Current through Register Vol. 54, No. 44, November 2, 2024
A.
(1)
Execution of a judgment for the payment of money rendered by a magisterial
district judge may be ordered by a magisterial district judge in whose office
the judgment was rendered or entered, provided the plaintiff files in that
office
(a) not before the expiration of 30
days from the date the judgment is entered by the magisterial district judge,
and
(b) within five years of that
date, a request for an order of execution.
(2) The magisterial district judge in whose
office the judgment was rendered or entered shall accept all timely requests
for an order of execution on that judgment, including when the location of the
property to be levied upon is located outside the county of the magisterial
district where the judgment was rendered or entered.
B. The request form shall be attached to the
order, return and other matters required by these rules.
C. The plaintiff may enter the judgment, for
the purpose of requesting an order of execution thereon, in an office of a
magisterial district judge other than that in which it was rendered only if
levy is to be made outside the county in which the judgment was rendered and
the office in which the judgment is entered for execution is that of the
magisterial district judge whose magisterial district is situated in the county
in which levy is to be made.
The plaintiff may enter the judgment in such other office by
filing therein a copy of the record of the proceedings containing the judgment,
certified to be a true copy by the magisterial district judge in whose existing
office the judgment was rendered or by any other official custodian of the
record.
D.
(1) The plaintiff may enter the judgment in
the court of common pleas in any county or the Philadelphia Municipal Court.
When so entered, the indexing, revival and execution of the judgment shall be
in accordance with procedures applicable in the court of common pleas or the
Philadelphia Municipal Court.
(2)
The judgment may be entered in the court of common pleas or the Philadelphia
Municipal Court by filing with the prothonotary or Philadelphia Municipal Court
Administrator a copy of the record of the proceedings containing the judgment,
certified to be a true copy by the magisterial district judge in whose office
the judgment was rendered or by any other official custodian of the
record.
(3) The judgment may be
entered in the court of common pleas or the Philadelphia Municipal Court after
30 days from the date the judgment is entered by the magisterial district
judge. The judgment may not be entered in the court of common pleas or the
Philadelphia Municipal Court after five years from the date the judgment is
entered by the magisterial district judge.
(4)
(a)
Within 14 days of entering the judgment in the court of common pleas or the
Philadelphia Municipal Court, the plaintiff shall file satisfactory proof of
the entry of judgment with the magisterial district court that entered the
judgment, and the magisterial district court shall vacate the judgment from its
docket.
(b) If after 14 days of
entering the judgment in the court of common pleas or the Philadelphia
Municipal Court, the plaintiff fails to comply with subparagraph 4(a) of this
rule, the defendant may file such proof with the magisterial district court
that entered the judgment, and the magisterial district court shall vacate the
judgment from its docket.
(5) Except as provided in subparagraphs D(4)
and D(6) of this rule, once the judgment is entered in the court of common
pleas or the Philadelphia Municipal Court all further process must come from
that court and no further process may be issued by the magisterial district
judge.
(6) The magisterial district
judge shall enter satisfaction on the docket of the magisterial district court
proceedings upon the filing by any party in interest of a certified copy of the
docket entries of the court of common pleas or the Philadelphia Municipal Court
showing the judgment and satisfaction have been entered in that
court.
E.
(1) As used in this rule, a judgment marked
"expired" is a judgment that cannot be satisfied, revived, or vacated because
the five-year period designated in Rule 402 has elapsed.
(2) If the plaintiff does not request an
order of execution in a magisterial district court or enter the judgment in a
court of common pleas or the Philadelphia Municipal Court within five years of
the date the judgment was entered by the magisterial district judge, then the
judgment shall be marked expired.