If preliminary objections are Pennsylvania's version of a motion to dismiss, think of summary judgment as the second and final off-ramp before trial. It typically comes after discovery is closed; when both sides have exchanged documents, answered interrogatories, and taken depositions. At that point, one or both sides may ask the judge to decide the case without ever going to a jury.
A motion for summary judgment (Pa.R.C.P. 1035.2) says this to the judge:
"We've done all the discovery. We've seen their evidence. We've shown ours. And when you look at everything, even giving the other side every benefit of the doubt; there's no genuine dispute about any material fact. The only question left is a legal one, and the law says I win."
In other words: there's nothing for a jury to decide. The facts aren't in dispute, only the legal conclusion. So the judge should just rule.
Summary judgment is where many cases are won and lost, and it directly connects back to everything that happened during discovery:
This phrase sounds technical, but it's actually two plain-English questions:
Summary judgment doesn't have to be all-or-nothing. The court can grant partial summary judgment: resolving some claims or issues while sending others to trial. For example, in a case with three counts (breach of contract, fraud, and unjust enrichment), the judge might grant summary judgment on the fraud count while sending the contract and unjust enrichment claims to trial.
If the court grants summary judgment in your favor, you win, the case is over (subject to appeal). If it's granted against you, you lose without a trial. The losing party can appeal to the Superior Court, but the standard of review is demanding, the appellate court reviews the same record and asks whether the trial judge got the law right, viewing the facts in the light most favorable to the losing party.
The case goes to trial. Denial of summary judgment usually means the judge found enough of a factual dispute that a jury needs to sort it out. This is often the point where serious settlement negotiations begin because both sides now know they're going to trial, and trials are expensive and unpredictable.
The Connection Between Discovery and Summary Judgment
Everything in discovery leads to this moment. The documents you produced (or didn't), the answers you gave in interrogatories, what you said at your deposition, whether you responded to requests for admissions, all of it becomes the evidence the judge examines. Discovery isn't busywork. It's building (or defending against) a summary judgment motion. Clients who take discovery seriously put themselves in a position to win at this stage. Clients who treat it as a nuisance often find themselves on the wrong end of it.
Statutory content on this page was last verified against Pennsylvania statutes (42 Pa.C.S.) and Rules of Civil Procedure: February 2026. If you are reading this significantly after that date, confirm key provisions with current statute text or contact our office.
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