party to an
action shall be served upon every other party to the action.” Pa.R.Civ.P.
440(a)(1). When there is no attorney of record for the defendant,4 “service
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4Again, it appears Appellant did not have counsel in this case until July 2021,
when he filed his petition to strike or open judgment. See n. 3.
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shall be made by handing a copy to the party or by mailing a copy to or leaving
a copy for the party at the address endorsed on an appearance or prior
pleading or the residence or place of business of the party, or by transmitting
a copy by facsimile[.]” Id. If the plaintiff seeks a default judgment due to
the defendant’s failure to answer the complaint, the plaintiff must “mail[] or
deliver[]” a written notice of intent to enter judgment to the defendant at least
ten days before filing a praecipe for entry of judgment. Pa.R.Civ.P.
237.1(a)(2). Further, when the plaintiff files the praecipe, he must certify
that he served the defendant with the ten-day notice and attach a copy of the
notice to the praecipe. Pa.R.Civ.P. 237.1(a)(2)-(4). Finally, the prothonotary
must mail all orders and notices of judgment to the defendant. Pa.R.Civ.P.
236(a)(2).
Notices required under the Rules are ineffective if they are sent to an
incorrect address. For example, in Brown v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea
Co., 460 A.2d 773 (Pa. Super. 1983), the plaintiff/appellee sent a ten-day
notice of intent to enter default judgment to an address from which the
defendant/appellant had moved more than one year prior and from which mail
was no longer forwarded to the defendant. We held that the trial court abused
its discretion in refusing to open judgment, reasoning that “appellant never
received any notice of appellee’s intention to enter default judgment, and . . .
this fact was not appellant’s but appellee’s fault.” Id. at 776.
Here, Appellee instructed the deputy sheriff to serve original process on
Appellant at 1075 Price Street. The deputy’s return of service conclusively
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establishes that he was unable to make service at 1075 Price Street because
this address “does not exist”. The deputy ultimately served Appellant with
original process at a different address. Subsequently, however, Appellee
mailed the complaint and ten-day notice of intent to enter a default judgment
to 1075 Price Street, an address which the sheriff’s return unequivocally states
does not exist. Moreover, the prothonotary likewise sent the Rule 236 notice
of the default judgment to 1075 Price Street. These multiple errors in service
of essential documents deprived Appellant of notice of the proceedings and
required the trial court to strike the judgment against him.
Appellee contends that the sheriff’s return of service did not conclusively
establish that 1075 Price Street was an incorrect address. According to
Appellee, the trial court had the discretion to determine what weight, if any,
to give to the return, and the court acted within its discretion by deciding not
to accept the return as true.
We disagree with Appellee’s argument in light of our Supreme Court’s
analysis in Hollinger v. Hollinger, 206 A.2d 1 (Pa. 1965). Hollinger held
that “in the absence of fraud, the return of service of a sheriff, which is full
and complete on its face, is conclusive and immune from attack by extrinsic
evidence.” Anzalone v. Vormack, 718 A.2d 1246, 1248 (Pa. Super. 1998)
(analyzing Hollinger). Hollinger defined the “rule of conclusiveness” as
follows:
The rule of conclusiveness of a return of service of process is
based upon the presumption that a sheriff, acting in the course of
his official duties, acts with propriety and, therefore, when the
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sheriff in the course of such official duties makes a statement, by
way of an official return, such statement is given conclusive effect.
However, both logic and common sense restrict the conclusive
nature of a sheriff’s return only to facts stated in the return of
which the sheriff presumptively has personal knowledge, such as
when and where the writ was served; when, in his official return,
the sheriff states that he served a writ at a certain time and at a
certain place, such facts are known to the sheriff personally and
should be given conclusive effect. However, the immutability of a
return should not extend (a) to facts stated to the return of which
the sheriff cannot be expected to have personal knowledge and
which are based upon information obtained through hearsay or
statements made by third persons or (b) to conclusions based
upon facts known to the sheriff only through statements made by
others. When a sheriff’s return states that a certain place is the
residence or dwelling house of the defendant, such statement is
not a matter ordinarily within the personal knowledge of the
sheriff but only a statement based upon that which he has been
told by other persons, i.e., he had been instructed by a third
person to make service at a certain place which he is told is the
residence or dwelling house of the defendant. No sound reason
exists for giving a conclusive effect to a statement or conclusion
which arises not from the sheriff’s own personal knowledge or
observation but from information given him by other persons. In
the case at bar, no attack is permissible upon the statements in
the sheriff’s return that he served this writ at a certain specified
time at [a specified address], but the rule does not preclude an
attack upon the statement in the return that [a specified address
at which service was made], was the dwelling house or residence
of Rita Hollinger.
Id., 206 A.2d at 3–4 (emphasis in original).
Anzalone provides a helpful application of these principles. There, a
constable wrote in a return of service that service of process took place at
“1:45 p.m.” on “7–6–96” upon the defendant’s “girlfriend” (Stacy Fuller) at
the “Sunny Hill Apts, at poolside, Beaver Falls, [Beaver County,] PA”. The
caption of the case listed the defendant’s address as “15 Sunnyhill Drive,
Beaver Falls, PA 15010.” This Court observed that under Hollinger,
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statements in a return of service listing when and where a
complaint is delivered constitute matters which are within the
personal knowledge of the process server and not subject to
attack. This renders the date, time and place service was made
by Constable Ehrenberg conclusive and immune from assault.
However, with regard to the status of the person to whom service
was made being a “girlfriend” named “Stacy Fuller” and the
defendant’s address being “15 Sunnyhill Drive, Beaver Falls, PA”,
these are matters which the constable presumptively had no
personal knowledge but learned via third party disclosure. As
such, the defendant was not precluded from attacking such
representations.
Id., 718 A.2d at 1249.5
In this case, Appellee instructed the sheriff to serve Appellant and his
wife at 1075 Price Street. The returns of service indicate that a deputy sheriff
attempted to make service at 1075 Price Street on October 24, 2017 but was
unable to do so because this address did not exist. On the return of service
relating to Appellant, the deputy wrote that the “[1075] Price St. address does
not exist.” On the service form relating to Appellant’s wife, the deputy wrote,
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5 The decisions cited in Appellee’s brief follow the same principle that the
sheriff’s return is conclusive as to matters within the personal knowledge of
the sheriff but is not conclusive as to matters that fall outside his personal
knowledge. See Mischenko v. Gowton, 453 A.2d 658, 659 (Pa. Super.
1982) (plurality opinion) (sheriff’s return of service which is full and complete
on its face is conclusive and immune from attack by extrinsic evidence, but
this rule does not extend to facts not within personal knowledge of the sheriff,
such as whether the place at which sheriff served process was defendant’s
residence); Quatrochi v. Gaiters, 380 A.2d 404, 407 (Pa. Super. 1977) (in
petition to open default judgment, defendant may attack validity of sheriff’s
return when he alleges that he did not reside at place where sheriff effected
service; defendant’s residence is not fact of which sheriff presumptively has
personal knowledge, and he must ordinarily rely upon hearsay information
supplied by third parties in determining defendant’s residence).
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“No such number on Price St. . . .” Since the deputy himself visited Price
Street and attempted to locate this address, he presumptively gained personal
knowledge that it was not an actual address. He did not merely learn this
detail through hearsay or third-party statements. Thus, like the date, time
and place details in Anzalone, the deputy’s finding that the address of 1075
Price Street did not exist was “conclusive and immune from assault.” Id., 718
A.2d at 1249. Appellee therefore, is not correct in asserting that the court
was free to give whatever weight (including none) it chose to the sheriff’s
return that related 1075 Price Street does not exist. The return was conclusive
on this fact.
During oral argument, counsel for Appellee asserted that if we were
inclined to grant relief to Appellant, the most we could do is remand for further
evidentiary proceedings in accordance with Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.7 (“Procedure
After Issuance Of Rule To Show Cause”).6 Appellee arguably waived this
argument because there is no reference to Rule 206.7 or its procedures in
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6 Rule 206.7(c) provides that when an answer is filed to a petition that raises
disputed issues of material fact,
the petitioner may take depositions on those issues, or such other
discovery as the court allows, within the time set forth in the order
of the court. If the petitioner does not do so, the petition shall be
decided on petition and answer and all averments of fact
responsive to the petition and properly pleaded in the answer shall
be deemed admitted for the purpose of this subdivision.
Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.7(c). The respondent to the petition may also take
depositions or such other discovery as the court allows. Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.7(d).
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Appellee’s brief. Even if Appellee preserved this argument, Rule 206.7 does
not apply to this case for two reasons. First, Rule 206.7 provides procedures
to follow after (1) a petition is filed and (2) the court issues a rule to show
cause. Our review of the record and docket entries reflects that the court did
not issue a rule to show cause in this case. Second, there should not be a
rule to show cause or any evidentiary proceeding when, as here, the court
receives a meritorious petition to strike. In such cases, the court decides the
petition solely on the record without a rule to show cause, discovery or
evidentiary proceedings. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 206.4(a)(2) (“A judgment shall be
stricken without the issuance of a rule to show cause when there is a defect
on the face of the record that constitutes a ground for striking a default
judgment”); see also Penn National, 276 A.3d at 273-74 (petition to strike
is a “demurrer to the record” in which the court examines whether “a fatal
defect or irregularity appearing on the face of the record”). Since the record
establishes that Appellant’s petition to strike was meritorious, further
evidentiary proceedings in this case were neither necessary nor permissible.
Before concluding this subject, we find it noteworthy that after Appellee
entered judgment and obtained an assessment of damages of $1,000,000.00,
he served discovery requests in aid of execution on Appellant at Appellant’s
business address (1234 West Chester Pike) instead of 1075 Price Street. This
fact suggests that Appellee elected to use the non-existent address of 1075
Price Street for service despite having actual knowledge that 1234 West
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Chester Pike was a proper address for Appellant. If this actually was the case,
then we note our disapproval of such tactics, as they suggest bad faith and an
abuse of the rules governing service of legal documents.
We hold that the trial court erred by failing to strike the judgment
against Appellant due to service of all documents subsequent to the writ of
summons on a non-existent address. This, however, does not conclude our
analysis, because we hold that the denial of the petition to strike was
erroneous for a second, independent reason: Appellee’s use of a defective ten-
day notice of intent to take a default judgment.
Preliminarily, we observe that Appellant did not raise any claim in the
trial court or in his appellate briefing that the text of the ten-day notice was
defective. The first time that Appellant objected to the text of Appellee’s ten-
day notice was during oral argument. Nevertheless, we recently held in a
non-precedential decision that when the defendant merely requests the trial
court to open a default judgment, he may still request on appeal that this
Court strike the judgment due to the plaintiff’s use of a defective ten-day
notice of intent to enter default judgment. Rooks v. Walker, 268 A.3d 447,
2021 WL 5445853, *2 (Pa. Super., Nov. 22, 2021) (memorandum). As
support, we cited the following passage from Oswald v. WB Pub. Square
Assocs., LLC, 80 A.3d 790 (Pa. Super. 2013):
Appellant’s original petition challenging Appellee’s default
judgment exclusively discussed the issue of opening the default
judgment. Generally, this Court will decline to address issues not
first raised before the trial court. However, we have long held that
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a litigant may seek to strike a void judgment at any time. This
Court also permits litigants to attack allegedly void decrees for the
first time on appeal. Consequently, we will address the merits of
Appellant’s first issue regarding a petition to strike default
judgment.
Id. at 793 (citations omitted). We find Rooks persuasive,7 so we will address
the merits of Appellant’s objection to the ten-day notice.
The Rules of Civil Procedure prohibit the prothonotary from entering
default judgment against a party “unless the praecipe for entry includes a
certification that a written notice of intention filed with the praecipe was
mailed or delivered . . . after the failure to plead to a complaint and at least
ten days prior to the date of the filing of the praecipe to the party against
whom judgment is to be entered and to the party’s attorney of record, if any.”
Pa.R.Civ.P. 237.1(a)(2)(ii). Furthermore, this notice must “substantially”
comply with the language set forth in Rule 237.5, which provides in relevant
part, “You are in default because you have failed to enter a written appearance
personally or by attorney and file in writing with the court your defenses or
objections to the claims set forth against you.” Pa.R.Civ.P. 237.5.
The ten-day notice sent in this case provided in relevant part, “You are
in default because you have failed [to] take action required of you in this
case.” We held in Penn National and Oswald that ten-day notices containing
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7See Pa.R.A.P. 126(b) (unpublished non-precedential memorandum decisions
of Superior Court filed after May 1, 2019 may be cited for their persuasive
value).
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precisely this same language were defective because they did not substantially
comply with Rule 237.5. The Penn National court reasoned:
In Oswald, . . . the plaintiff initiated an action against the
defendant by filing a complaint with proper service. After the
defendant failed to respond to the complaint, the plaintiff sent the
defendant notice of her intention to file a praecipe for default
judgment. The default judgment notice provided in Oswald
stated, in relevant part, “You are in default because you have
failed to take action required of you in this case.” Id. at 796
(emphasis omitted). This Court found that this language was
‘deficient’ since the notice failed to state “specific reasons why the
defendant is in default.” Id. (quoting City of Philadelphia v.
David J. Lane Advertising, Inc., 33 A.3d 674, 679 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2011)). Thus, this Court concluded the notice of default judgment
rendered the notice ‘defective on its face,’ as the document was
‘not “substantially” in the form required by Rule 237.5.’ Oswald,
80 A.3d at 796.
In so holding, this Court adopted the reasoning of the
Commonwealth Court in David J. Lane Advertising, Inc.,
wherein the court explained:
The general ‘failed to take action required of you in
this case’ language is consistent with the version of
the form in Rule 237.5 predating a 1994 amendment
(Old Form Notice). In the 1994 amendment, which
became effective on July 1, 1995, the Supreme Court
chose to remove this general language in the Old Form
Notice and to substitute the more specific language in
the current form—’failed to enter a written
appearance personally or by attorney and file in
writing with the court your defenses or objections to
the claims set forth against you.’ Indeed, it appears
from the explanatory comment to the rule that the
specific purpose of the 1994 amendment was to add
this more specific language to the form. The
explanatory comment notes that the purpose of the
modification is to track the language set forth in
Pa.R.C.P. [] 1018.1 for a notice to plead, which
language expressly directs the defendant to defend by
entering an appearance (either personally or by
attorney) and by filing with the court in writing
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defenses or objections to the claims in the complaint.
The comment to Rule 237.5 further provides: ‘Since
the notice will in many cases be sent to an as yet
unrepresented defendant, repetition of the notice to
defend, in modified form helps to stimulate action and
stem the tide of petitions to open default judgments.’
In adopting the revision to the form, then, the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court determined that before
entering judgment by default (which is no insignificant
matter), it was important to notify a defendant
specifically what it failed to do (i.e., why it was in
default) by tracking the language in the earlier-issued
notice to defend. Rather than informing a defendant
that he merely ‘failed to take action required by you
in this case,’ a more specific notice of why the
defendant was in default that tracks the earlier notice
to defend serves as a reminder to the defendant in
many cases unrepresented at that point, of the
defendant’s specific pleading obligations.
Id. at 678–79 (internal citations and emphasis omitted).
Id. at 278. Penn National followed Oswald’s reasoning and held that the
ten-day notice was “defective on its face because it did not use [or
substantially comply with] the required language set forth in Rule 237.5.” Id.
at 278-79 (citing Rooks). As a result, Penn National held that the notice
“on its face . . . violated Rule 237.1(a)(2). Thus, the Prothonotary was not
authorized to enter the default judgment, and the judgment against [the
defendant] was void ab initio. [Accordingly,] the court should have granted
the petition to strike the default judgment.” Id. at 279.
The ten-day notice in this case recited the same language as the text
found erroneous in Penn National and Oswald. Therefore, these decisions
require us to find the ten-day notice herein defective on its face, thus providing
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yet another reason why Appellant is entitled to have the judgment against him
stricken.
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the order denying Appellant’s
petition to strike the judgment and remand for further proceedings. Since we
hold that the judgment must be stricken, it is unnecessary for us to decide
the other issues raised by Appellant, including his requests to open the
judgment and to remand this case for an amended order.
Order reversed. Case remanded for further proceedings. Jurisdiction
relinquished.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 10/21/2022
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