First American Title Ins. Co. v. Comond, M. ( 2022 )


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  • J-S01012-22
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    FIRST AMERICAN TITLE INSURANCE             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    COMPANY                                    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    MARIE L. CHAVANNES AND MARVIN              :
    COMOND                                     :   No. 661 MDA 2021
    :
    :
    APPEAL OF: MARVIN COMOND                   :
    Appeal from the Order Entered April 14, 2021
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County Civil Division at No(s):
    13 15945
    BEFORE:      BOWES, J., NICHOLS, J., and COLINS, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY BOWES, J.:                                FILED MARCH 02, 2022
    Marvin Comond (“Appellant”) appeals from the April 14, 2021 order
    denying his petition to strike the praecipe for writ of revival filed by plaintiff
    First American Title Insurance Company (“First American”). We affirm.
    We glean the following background from the certified record. In 2006,
    Appellant’s father, Robert Comond (“Mr. Comond”), filed suit in New York
    regarding a fraudulent land deal in Brooklyn, New York, and an alleged forgery
    on a power of attorney. Mr. Comond named several defendants, including
    Golden Grand Developers LLC (“Golden Grand”), Appellant, and Marie
    Chavannes, who is Mr. Comond’s former wife and Appellant’s mother.
    Pursuant to a settlement agreement, First American agreed to pay Mr.
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S01012-22
    Comond on behalf of its insured, Golden Grand, as well as all other co-
    defendants except Appellant and Ms. Chavannes.          In return, Mr. Comond
    assigned his money-damage fraud claim against Appellant and Ms. Chavannes
    to Golden Grand, who in turn assigned it to First American. In 2013, a New
    York court granted summary judgment in favor of First American and against
    Appellant and Ms. Chavannes based upon the fraud claims initially brought by
    Mr. Comond, holding Appellant and Ms. Chavannes jointly and severally liable.
    On June 27, 2013, First American domesticated the New York judgment
    in Berks County, Pennsylvania. Shortly thereafter, Ms. Chavannes filed for
    bankruptcy and the judgment was automatically stayed.1                Additional
    proceedings were placed on hold due to the pendency of various appeals and
    Ms. Chavannes’s purported health issues.         At a November 2019 status
    conference, Appellant notified First American that Ms. Chavannes had died.
    First American requested a copy of her death certificate and obituary as proof
    of her passing, but Appellant never provided those.             First American
    subsequently asked Appellant to notify it upon the opening of an estate for
    Ms. Chavannes as it was a creditor entitled to file notice of a claim against her
    estate. As with the requested proof of death, Appellant never complied.
    ____________________________________________
    1  Execution of the judgment was also stayed during the pendency of appeals
    filed by Appellant and Ms. Chavannes in the New York courts. Ultimately, the
    appeals court affirmed the order of the lower court and the Court of Appeals
    of New York dismissed the subsequent motions seeking leave to appeal. First
    Am. Title Ins. Co. v. Chavannes, 
    149 N.E.3d 434
     (N.Y. 2020).
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    In August 2020, after having received no proof of death or notice of the
    opening of an estate, First American filed the underlying praecipes for a writ
    of revival against Appellant and Ms. Chavannes. On September 22, 2020,
    Appellant filed the underlying petition to strike.    Therein, he alleged that
    service of process was not properly made as to Appellant and, as described
    by the trial court, that First American
    domesticated an unlawful foreign judgment from New York to
    Berks County, Pennsylvania and that in the last seven years, . . .
    made no attempt to execute on the judgment. [Appellant]
    contend[ed] that [First American’s] last day to effectively maintain
    priority of the lie[n] was June 27, 2018,[ which was five years
    after the judgment was domesticated,] and by the time of [Ms.
    Chavannes’s] death, the judgment had lapsed for fourteen
    months. [Appellant] submitted that [First American wa]s barred
    from trying to revive the lien and that [the] action to revive it was
    made in bad faith because [First American] had knowledge of [Ms.
    Chavannes’s] death.
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/1/21, at 2. Following off-the-record argument, the trial
    court denied Appellant’s petition. This appeal followed. Both Appellant and
    the trial court have complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
    Appellant lists the following issues for our review:
    1. Whether the trial court has subject matter jurisdiction to revive
    a lien against a deceased party without a scire facias being
    issued to the deceased estate?
    2. Whether the trial court has personal jurisdiction to revive a lien
    against a deceased party?
    3. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law by reviving a
    lien against a deceased party?
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    4. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law without making
    an inquiry about the decease[d] party?
    5. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law without the
    defendant’s being properly served with the issued writ by the
    Prothonotary?
    6. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law by allowing the
    Prothonotary to serve the issued writ to defendant[’]s attorney
    of record who retired from the practice of law since June 2019?
    7. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law in denying
    defendant[’]s petition to strike plaintiff[’]s writ despite
    plaintiff[’]s failure to properly name all the defendants prior to
    the expiration of the lien?
    8. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law by allowing
    plaintiff to serve the defendant and not his counsel of record
    with a defective writ.. . . that wasn’t signed by the Prothonotary
    and didn’t provide defendant with notice of his rights?
    9. Whether the trial court erred as a matter of law by conducting
    the April 6, 2021 hearing off the record?
    10. Whether a foreign judgment rendered in violation of
    defendant’s 14th amendment right for due process is entitled
    to full faith and credit?
    Appellant’s brief at 5-6 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    Notwithstanding the above, Appellant divides his argument section into
    six parts, which do not readily correspond with these ten issues. While this
    technically violates our rules of appellate procedure, we decline to dismiss as
    we can discern Appellant’s arguments and are satisfied they were preserved
    in his Rule 1925(b) statement. See Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a) (“The argument shall
    be divided into as many parts as there are questions to be argued[.]”);
    Pa.R.A.P. 2101 (stating that briefs “shall conform in all material respects with
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    the requirements of these rules” and that “if the defects are in the
    [appellant’s] brief . . . and are substantial, the appeal . . . may be quashed or
    dismissed”).
    Upon examination, Appellant essentially challenges (1) the trial court’s
    jurisdiction to revive the lien, (2) the service of the writ to revive, and (3) the
    New    York    judgment’s      entitlement     to   full   faith   and   credit   in   this
    Commonwealth.2 Appellant’s challenges present pure questions of law, and
    ____________________________________________
    2 Appellant also challenges the trial court’s decision to hold the April 6, 2021
    oral argument off the record. Appellant’s brief at 14-18. Appellant raised this
    claim for the first time in his Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statement, noting that when
    Appellant asked the trial court why the matter was being held off the record,
    the trial court responded that it did not want to clutter the record. The trial
    court offered the following response in its Rule 1925(a) opinion:
    This issue is a fallacy. This court heard argument over the legal
    issue of the validity of the judgment. There was not testimony
    taken, despite [Appellant’s] incorrectly calling the proceeding a
    hearing. It was an argument which this court does not want
    recorded, because it is a waste of the court reporter’s time and
    expense. [Appellant’s] footnote on this issue is misleading. This
    court never “requests” to have hearings off the record because “it
    does not want to clutter the record.” The proceeding in this case
    consisted of argument on the law, not findings of fact.
    Trial Court Opinion, 7/1/21, at 8-9. Significantly, Appellant has not directed
    us to where he preserved an objection to the decision to hold argument off
    the record, either orally or via a written motion, and our review of the certified
    record has revealed none. Therefore, the matter is waived. See Pa.R.A.P.
    302(a) (“Issues not raised in the lower court are waived and cannot be raised
    for the first time on appeal.”).
    Even if not waived, Appellant has failed to cite any legal authority for the
    proposition that he was entitled to a transcript of the argument proceeding.
    More importantly, he cannot demonstrate that he was prejudiced as no
    (Footnote Continued Next Page)
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    thus our standard of review is de novo and our scope of review is plenary.
    See Mazur v. Trinity Area Sch. Dist., 
    961 A.2d 96
    , 101 (Pa. 2008).
    “The existence of a judgment lien prevents a debtor from encumbering
    or conveying any property he might own in such a way as to divest the effect
    of the judgment, while also preventing later lienholders from satisfying their
    debt without first paying the earlier lien.”     Mid-State Bank & Tr. Co. v.
    Globalnet Int'l, Inc., 
    710 A.2d 1187
    , 1192 (Pa.Super. 1998) (citation
    omitted).    “[A] writ of revival of a judgment lien does nothing more than
    preserve the judgment creditor’s existing rights and priorities.” Shearer v.
    Naftzinger, 
    747 A.2d 859
    , 861 (Pa. 2000).
    Generally, an action for revival must be commenced within five years.
    42 Pa.C.S. § 5526. “The longstanding rule in this Commonwealth is that a
    judgment continues as a lien against real property for five years and then
    expires unless revived. Although a judgment may be revived after the five[-
    ]year period, its priority against intervening liens is lost.” Mid-State Bank,
    
    supra at 1190
     (citations omitted); see also Shearer, supra at 860 n.1 (“The
    ____________________________________________
    testimony was taken, no evidence was presented, and the trial court, contrary
    to Appellant’s argument, provided its rationale for denying Appellant’s petition
    to strike in its Rule 1925(a) opinion. To wit, Appellant based his petition to
    strike on the following grounds: (1) service of process was not properly made;
    (2) the judgment lien had lapsed; and (3) the judgment was not entitled to
    full faith and credit. In its opinion, the court provided its rationale for why it
    found each of those grounds meritless. See Trial Court Opinion, 7/1/21, at
    7-9. Based on the foregoing, even if not waived, we would conclude that the
    trial court did not abuse its discretion in deciding to hold oral argument on
    Appellant’s petition off the record.
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    judgment lien may nonetheless be revived after the five-year statute of
    limitations period for revival, however its priority against intervening liens, if
    any, is lost.”); Pa.R.C.P. 3027(b)(2) Note (“The priority of the lien is preserved
    only if the praecipe or the agreement is filed within the five-year period
    prescribed by these rules.”).
    Appellant raises three arguments in support of his contention that the
    court was without jurisdiction to consider the writ of revival: (1) the writ was
    filed after Ms. Chavannes had died; (2) the writ was filed beyond the five-year
    period; and (3) Ms. Chavannes was an indispensable party who could not be
    joined because she was deceased. Appellant’s brief at 19-24. We will consider
    these arguments seriatim.
    Preliminarily, we observe that the record is unclear as to whether Ms.
    Chavannes is indeed deceased and, if she is, whether First American knew
    that when it filed the praecipes for a writ of revival. In Appellant’s petition to
    strike, he claimed that Ms. Chavannes’s death certificate is a public record and
    cited the attached Exhibit 2 in support of his claim that the writ was filed in
    bad faith because First American knew Ms. Chavannes had died. Petition to
    Strike, 9/22/20, at 2. Instead of attaching a death certificate, Exhibit 2 is an
    affidavit from First American’s legal counsel, Paige Bellino, Esquire, in
    opposition to Appellant’s motion for leave to appeal to the Court of Appeals of
    New York.    Therein, Attorney Bellino stated that on November 13, 2019,
    Appellant informed First American that Ms. Chavannes had died. She further
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    stated that in a subsequent phone conversation, Appellant claimed Ms.
    Chavannes had a will, that he was the executor and sole beneficiary, and that
    he would be sending a notice of probate. Attorney Bellino stated that her
    office requested a death certificate and obituary to confirm Ms. Chavannes’s
    death because they could not confirm her death on their own. Petition to
    Strike, 9/22/20, at Exhibit 2 (Attorney Bellino Affidavit, 11/26/19). Despite
    these requests, First American claimed in its answer to Appellant’s petition to
    strike that it never received confirmation of Ms. Chavannes’s death or a notice
    of probate. Answer, 12/4/20, at 4-5. Having received neither, First American
    “took steps to enforce the New York [j]udgment by filing” the praceipe for a
    writ of revival. Id. at 5.
    Based on the foregoing, First American was certainly on notice when it
    filed the writ of Appellant’s claim that Ms. Chavannes had died. However, First
    American was not satisfied with verbal notice and requested proof of death.
    Appellant failed to provide proof of death or notice of probate, and thus First
    American lacked any proof that Ms. Chavannes had died. See First American’s
    brief at 6 (explaining at the time it filed the praecipes, “no estate [had] been
    raised for Ms. Chavannes and no proof [had] been provided or located to
    substantiate that she had passed away”). Notably, the certified record also
    lacks any proof of Ms. Chavannes’s death. Thus, what First American did know
    at the time it filed the praecipes was that the stays and holds had been lifted
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    and Appellant claimed without proof that Ms. Chavannes had died.            Under
    these circumstances, we will not fault First American with acting in bad faith.
    Even if the certified record confirmed Ms. Chavannes’s death and
    First American’s knowledge of her death at the time it filed the praecipes for
    a writ of revival, that filing would not have been a new action filed against a
    deceased person. As noted, the initial judgment lien was issued in 2013, while
    Ms. Chavannes was unquestionably alive. The writ of revival, filed after her
    purported death, merely preserved the already-existing rights and priorities
    of the creditor. See Shearer, supra at 861. Therefore, even if the record
    confirmed Ms. Chavannes’s death and First American’s knowledge of her death
    at the time it filed the praecipes, that would not deprive the court of
    jurisdiction.
    We next turn to the timing of the praecipes. Even assuming they were
    filed after the five-year period, that solely affects the priority of the lien. See
    id. at 860 n.1. Appellant does not challenge the priority of First American’s
    lien and we do not take up that issue sua sponte.           Thus, the court had
    jurisdiction to consider revival of the lien despite any time lapse between the
    initial lien and its revival.
    Lastly, we consider Appellant’s argument that the trial court lacked
    subject matter jurisdiction over the writ because Ms. Chavannes was an
    indispensable party who could not be joined because she was deceased. In
    support, Appellant cites Rule 3026.1, which provides as follows:
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    (a) Except as provided by subdivision (b), if there is a judgment
    against two or more joint defendants, no revival of the lien of the
    judgment shall be effective against any of such defendants unless
    all joint defendants are made parties to the revival proceedings.
    (b) If all or fewer than all joint defendants agree to be bound, the
    revival shall be effective against all of the defendants so agreeing.
    Note: This rule does not apply where defendants are jointly
    and severally liable or severally liable only.
    Pa.R.C.P. 3026.1. Regardless of the record being unclear as to whether Ms.
    Chavannes is in fact deceased, we find this argument specious as the rule
    explicitly does not apply to defendants who are jointly and severally liable like
    Appellant and Ms. Chavannes. Accordingly, Appellant has not established that
    the trial court lacked jurisdiction to consider First American’s praecipes for a
    writ of revival.
    Appellant next argues that the writ should have been stricken for
    improper service. Appellant’s brief at 24. According to Appellant, he received
    a defective writ from First American on September 17, 2020, which he claims
    did not have the official seal of the court and was not signed by the
    prothonotary. Appellant’s brief at 25-26. Thereafter, the prothonotary issued
    a writ to the attorney of record for Appellant and Ms. Chavannes. However,
    Appellant contends he did not receive this because his attorney retired in
    2019. Id. at 26-27.
    On the other hand, First American maintains that it submitted the
    praecipes electronically and served a copy of the filed, stamped praecipes
    upon Appellant and Ms. Chavannes by certified and regular mail.               First
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    American detailed several subsequent hiccups regarding service of the writ
    and petition to strike, but argues that “none of the circumstances prejudiced”
    Appellant as “[t]here is no question that the spirit of [the s]tatute was satisfied
    and [Appellant’s] receipt of the file stamped [p]raecipes placed him on notice
    sufficient to enable him to object/defend against the [p]raecipes by filing the
    [p]etition.” First American’s brief at 19. Finally, First American insists that if
    there had been justification to grant Appellant’s petition to strike based upon
    improper service, the lower court would have done so without prejudice to
    perfect service. Id. at 20.
    In its Rule 1925(a) opinion, the trial court noted that Appellant clearly
    had notice of the writ as he filed a petition to strike and was therefore not
    prejudiced by any alleged service error. Trial Court Opinion, 7/1/21, at 7.
    Insofar as Appellant argued in his concise statement that the trial court erred
    in allowing service by the prothonotary on Appellant’s retired counsel, the
    court labeled this claim as “frippery” since it was Appellant and Ms. Chavannes
    who “permitted the service because they never informed the [p]rothonotary
    that their attorney had retired, and papers had to be served on them.” Id.
    We first examine the prothonotary’s service.          The certified record
    includes a note from the prothonotary that the writ was issued to Appellant’s
    attorney on August 20, 2020. Writ Issued to Attorney, 8/20/20. Rule 236
    provides in relevant part as follows:
    (a) The prothonotary shall immediately give written notice of the
    entry of
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    (1) a judgment entered by confession to the defendant by
    ordinary mail together with a copy of all documents filed
    with the prothonotary in support of the confession of
    judgment. The plaintiff shall provide the prothonotary with
    the required notice and documents for mailing and a
    properly stamped and addressed envelope; and
    (2) any other order or judgment to each party’s attorney of
    record or, if unrepresented, to each party. The notice shall
    include a copy of the order or judgment.
    Pa.R.C.P. 236(a). Appellant does not dispute that his now-retired attorney
    remained the attorney of record at the time the writ was issued. Thus, we
    conclude that the prothonotary properly issued the writ to the attorney of
    record in compliance with Rule 236(a)(2).
    Turning to the service of the writ by First American, we observe that
    such is governed by Rule 3028, which provides as follows:
    (a) The writ shall be served within ninety days after its issuance
    by the sheriff by handing a copy in the manner provided by Rule
    402 or by mailing a copy in the manner provided by Rule 403.
    (b) If service cannot be made as provided by subdivision (a), then
    service may be made
    (1) in the manner prescribed by order of court pursuant to
    Rule 430(a), or
    (2) by publication in the manner prescribed by Rule 430(b)
    upon the filing of an affidavit showing reasonable efforts to
    make service pursuant to subdivision (a) and the reasons
    why such service could not be made.
    Pa.R.C.P. 3028. First American served the writ pursuant to Rule 403, which
    provides as follows:
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    If a rule of civil procedure authorizes original process to be served
    by mail, a copy of the process shall be mailed to the defendant by
    any form of mail requiring a receipt signed by the defendant or
    his authorized agent. Service is complete upon delivery of the
    mail.
    (1) If the mail is returned with notation by the postal
    authorities that the defendant refused to accept the mail,
    the plaintiff shall have the right of service by mailing a copy
    to the defendant at the same address by ordinary mail with
    the return address of the sender appearing thereon. Service
    by ordinary mail is complete if the mail is not returned to
    the sender within fifteen days after mailing.
    (2) If the mail is returned with notation by the postal
    authorities that it was unclaimed, the plaintiff shall make
    service by another means pursuant to these rules.
    Pa.R.C.P. 403.
    According to First American, the writ it sent via “certified mail was
    returned unclaimed, but the regular mail was not returned, and [Appellant]
    has admitted to receiving same.” First American’s brief at 18 (citing, inter
    alia,3 Appellant’s Petition to Strike, 9/22/20, at 1 (“Plaintiff served Defendant
    with the praecipe for writ of revival however defendant did not receive the
    [writ i]ssued.”)).
    ____________________________________________
    3 First American also cites portions of its own reproduced record, which
    included notices of the certified mail being returned unclaimed. Appellant filed
    a motion to strike these documents as they are not part of the certified record.
    We denied Appellant’s motion without prejudice to seek relief once this appeal
    was assigned to the merits panel. Appellant has not re-raised the issue.
    Regardless, for the reasons discussed infra, our review is not dependent on
    the certified mail documents contained in First American’s reproduced record.
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    In McCreesh v. City of Philadelphia, 
    888 A.2d 664
     (Pa. 2005), our
    Supreme Court adopted the more flexible approach advocated in Leidich v.
    Franklin, 
    575 A.2d 914
     (Pa.Super. 1990), “excusing plaintiffs’ initial
    procedurally defective service where the defendant has actual notice of the
    commencement of litigation and is not otherwise prejudiced” because such an
    approach “sufficiently protects defendants from defending against stale claims
    without the draconian action of dismissing claims based on technical failings
    that do not prejudice the defendant.” McCreesh, supra at 666.
    In light of our High Court’s holding in McCreesh, we need not determine
    whether First American properly served Appellant pursuant to Rule 403.
    Rather, our review of the certified record confirms that Appellant had actual
    notice of the writ and was not prejudiced.       Specifically, Appellant filed a
    petition to strike the writ, which the trial court considered. Accordingly, we
    conclude that the trial court did not err in finding that any procedural defects
    arising from the service of the writ did not warrant striking.
    Finally, Appellant argues that the New York judgment is not entitled to
    full faith and credit in Pennsylvania.   Appellant’s brief at 29-36. Appellant
    challenges the validity of summary judgment granted by the New York court
    because he claims that discovery had not been completed and the matter had
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    not been properly restored as to Appellant and Ms. Chavannes. 4 Id. at 29-
    34.
    We begin with the following background:
    The United States Constitution requires that Full Faith and Credit
    shall be given in each State to the public Acts, Records, and
    judicial Proceedings of every other State. Congress codified the
    full faith and credit clause by enacting the Full Faith and Credit
    Act, which provides that judgments shall have the same full faith
    and credit in every court within the United States and its
    Territories and Possessions as they have by law or usage in the
    courts of such State, Territory or Possession from which they are
    taken.
    As explained by the United States Supreme Court,
    the very purpose of the full-faith and credit clause was
    to alter the status of the several states as independent
    foreign sovereignties, each free to ignore obligations
    created under the laws or by the judicial proceedings
    of the others, and to make them integral parts of
    a single nation throughout which a remedy upon a just
    obligation might be demanded as of right, irrespective
    of the state of its origin.
    Milwaukee Cnty. v. M.E. White Co., 
    296 U.S. 268
    , 276–77
    (1935). Thus, the Full Faith and Credit Act mandates that all
    courts treat a state court judgment with the same respect that it
    would receive in the courts of the rendering state.
    ____________________________________________
    4 In support, Appellant cites 42 P.S. § 22004, which provides grounds for
    nonrecognition of a foreign judgment within the Uniform Foreign Money
    Judgment Recognition Act. See Appellant’s Brief at 29. Within this Act, a
    “foreign judgment” is one originating from “[a]ny governmental unit other
    than the United States, or any state, district, Commonwealth, territory or
    insular possession thereof, or the Panama Canal Zone, the Trust Territory of
    the Pacific Islands or the Ryukyu Islands.” 42 P.S. § 22002. As the judgment
    herein is from our sister-state of New York, not a foreign governmental unit,
    this statute does not apply.
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    Regarding judgments, however, the full faith and
    credit obligation is exacting. A final judgment in one
    State, if rendered by a court with adjudicatory
    authority over the subject matter and persons
    governed by the judgment, qualifies for recognition
    throughout the land. For claim and issue preclusion
    (res judicata) purposes, in other words, the judgment
    of the rendering State gains nationwide force.
    We are aware of no considerations of local policy or
    law which could rightly be deemed to impair the force
    and effect which the full faith and credit clause and
    the Act of Congress require to be given to a money
    judgment outside the state of its rendition.
    Therefore, Pennsylvania gives a judgment the same res judicata
    effect the judgment would have been afforded in the state in which
    it was rendered. . . .
    Full faith and credit is statutorily enshrined in Pennsylvania’s
    Enforcement Act[.]
    ....
    Generally, Pennsylvania enforces a valid sister-state judgment
    transferred to Pennsylvania even if the judgment violates
    Pennsylvania public policy.
    Standard Chartered Bank v. Ahmad Hamad Al Gosaibi & Bros. Co., 
    99 A.3d 936
    , 940–42 (Pa.Super. 2014) (cleaned up).
    In its Rule 1925(a) opinion, the trial court found that the judgment was
    entitled to full faith and credit as Appellant has “litigated this same issue
    before the New York trial and appellate courts and the judgment has been
    affirmed” and “has been docketed in Berks County for more than seven years,
    so it has already been recognized by the court prior to this proceeding.” Trial
    Court Opinion, 7/1/21, at 9.      First American argues that this claim is
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    essentially an attempt to overturn the New York judgment.          See First
    American’s brief at 28-29.
    We agree with the trial court and First American that this claim is a
    collateral attack on the underlying judgment. As noted, the judgment was
    entered and domesticated in 2013, affirmed in 2019, and the motions for leave
    to appeal that affirmance were dismissed in 2020. The time for challenging
    the underlying judgment has passed. First American’s praecipes for a writ of
    revival concerned revival of the judgment; it did not concomitantly revive
    Appellant’s right to challenge the judgment.    As the judgment is clearly
    entitled to full faith and credit in this Commonwealth, we conclude that this
    claim is meritless.
    Based on the foregoing, we affirm the trial court’s order denying
    Appellant’s petition to strike.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/2/2022
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Document Info

Docket Number: 661 MDA 2021

Judges: Bowes, J.

Filed Date: 3/2/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/2/2022