This is a consolidated appeal from two orders issued in a dispute over the enforcement of a support agreement. The first order was in favor of the former wife, Mary C. Hollman (hereinafter “Mary”), holding that the pension funds of the former husband, Wade Power Hollman (hereinafter “Wade”), could be attached to enforce the support agreement. The second order was in Wade’s favor, holding *294that this Court’s decision in Schmitz v. Schmitz, 305 Pa.Super. 328, 451 A.2d 555 (1982) forbids such attachment of pension funds since the parties were no longer married. We find that Schmitz governs the case before us and accordingly, we vacate the first order and affirm the second.
Factual and Procedural History
Mary and Wade entered into a support agreement on March 3, 1969, which provided that Wade was to pay Mary the fixed sum of $300.00 monthly. The parties became divorced shortly thereafter in May of 1969. Wade made these payments consistently until November of 1978, at which time they ceased. A default judgment was then entered against Wade for the missed payments in the amount of $1,800. Consequently, a writ of execution was issued and served on U.S. Steel and Carnegie Pension Funds to attach the pension benefits in the amount of $1,661.69 per month being received by Wade. However, Wade claimed an exemption from attachment on the basis that the court was unable to enforce a support agreement as opposed to a court-imposed support order. The court below dismissed this claim for an exemption from attachment on June 4, 1981.1 Wade appealed from this order.
Subsequently, the payments still not made, Mary brought a second action in equity to enforce the separation agreement. On February 23, 1982, the court below entered an order directing Wade to make the monthly payments to Mary pursuant to the support agreement. The court also directed that judgment be entered on the arrearages that had accrued since the first action. A second attachment was then made against Wade’s pension benefits. At this point, the trustees of the pension plan, as garnishee, questioned the attachability of the pension funds.
*295Acting in a two-judge en banc panel,2 the court below, on December 22, 1982, ordered the dismissal with prejudice of the judgment of garnishment of the pension funds. As noted above, this decision was based on Schmitz, supra. Appeal was taken from this order by Mary.
Analysis
The issue before us is: Whether pension payments of a former spouse can be attached to satisfy a judgment entered against him for arrearages in payments due to his former wife under a support agreement?
We begin our analysis by noting that 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8124(b) sets forth:
(b) Retirement funds and accounts.—
(1) Except as provided in paragraph (2), the following money or other property of the judgment debtor shall be exempt from attachment or execution on a judgment:
(vii) Any pension or annuity, whether by way of a gratuity or otherwise, granted or paid by any private corporation or employer to a retired employee under a plan or contract which provides that the pension or annuity shall not be assignable.
Applying this language to the facts before us, there is no denying that the pension fund here involved is not assignable and, therefore, appears to be exempt from attachment or execution.
As noted above, the en banc court below relied on Schmitz in support of its order dismissing the judgment of garnishment of the pension funds. The Schmitz case involved the attempted garnishment of the cash surrender *296value of life insurance policies to satisfy arrearages in payments owed under a support agreement. The facts in Schmitz vary from those before us in only one particular. Schmitz involved 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8124(c) — the insurance exemption — and not, as here, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8124(b)(1)(vii)— the pension exemption. This sole difference in no way renders the holding of Schmitz inapplicable to the case before us.
The Schmitz Court went on to state that since the parties were divorced, the ex-wife was a creditor and no marital support exception to the exemption was applicable:
In the instant case we do not believe the Commonwealth v. Berfield, 160 Pa.Super. 438, 51 A.2d 523 (1947) language is controlling. It must be emphasized that the parties were divorced. There is no longer a legal unity of husband and wife. The obligation here is imposed more so in contract than as an incident arising from the marital status. An absolute decree of divorce terminates the duty of a spouse to support his or her former spouse. Watson v. Watson, 243 Pa.Super. 23, 364 A.2d 431 (1976). Although a separation agreement providing support for a spouse will continue subsequent to a divorce, the obligation is based on a contract. See Cavazza Estate, 169 Pa.Super. 246, 82 A.2d 331 (1951). The legal relationship of marriage has been severed.
Therefore, we find that the Schmitz’ divorce precludes us from applying policy relevant to the marital status. Appellee must be considered a judgment creditor and thus, under Pennsylvania law, her garnishment of the cash surrender value of the two life insurance policies cannot be allowed.
Id. 305 Pa.Super. at 332, 451 A.2d at 557.
The holding of Schmitz is clear. Once a couple is divorced, the exception for support to the statutory exemption from attachment no longer applies. From Schmitz it would follow, therefore, that since Wade and Mary were divorced at all times during which support payments were not made, *297the exemption from attachment in 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8124(b)(1)(vii) is in force here.
We must not overlook the fundamental legal dichotomy between a private support agreement entered into voluntarily by the parties and a support order entered by a court of competent jurisdiction. Each of the above-mentioned legal entities affords a distinct right which is enforceable differently from the other. That being so, a private support agreement is no different from any other contract. Brown v. Hall, 495 Pa. 635, 435 A.2d 859 (1981); Guerin v. Guerin, 296 Pa.Super. 400, 442 A.2d 1112 (1982); Commonwealth ex rel. Durso v. Durso, 292 Pa.Super. 94, 99, 436 A.2d 1021, 1024 (1981) (Concurring Statement by Spaeth, J., joined by Cavanaugh, J.); Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Jones, 216 Pa.Super. 1, 260 A.2d 809 (1969); Cavazza’s Estate, 169 Pa.Super. 246, 82 A.2d 331 (1951).3 Consequently, the proper procedure to enforce the husband’s failure to comply with his obligations under a support agreement is an action in assumpsit. Exner v. Exner, 268 Pa.Super. 253, 407 A.2d 1342 (1979); Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Jones, supra.
In Jones, the facts are identical to those in the present case. The ex-wife attempted to garnish wages of *298the former husband pursuant to the separation agreement. This Court reversed on the legal theory that legislation to enforce support orders is not applicable to agreements. Here, the parties, in contemplation of divorce, chose to enter into a contract regarding the wife’s future support and the courts of this Commonwealth cannot abrogate the intent of the parties and reclassify the contract to give it the effect of a judicial order. Steuart v. McChesney, 498 Pa. 45, 444 A.2d 659 (1982); Litwack v. Litwack, 289 Pa.Super. 405, 433 A.2d 514 (1981).
While the Divorce Code of 1980, 23 P.S. § 101 et seq., has expanded the obligation of support to support agreements included in post-divorce “spousal support” or “alimony” and additionally recognizes and encourages private alimony agreements, that is not to mean the distinction between these entities has been eliminated. To equate a private support agreement with alimony is a misconstruction of the term “alimony” which is by definition: “An order for support granted by this or any other state to a spouse or former spouse in conjunction with a decree granting a divorce or annulment.” 23 P.S. § 104 (emphasis added). Even though alimony may arise through agreements, which are encouraged, it does not become “alimony” unless incorporated in a divorce decree or alimony order. 23 P.S. § 501(a) and 501(f).
Section 501(f) of the Divorce Code provides:
Whenever the court shall approve an agreement [of support] for the payment of alimony voluntarily entered into between the parties, such agreement shall be deemed the order of the court and may be enforced as provided in section 503 [enter judgment on arrears, taking property, attach wages, award interest, require surety for future payment, attachment and incarceration] (emphasis added).
It is the latter provision which distinguishes a support order or alimony order (which is simply another species of a support order) from a separation agreement or unincorporated voluntary alimony agreement. The Divorce Code simply extended the duty of support, enforceable by court *299order, beyond the divorce, so long as the duty was preserved by court order prior to the divorce. Commonwealth ex rel. Cook v. Cook, 303 Pa.Super. 61, 449 A.2d 577 (1982). Also, the fact that the agreement here was created long before the Divorce Code of 1980, causes the Code to be inapplicable in this case. See Young v. Young, 507 Pa. 40, 488 A.2d 264 (1985). The distinction is further sharpened by the finding in Millstein v. Millstein, 311 Pa.Super. 495, 457 A.2d 1291 (1983), which held that a support order does not merge into a separation agreement; each has its own attributes of enforceability. Without the special legislative provision for post divorce alimony, a duty of support arises out of the marital obligation and ends with the termination of marriage. Remick v. Remick, 310 Pa.Super. 23, 456 A.2d 163 (1983).
A. — Support Orders
A support or alimony order is a creation of statute and an incident of the marriage which is enforceable by operation of law. Commonwealth ex rel. Smith v. Smith, 260 Pa.Super. 203, 393 A.2d 1224 (1978). Proceedings relative to such orders contain due process requirements, evidentiary findings and involve scrutiny by the court as to their validity, subject to appellate review. In return for this closely proscribed legal proceeding with its attendant safeguards and judicial findings, the legislature has extended the powers to bring about compliance by granting courts the right to attach property and wages and to incarcerate willfully delinquent obligors. A further extension of this power is the right to modify the order or vacate the arrears upon a showing of changed circumstances, 23 P.S. § 501(e), and in furtherance of the process, provides that the court will have domestic relations sections and personnel to receive, disburse and monitor payments. 23 P.S. § 504. See Support Proceedings, 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6701 et seq., as superseded by Pa.R.C.P. 1910, Actions for Support; Revised Uniform Reciprocal Enforcement of Support Act (1968), 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 6741 et seq. Thus, upon analysis, it is apparent *300that extraordinary attributes and conditions are attached to support and alimony orders, which become instruments of the court, and not subject to the control of the parties. Were we to make the enforcement of support agreements equivalent to the enforcement of support or alimony orders, then the full panoply of enforcement means would become available, including jailing for contempt. Thus, a person could be jailed on an obligation which never passed the due process accorded to court orders and is not subject to constant review for modification for change of circumstance or ability to pay.
B. — Support Agreements
By comparison, agreements, whether they be separation, antenuptial, postnuptial or support, are instruments of contract in which the court has no involvement. None of the elements of due process, court review and appealability are involved in agreements such as these, which are private undertakings between two parties, each having responded to the “give and take” of negotiations and bargained consideration. As such, they are governed by the law of contracts. Steuart v. McChesney, supra, Brown v. Hall, supra, Litwack v. Litwack, supra, VanKirk v. VanKirk, 336 Pa.Super. 502, 485 A.2d 1194 (1984). This means, of course, they are not modifiable unilaterally; a court cannot remake or modify such an agreement as it would be the taking of property without due process of law. Also, such an agreement is solely enforceable by an action in assumpsit. Brown, Jones, Cavazza’s Estate, Exner, supra. Since they are not court orders, the extraordinary powers flowing from a court order are not available. To jail a person for failing to pay on his agreement (which created a debt) is prohibited by our constitutions, state and federal, as imprisonment for debt. Clark, Law of Domestic Relations, Ch. 16.12, p. 554 (1968). Garnishment of wages or a pension is likewise uniquely applicable to court orders of support and alimony, as a legislatively empowered exercise of court authority to implement its orders. Strict *301limitations are imposed on attachment of these assets, and it has been universally held they cannot be attached unless pursuant to an order of support; support agreements are specifically excluded from such enforcement. No private agreement, at least in Pennsylvania, has been ascribed with this power. Buswell v. Buswell, 377 Pa. 487, 105 A.2d 608 (1954).
In Steuart, the Court reiterated the basic and time-honored rule of contract law that a court may not rewrite a contract “for the purpose of accomplishing that which, in its opinion, may appear proper, or, on the general principles of abstract justice....” Id., 498 Pa. at 51, 444 A.2d at 662 (quoting 17A C.J.S. Contracts, § 296(3)). Were we to disregard this fundamental rule in the instant case, we would shake the very foundation of contract law.
Mary relies on Commonwealth ex rel. Magrini v. Magrini, 263 Pa.Super. 366, 398 A.2d 179 (1979) for the proposition that the public policy of this Commonwealth favors the enforcement of a delinquent spouse’s support obligations, whether created by private agreement or court order. However, a closer analysis of Magrini reveals that it only applies to court-ordered support obligations and not to private support agreements. In Magrini, the lower court issued an order of attachment against Mr. Magrini’s pension, which was administered by the Aluminum Company of America. In reviewing the applicable Pennsylvania law, the Court upheld the attachment and found there was no enunciated policy protecting private pension funds which would override the public policy favoring family support. The Magrini Court held that the attachment was not prohibited by 40 P.S. § 515 (currently codified at 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8124(b)(1)(vii)), since that statute was enacted to protect the beneficiary’s family so that he or she could not voluntarily, or by means of creditor judgments, dissipate the assets and leave the family without support. Id., 263 Pa.Superior Ct. at 370-71, 398 A.2d at 181. Additionally, the Magrini Court noted that a wife seeking to enforce a support order was not an ordinary creditor, and therefore *302was not statutorily prohibited from seeking the attachment of her husband’s pension. Id,., 263 Pa.Superior Ct. at 371 n. 3, 398 A.2d at 181 n. 3 (citing Commonwealth ex rel. Peterson v. Peterson, 100 Pa.Super. 600 (1930)). Thus, after balancing the competing interests, the Magrini Court concluded that the attachment of such benefits by a spouse pursuant to a court order outweighed the private employer’s interest in the convenient administration of the plan. Id., 263 Pa.Superior Ct. at 370-71, 398 A.2d at 181. Recently, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Young v. Young, supra, extended the Magrini doctrine to municipal pensions and held that equitable distribution by a New Jersey court of a Pennsylvania police pension was in the nature of support and, therefore, the pension could be attached (reversing Young v. Young, 320 Pa.Super. 269, 467 A.2d 33 (1983)).
While the rationale of Magrini upholds the public policy favoring the enforcement of support obligations, it does so only in regards to support orders entered by a court of competent jurisdiction and does not extend to private support agreements. This position is buttressed by the language of the Act of May 10, 1921, P.L. 434, § 1, 48 P.S. § 136 (utilized by the lower court to attach the pension fund), which provides in relevant part:
Whenever any court of competent jurisdiction has made an order or entered a decree or judgment against any husband requiring him to pay any sum or sums for the support of his wife or children or both, the court may issue the appropriate writ of execution against any property, real or personal, belonging to the defendant to enforce said order, decree, or judgment, and the said court may issue a writ of attachment execution, or writ in the nature of attachment execution, against any money or property to which said husband is entitled, whether under what is known as a spendthrift trust or otherwise____
*303The above Act specifically refers to an order, decree or judgment entered by a court of competent jurisdiction.4 See Jones, supra. Because the Act makes no reference to private support agreements, we must infer that the Legislature did not intend for it to apply to such agreements. Rossiter v. Township of Whitpain, 404 Pa. 201, 170 A.2d 586 (1961). Furthermore, Mr. and Mrs. Hollman are not in the category of persons which section 136 purports to protect, for the simple reason that they are divorced and are no longer “husband” and “wife.” 5
It is well-established that a husband’s legal obligation to support his wife is terminated by a valid divorce decree. See, e.g., Commonwealth ex rel. Smith v. Smith, 260 Pa.Super. 203, 393 A.2d 1224 (1978); Watson v. Watson, 243 Pa.Super. 23, 364 A.2d 431 (1976); Commonwealth ex rel. Platt v. Platt, 227 Pa.Super. 423, 323 A.2d 29 (1974); Commonwealth ex rel. Jones v. Jones, supra. As the Honorable Edmund B. Spaeth, Jr., now President Judge of this Court, stated in Smith, “once the marital unity has been severed, the former spouses must start to regard each other as legal strangers.” Id., 260 Pa.Superior Ct. at 210, 393 A.2d at 1224. This is not altered by the 1980 Divorce Code, which provides for post-divorce alimony, as the statute is clear that if alimony is not obtained before the *304divorce, as an incident of the marriage, it cannot be obtained once a decree is entered, since the relationship is terminated. Nor is there any change in the law by virtue of the Divorce Code as it relates to separation agreements for post-divorce support, which are not incorporated into the divorce decree. As stated above, nothing in the 1980 Divorce Code can be construed to be relevant to a divorce and agreement entered into many years before its enactment. Young, supra. The agreement is not enforceable by the same means as a court order. This longstanding rule of law was reiterated in Schmitz, supra.
C. — Applicable Rules
A further indication of the uniqueness of an alimony or support agreement is evident in the Rules of Civil Procedure regarding support. See Pa.R.C.P. 1910 et seq. Rule 1910.1, titled “Scope”, provides:
Rule 1910.1. Scope
(a) Except as provided by subdivision (b), the rules of this chapter govern all civil actions or proceedings brought in the court of common pleas to enforce a duty of support, b) The rules of this chapter shall not govern
1) actions or proceedings for support based upon
(c) a contract or agreement unless the contract or agreement provides that it may be enforced by an action
in accordance with these rules;____
The agreements enforced pursuant to these rules are those entered pursuant to rule 1910.11, which provides:
Rule 1910.11. Office Conference. Subsequent Proceedings. Order
d) ... If an agreement for support is reached at the conference, the officer shall prepare a written order in conformity with the agreement for signature by the parties and submission to the court together with the officer’s recommendation for approval or disapproval____
*305Sections (f) and (g) of Rule 1910.11 permit entry of the order or hearing de novo by the court if an issue arises which requires court determination. Rule 1910.12 provides for a similar procedure with a permanent hearing officer (who must be an attorney), with exceptions to be filed by a dissatisfied party, to be determined by the court. Thus, it is apparent there are three types of agreements possible in Pennsylvania law: 1) separation agreements unrelated to any court involvement, 2) support agreements inherent in the support procedures and resulting in a court order incorporating an agreement (Pa.R.C.P. 1910.11, 1910.12), and 3) voluntary alimony agreements, entered into prior to the divorce but incorporated in the divorce decree. (See 23 P.S. § 401, 502, 503 and Pa.R.C.P. 1920.31, allowing support proceedings, and Pa.R.C.P. 1920.52, which follow rules as to civil actions and not support).
The effect is that a separation contract is not enforceable pursuant to court procedures under the support rules or the Divorce Code; support agreement orders are enforceable pursuant to the support rules, and alimony agreements incorporated in a decree are enforceable through the Divorce Code. This includes in personam actions for support under 48 P.S. § 132, which are enforced by proceedings pursuant to § 1910.20-1910.23, as with other civil support actions. There is one exception in that any order for support, against either husband or wife, can be enforced by an in rem proceeding pursuant to 48 P.S. § 133, 136-141. See Stein v. Stein, 487 Pa. 1, 406 A.2d 1381 (1979).
The agreement sub judice fits none of the categories enforceable under the Rules, Pa.R.C.P. 1910, et seq., nor pursuant to 48 P.S. § 133-141, nor pursuant to the Divorce Code, § 503. A support order may be enforced by contempt proceedings pursuant to Rule 1910.12, wage attachment pursuant to Rule 1910.22, and execution upon judgment for arrears pursuant to Rule 1910.23. In a similar fashion, an alimony order may be enforced under the support rules, supra, or the Divorce Code, supra. A support agreement can only be enforced by an action in assumpsit, specific *306performance, or upon obtaining a judgment on arrears and execution against property.
In the instant case, the former wife was incapable of having the original support agreement incorporated into the divorce decree, which is permissible under the present Divorce Code.6 By this procedure, which allows the court to review the terms of the original support agreement (§ 501(f)) and upon incorporating it into the divorce decree, the agreement merges into the decree.7 In Commonwealth ex rel. Tokach v. Tokach, 326 Pa.Super. 359, 474 A.2d 41 (1984) (Opinion by Johnson, J.), this Court clearly distinguished incorporated agreements which are enforced as orders of court from unincorporated agreements which are enforced by assumpsit actions. See also Madnick v. Madnick, 339 Pa.Super. 130, 488 A.2d 344 (1985). We cannot rewrite the prior divorce law to treat the present agreement as though it could have been incorporated and thereby, transform it into a support order. Mary could not pursue this procedure, and she must be treated as an ordinary creditor in her efforts to execute the judgment against Wade. Schmitz, supra. It is well known that the reason for divorce reform evidenced by the Act of 1980 was to cure some of the economic inequities, including the injustice caused by non-incorporated separation agreements. However unreasonable and inadequate a support agreement *307appears,8 there were trade-offs, as is the case in any agreement. Under current law, permanency and irrevocability, such as here, can only be obtained in the same fashion — by agreement — which is not incorporated into the decree. See Tokach, supra. If this was a court approved alimony agreement, it would be reviewable and modifiable, and the concept is rehabilitative, time limited and not restitutional. 23 P.S. § 501(c), (e). We can only guess at what the order would be and its duration, if entered by a court pursuant to present law. Under the prior divorce law (pre-1980), because of the necessity to prove fault and that the petitioner was innocent and injured, a lifetime support agreement was frequently the key to marital freedom. Thus, it is useless to attempt to rationalize the conditions of a support agreement entered into in 1969 with the philosophy and law in effect in 1983.
Concerning the welfare of children whose parents are divorced when agreements are involved, our courts have consistently disregarded support agreements which fail to provide adequate support for minor children. See, e.g., Brown v. Hall, 495 Pa. 635, 643 n. 11, 435 A.2d 859, 863 n. 11; Commonwealth ex rel. Snively v. Snively, 206 Pa.Super. 278, 212 A.2d 905 (1965). Furthermore, the duty to support one’s children is ongoing and survives a decree of divorce. Silverstein v. Silverstein, 246 Pa.Super. 503, 371 A.2d 948 (1977). Thus, with our decision today, the support rights of children remain intact.
In addition, our result in no way implies that there should not be an exception to the exemption from attachment of pensions when the proper procedure is followed to enforce support obligations. Therefore, we wholeheartedly agree with the Magrini and Young decisions as far as they apply to support orders entered by a court of competent jurisdiction. In the case before us, however, there was only a private support agreement which was not incorporated into the decree of divorce; therefore, the instant case is readily *308distinguishable from Magrini.9 Moreover, as discussed above, the present dispute is governed by the rationale of this Court’s decision in Schmitz.
Subject Matter Jurisdiction
The next bothersome issue in this case relates to the jurisdiction of the Civil Division of the Court of Common Pleas to enter judgment and order of attachment dated June 4, 1981. As noted above in footnote 2, the first order entered to attach the pension fund was issued by a judge of the Civil Division of the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas, the second order dismissing the attachment of the pension fund, emanated from the lower court’s Family Division.
Article V of the Pennsylvania Constitution establishes the Judicial System of Pennsylvania. The Schedule to the Judiciary Article provides for the composition, jurisdiction and administration of the Judicial System, and its provision shall have the same force and effect as those contained in the numbered sections of Article V. Section 17 of the Schedule provides:
ALLEGHENY COUNTY
§ 17. Courts
Until otherwise provided by law:
*309(a) The court of common pleas shall consist of a trial division, an orphans’ court division and a family court division; the courts of oyer and terminer and general jail delivery and quarter sessions of the peace, the county court, the orphans’ court, and the juvenile court are abolished and their present jurisdiction shall be exercised by the court of common pleas. Until otherwise provided by rule of the court of common pleas and, except as otherwise provided in this schedule, the court of common pleas shall exercise the jurisdiction of the present court of common pleas and the present county court through the trial division. Until otherwise provided by rule of the court of common pleas, the jurisdiction of the present orphans’ court, except as otherwise provided in this schedule, shall be exercised by the court of common pleas through the orphans’ court division.
(b) Until otherwise provided by rule of the court of common pleas, the court of common pleas shall exercise jurisdiction in the following matters through the family court division:
(i) Domestic Relations: Desertion or nonsupport of wives, children and indigent parents, including children born out of wedlock; proceedings, including habe-as corpus, for custody of children; divorce and annulment and property matters relating thereto.
(ii) Juvenile Matters: All matters now within the jurisdiction of the juvenile court.
(iii) Adoptions and Delayed Birth Certificates, (emphasis added)10
The article provides for other divisions to exercise Criminal, Civil (Trial) and Orphans’ Court matters. The subject matter in this case should properly have been exercised in the Family Division, and the entertainment of the first procedure by an order sur judgment in the Civil Division was *310improper. See Balter v. Balter, 284 Pa.Super. 350, 425 A.2d 1138 (1981).11
There is a possibility of construction that the Civil Division properly exercised jurisdiction in this matter from the footnote in Guerin v. Guerin, 296 Pa.Super. 400, 409 n. 3, 442 A.2d 1112, 1113-14 n. 3 (1982). Guerin did not turn on which division had jurisdiction but whether a support agreement could be modified as is the case of a support order, which we have analyzed here. To the extent that footnote 3 of Guerin relies on 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 952 as authority that any division may exercise the power of any other division, it flies in the face of the reasons for establishing divisions of the court and the actual meaning of section 952. Section 952 simply is an implementing statute for Article V, Section 5, of the Pennsylvania Constitution which provides as follows:
§ 5. Courts of common pleas
There shall be one court of common pleas for each judicial district (a) having such divisions and consisting of such number of judges as shall be provided by law, one of whom shall be the president judge; and (b) having unlimited original jurisdiction in all cases except as may otherwise be provided by law.
Section 4 of the Schedule to Article V of the Constitution provides:
§ 4. The courts of common pleas
Until otherwise provided by law, the several courts of common pleas shall exercise the jurisdiction now vested in *311the present courts of common pleas. The courts of oyer and terminer and general jail delivery, quarter sessions of the peace, and orphans’ courts are abolished and the several courts of common pleas shall also exercise the jurisdiction of these courts. Orphans’ courts in judicial districts having separate orphans’ courts shall become orphans’ court divisions of the courts of common pleas and the court of common pleas in those judicial districts shall exercise the jurisdiction presently exercised by the separate orphans’ courts through their respective orphans’ court division.
While section 952 of the Judicial Code provides that “[i]n a court of common pleas having two or more divisions each division of the court is vested with the full jurisdiction of the whole court”, this is delimited by section 5103(c) which directs:
(c) Interdivisional transfers. — If an appeal or other matter is taken to, brought in, or transferred to a division of a court to which such matter is not allocated by law, the court shall not quash such appeal or dismiss the matter, but shall transfer the record thereof to the proper division of the court, where the appeal or other matter shall be treated as if originally filed in the transferee division on the date first filed in a court or magisterial district.
Not only is footnote 4 of Guerin dicta, it does not fully state the law. As stated by Justice Eagen in Posner v. Sheridan, 451 Pa. 51, 299 A.2d 309 (1973):
While the 1968 Constitution had the felicitous result of abolishing the old system of separate courts and amalgamating them into a unified common pleas system, nothing in these new provisions permits plaintiffs to file complaints, or courts to docket them willy-nilly without regard to the appropriate division. In point of fact the language of the Schedule to the Judiciary Article establishes otherwise, (footnote omitted)
Is there any question, for example, that even under the new Constitution it would be inappropriate for an estate *312to be probated in family court division? To ask the question is to answer it. If it makes no difference where a case was docketed, then we are left to wonder to what purpose were such divisions created by the drafters of the 1968 Constitution.
Id., 451 Pa. at 58-59, 299 A.2d at 312-13.
Paradoxically, Posner was an assumpsit action for debt based on a California support decree, and while the majority inferred it was a matter not necessarily within the Family Division jurisdiction, which heard the case, it remanded on other matters. In four Concurring and Dissenting Opinions the consensus was that an assumpsit action based on a support matter was properly within the Family Court jurisdiction.
At any rate, failure to file an action in the appropriate jurisdiction is not fatal as stated by Justice Pomeroy in Commonwealth v. Wadzinski, 485 Pa. 247, 401 A.2d 1129 (1978), on remand, 266 Pa.Super. 56, 403 A.2d 91 (1979), rev’d on other grounds, 492 Pa. 35, 422 A.2d 124 (1980):
The court of common pleas, as reconstituted, possesses the jurisdictions of the former courts of common pleas, courts of quarter sessions, courts of oyer and terminer, orphans’ courts, and juvenile courts. One of the purposes of the unified court is, of course, to simplify procedure and remove archaisms from the judicial system. A case may not be dismissed because brought in the wrong court; if the matter is justiciable, there is jurisdiction in the court of common pleas to hear it, and in a multi-division court the remedy for bringing the case in the wrong division is not a dismissal, but a transfer of the matter to the correct division, (footnote omitted)
Id., 485 Pa. at 254, 401 A.2d at 1132. He then cites the provisions of Section 5 of Article V, footnote 9, p. 1132, and sections 952 and 5103(c) of the Judicial Code, footnote 10, pp. 1132, 1133.
Thus we conclude that while the Civil Division had the jurisdiction to hear and decide this matter, the appropriate action was to transfer this action to the Family Division for *313disposition, which would have resulted in the application of the greater expertise which the Family Division could bring to its determination, consistent decisions in the lower court, and avoidance of the appearance of one judge overruling the decree of another judge.
Accordingly, we affirm the Order of December 22, 1982 entered in the Family Division and vacate the Order of June 4, 1981 entered in the Civil Division.
SPAETH, President Judge, and CAVANAUGH and McEWEN, JJ., join TAMILIA, J., except as to subject matter jurisdiction, on which issue they join JOHNSON, J.
JOHNSON, J., files concurring and dissenting opinion in which ROWLEY, J. joins.
SPAETH, President Judge, and CAVANAUGH and McEWEN, JJ., join JOHNSON, J., as to subject matter jurisdiction only.
BROSKY, J., files dissenting opinion.