In Re: Hutchins, T., Appeal of: VIP Services Corp. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A28035-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    IN RE: TYECIA HUTCHINS                   :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    APPEAL OF: VIP SERVICES                  :
    CORPORATION                              :   No. 395 WDA 2020
    :
    :
    :
    :
    Appeal from the Order Entered February 12, 2020
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County Civil Division at
    No(s): GD-20-000414
    BEFORE: OLSON, J., MURRAY, J., and McCAFFERY, J.
    MEMORANDUM BY McCAFFERY, J.:                      FILED DECEMBER 11, 2020
    VIP Services Corporation (Appellant) appeals from the order entered in
    the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas, granting the joint petition to
    transfer structured settlement payment rights filed by payee Tyecia Hutchins
    (Payee) and transferee TBT Services, LLC (TBT).        Appellant was granted
    permission to intervene in this matter. On appeal, Appellant contends the trial
    court erred when it scheduled a hearing despite defects in the joint petition,
    and when it determined the transfer was in Payee’s best interests. For the
    reasons below, we affirm.
    The relevant facts and procedural history underlying this appeal are
    aptly summarized by the trial court as follows:
    This litigation commenced with the filing of a Joint Petition
    to Initiate Case filed by TBT[,] the transferee, and [P]ayee. . . .
    TBT . . . is a limited liability company organized under and
    pursuant to the laws of [the] state of Wyoming. [P]ayee . . . is
    J-A28035-20
    an adult individual of full age who resides in Pittsburgh, Allegheny
    County, Pennsylvania. . . .
    As a result of personal injuries [received when she was a
    minor, Payee] was entitled to receive future structured settlement
    payments.    The Annuity owner is Pacific Life and Annuity
    Company. The Annuity issuer is Pacific Life Insurance Company.
    On or about January 2, 2020, [Payee] executed an “Absolute
    Sale, Transfer and Assignment of Structured Settlement Payment
    Rights” (the “Agreement”). The Agreement provided for the
    assignment of future payments to TBT and/or its designated
    assignee. TBT provided a Disclosure Statement, setting forth,
    inter alia, the amounts and schedule of payments to be
    transferred to [Payee].
    The Disclosure asserts that [Payee] intends to sell future
    payments at a discounted present value of $27,131.88. The
    Disclosure stated the total amount [Payee] would receive for the
    transaction, as well as . . . the specific payment amounts and
    timing of the individual structured settlement payments. The
    Disclosure also included the fee applied for [Payee] to enter into
    the [Agreement,] effectively, . . . an interest rate of 22.14% per
    annum[.]
    In paragraph twelve (12) of [Payee and TBT’s] Joint Petition,
    they state, “[a]fter due consideration, Payee . . . is satisfied that
    the transfer is in her best interests for the reasons set forth in
    the Affidavit attached hereto as Exhibit “C”. Again, [Payee] is an
    adult individual of full age. Further, paragraph fifteen (15) of the
    . . . Joint Petition maintains that “Payee . . . has executed an
    Acknowledgment confirming that she has waived independent
    legal advice, including consideration of any tax ramifications of the
    transfer.[”]
    *    *    *
    [O]n January 14, 2020, the [trial court] ordered that a hearing
    would be held as to the Petitioners’ Joint Petition . . . on February
    12th, 2020[.]
    *    *    *
    . . . An Amended Joint Petition was filed on January 21, 2020
    by . . . TBT. In paragraph 10 of the Amended Petition[, Payee
    averred she intended to sell future payments at a discounted
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    present value in] the amount of $39,767.02. . . . Paragraph 11
    of the Amended Petition goes on to calculate that [Payee] would
    effectively be paying an interest rate at 24.92[%] per annum.
    *       *   *
    On February 12, 2020, [Appellant] filed an Emergency
    Petition to Intervene. At said time, [Appellant] was a non-party
    to this action. [Appellant] is engaged in the same type of business
    as TBT; that being, arranging and making lump sum payments to
    annuity beneficiaries. [Appellant] is headquartered in Delaware.
    [Appellant] asserts that on December 13, 2019, [Payee]
    entered into a Structured Settlement Annuity Sale and
    Assignment Agreement to [Appellant] (hereinafter “the
    [Appellant] Agreement”). Pursuant to the [Appellant] Agreement,
    [Payee] assigned all of her rights, title and interest in one lump
    sum payment of $8,000.00, due December 24, 2020, to be
    followed by one lump sum payment in the amount of $15,496.00
    on December 24, 2025; in exchange for one lump sum payment
    by [Appellant] to [Payee] in the amount of $10,615.00. . . . The
    annual interest rate purported on [Appellant’s] transaction is
    21.9%.
    *       *   *
    . . . [The petition further asserted that the Appellant’s
    A]greement was in [Payee’s] best interest due to a 3% premium
    over the TBT agreement. [Appellant] further assert[ed] that
    [Payee] failed to appear for an earlier scheduled appearance date
    set for court approval [of Appellant’s agreement.1]
    Trial Ct. Op. 7/13/20, at 1-5.
    Payee, TBT, and Appellant appeared for a hearing before the trial court
    on February 12, 2020. The court granted Appellant permission to intervene
    in the matter “for the limited purpose of offering the deal referenced in
    [Appellant’s] Petition to Intervene to [Payee], and permitting [Payee], in
    ____________________________________________
    1 The hearing for court approval of Appellant’s agreement with Payee was
    rescheduled for February 25, 2020, nearly two weeks after the hearing in the
    present case. See N.T., 2/12/20, at 4.
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    [Payee’s] sole and absolute discretion, to decide how she wishes to proceed.”
    Intervenor Order, 2/12/20. At the hearing, Payee testified that she previously
    agreed to sell two future lump sum payments to Appellant, but she had
    “effectively canceled that contract.” N.T., 2/12/20, at 11. She confirmed the
    terms of her agreement with TBT, including the fact that she was selling
    $39,767 in future payments in exchange for an “upfront lump sum . . . of
    $18,307.37[.]” Id. at 13. Payee explained she intended to use the money to
    pay off $5,000 in credit card bills, some student loans, and a year’s rent on a
    new apartment for her and her child. Id. at 13-14. She also acknowledged
    the interest rate of the offer proposed by Appellant was better than the rate
    offered by TBT. Id. at 17.
    That same day, the trial court entered a detailed order granting the joint
    petition filed by TBT and Payee. Appellant filed a timely notice of appeal on
    March 12, 2020, and complied with the trial court’s order to file a Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(b) statement.
    Appellant raises the following two issues on appeal:
    1. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err when it approved the TBT Petition
    because Pa.R.C.P. 229.2 required the [t]rial [c]ourt to deny the
    TBT Petition?
    2. Did the [t]rial [c]ourt err when it approved the TBT Petition,
    finding it to be in [Payee’s] best interests to do so, because the
    financial terms of the assignment in the TBT Petition were worse
    than those contemplated by [Payee’s] agreement with
    [Appellant]?
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    Appellant’s Brief at 8-9.2
    Appellant’s claims concern the interplay between the Structured
    Settlement Protection Act (SSPA), 40 P.S. §§ 4001-4009, and Pennsylvania
    Rule of Civil Procedure 229.2. The SSPA mandates court approval for the
    transfer of any future structured settlement payments. 3          See 40 P.S. §
    4003(a). In particular, the Act requires the payee establish that “the transfer
    is in the best interests of the payee or his dependents.” 40 P.S. § 4003(a)(3).
    Rule 229.2 sets forth the procedure by which a payee and transferee
    may seek court approval for the transfer of settlement payments under the
    SSPA. The Rule specifies that a petition seeking to transfer future settlement
    payments “shall contain” the following:
    (1) a statement setting forth the payment provisions of the
    structured settlement agreement and the payment rights that the
    payee seeks to transfer,
    (2) separate paragraphs which in bold type set forth
    (i) the net amount payable to the payee after deduction of
    all commissions, fees, costs, expenses, and charges, and
    (ii) the following statement setting forth the interest rate:
    “Based on the net amount that the payee will receive from
    this transaction ($ ___ ) and the amounts and timing of the
    structured settlement payments that would be assigned, the
    ____________________________________________
    2   We have reordered Appellant’s issues on appeal for ease of disposition.
    3As the trial court explained in its opinion, the statute was enacted to protect
    settlement recipients from “factoring companies” that, through “aggressive
    advertising,” offer immediate cash payouts at substantial discounts in
    exchange for the transfer of future settlement payments. See Trial Ct. Op. at
    10 (citation omitted).
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    payee is, in effect, paying interest at a rate of ___ % per
    year.”
    (3) four attachments:
    (i) a Payee’s Affidavit in Support of Petition, in the form
    prescribed by subdivision (f) as Attachment 1,
    (ii) an initial order of court scheduling the hearing, in the
    form prescribed by subdivision (g),
    (iii) a certification by an attorney for the transferee
    representing to the best of his or her knowledge,
    information and belief, formed after reasonable inquiry, that
    the transfer will comply with the requirements of the Act and
    will not contravene any other applicable federal or state
    statute or regulation or the order of any court or
    administrative authority, and
    (iv) a final order of court granting the petition, in the form
    prescribed by subdivision (i).
    Pa.R.C.P. 229.2(d)(1)-(3).
    The Rule further provides that if the petition meets the criteria set forth
    above, and includes “factual allegations” which, if proven, would satisfy the
    requirements of the SSPA, “the court shall promptly enter an order scheduling
    a hearing date.”   Pa.R.C.P. 229.2(e)(1).    However, if the court denies the
    petition without first holding a hearing due to a deficiency in the petition or
    the factual allegations, the Rule permits the payee to file “an amended petition
    as of course.” Pa.R.C.P. 229.2(e)(2).
    Appellant first argues the trial court erred in holding a hearing because
    the joint petition filed by Payee and TBT did not comply with Rule 229.2.
    Appellant’s Brief at 27. Specifically, Appellant contends the petition did not
    “contain a statement of the payment provisions of the structured settlement
    agreement and the payment rights [Payee] sought to transfer,” but rather,
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    simply referred to attachments which were “improperly redacted” to remove
    the requisite financial information. Id. at 29. Appellant insists “[t]his non-
    compliance with” Rule 229.2 was fatal and “mandated” the court’s denial of
    the petition without a hearing. Id. at 29-30.
    “Since this question involves the proper interpretation of the language
    of our rules of civil procedure, it is one of law, and, thus, our standard of
    review is de novo.” Bruno v. Erie Ins. Co., 
    106 A.3d 48
    , 73 (Pa. 2014).
    Upon our review, we conclude Appellant’s claim is meritless. Although
    the trial court did not refer to Rule 229.2 in its opinion, it succinctly concluded
    the joint petition “met all criteria mandated by [40] Pa.C.S. § 4003, including
    the discounted present value amount, [Payee’s] effective interest rate (in
    12pt. Bold), as well as a notice of her right to obtain independent counsel,
    etc.” Trial Ct. Op. at 10-11.
    Appellant’s contention focuses on Subsection (d)(1) of Rule 229.2,
    which requires the petition contain “a statement setting forth the payment
    provisions of the structured settlement agreement and the payment rights
    that the payee seeks to transfer[.]” See Pa.R.C.P. 229.2(d)(1). While this
    information was included on documents attached to the joint petition, the
    actual financial information is redacted from the copies of these documents in
    the certified record.4 See Amended Joint Petition for Approval of Transfer of
    ____________________________________________
    4 It is unclear whether the trial court received the unredacted documents prior
    to the hearing. See N.T., 2/12/20, at 6. However, TBT asserts in its brief
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    Structured Settlement Payment Rights, 1/21/20, at Exhibit A, Absolute Sale,
    Transfer and Assignment of Structured Settlement Payment Rights, Terms
    Rider Schedule A; Exhibit B, Disclosure Statements.
    Even if the unredacted information was not provided to the trial court
    before the hearing, we do not agree that Rule 229.2 required the court to
    deny the petition on its face. Although the Rule mandates the petition include
    certain financial information — as evident by the use of the phrase “[t]he
    petition . . . shall contain”5 — it does not similarly mandate dismissal of the
    petition when, as here, that information is redacted.       Subsection (e)(1)
    provides that the trial court “shall promptly enter an order scheduling a
    hearing date” if the petition meets the requirements of the Rule and contains
    the requisite factual allegations pursuant to Section 4003.          Pa.R.C.P.
    229.2(e)(1). There is no corresponding language that mandates the dismissal
    of the petition if it does not meet the pleading requirements of the Rule. See
    In re Jacobs, 
    936 A.2d 1156
    , 1164 (Pa. Super. 2007) (noting that under the
    then “new” Rule 229.2, “a trial court can deny an SSPA petition without
    holding a hearing if the petition does not contain factual allegations that
    support a finding that the transfer is in the petitioner’s best interest”)
    ____________________________________________
    that although the petition was “redacted in portions upon request” of Payee,
    the trial court had a “full understanding of the terms and conditions of the
    proposed transfers . . . prior to and during the hearing on February 12, 2020.”
    TBT’s Brief at 41-42 (unpaginated) (emphasis added).
    5   Pa.R.C.P. 229.2(d) (emphasis added).
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    (emphasis added). Rather, Subsection (e)(2) permits the payee to “file an
    amended petition as of course” if the court denies the petition without a
    hearing because of a pleading deficiency. Pa.R.C.P. 229.2(e)(2). Thus, we
    disagree with Appellant’s underlying premise that the trial court was required
    to dismiss the joint petition if it concluded the pleading was insufficient.
    Indeed, if it had done so, Payee could have simply filed an amended petition
    under Subsection (e)(2). Accordingly, this claim fails.6
    Next, Appellant argues the trial court erred when it approved the joint
    petition since the transfer was not in Payee’s best interest. Appellant’s Brief
    at 21.   Appellant insists that because Payee’s reasons for transferring her
    settlement payments were “purely financial,” the trial court should have found
    that its proposed transfer, which included more favorable terms than the TBT
    offer, was in Payee’s best interests.            Id. at 21-22.   Indeed, Appellant
    maintains the trial court neglected its guardianship role when it ignored
    “uncontroverted evidence” that the settlement offer from Appellant had
    “better financial terms” than the offer in the joint petition. Id. at 23.
    Our analysis of the requirements of the SSPA involves statutory
    interpretation; thus, “our standard of review is de novo and our scope of
    review is plenary.” In re Jacobs, 
    936 A.2d 1156
    , 1163 (Pa. Super. 2007).
    ____________________________________________
    6 We note, too, that Appellant did not raise this purported pleading deficiency
    before the trial court at the February 12th hearing. Thus, we could find this
    issue waived. See Pa.R.A.P. 302(a) (“Issues not raised in the trial court are
    waived and cannot be raised for the first time on appeal.”).
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    Our review of the record, and in particular the transcript from the
    petition hearing, reveals no error on the part of the trial court. At the hearing,
    Payee acknowledged that she had entered into a contract with Appellant in
    late November or early December of 2019, to transfer two future settlement
    payments.     N.T., 2/12/20, at 11, 17.        However, she later decided to
    “cancel[ ]” that contract and enter into an agreement with TBT. Id. at 11.
    She explained:
    I was being threatened that [Appellant] would intervene today.
    They’ve harassed me and said they were going to send notaries
    to my house, and if I didn’t deny the court hearing with [TBT],
    that they were going to send people to my house.
    Id. at 11-12. Payee confirmed the financial terms of her agreement with TBT,
    and conceded that the contract with Appellant included a lower interest rate.
    Id. at 12-13, 15-17. Furthermore, Payee testified she intended to use the
    money to “pay off some credit card bills and student loans and also improve
    [her] living situation.” Id. at 13.
    Based upon this record, the court found the agreement with TBT was in
    Payee’s best interests. The court emphasized that “[t]he formation of a valid
    contract requires the mutual assent of the contracting parties,” and assent
    cannot be obtained by means of duress. Trial Ct. Op. at 11. Further, the
    court disputed Appellant’s argument that a person is “mandated to accept the
    highest offer.” Id. (citation omitted).
    We agree. Here, it is evident that Payee, an adult, was fully aware of
    the terms of both offers, and chose to proceed with TBT. Appellant appears
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    to argue that Payee’s preferred choice is irrelevant, and that the trial court
    “fail[ed] to fulfill its guardianship role” when it approved a petition with less
    favorable financial terms. Appellant’s Brief at 23. In doing so, Appellant relies
    upon this Court’s decision in Power v. Tomarchio, 
    701 A.2d 1371
     (Pa. Super.
    1997), a case that we conclude is distinguishable.
    In Power, the minor plaintiff suffered injuries after being bitten by
    defendants’ dogs.      Power, 
    701 A.2d at 1373
    .      The defendants refused to
    accept the court’s pretrial settlement recommendation of $15,000, and the
    parties proceeded to binding arbitration. 
    Id.
     Prior to the arbitration hearing,
    the parties entered into a high/low agreement whereby the minor plaintiff was
    guaranteed a recovery no less than $7,500, and no more than $20,000. 
    Id.
    Despite the fact that any settlement agreement involving a minor party must
    be approved by the court pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 2039,7 the parties did not
    inform either the trial court or arbitration panel of the high/low agreement.
    
    Id. at 1373-74
    .       Subsequently, the arbitrators awarded the minor plaintiff
    $35,000.     
    Id. at 1373
    .       Neither party appealed.   Thereafter, the minor
    plaintiff’s parents filed a petition in the trial court for permission to accept a
    settlement in the amount of $20,000, the high end of the pre-arbitration
    agreement.      
    Id.
       The court, however, denied the petition, and refused to
    ____________________________________________
    7Rule 2039 provides in relevant part, “No action to which a minor is a party
    shall be compromised, settled or discontinued except after approval by the
    court pursuant to a petition presented by the guardian of the minor.”
    Pa.R.C.P. 2039(a).
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    accept any settlement that was less than the arbitration award. 
    Id.
     It entered
    judgment on the arbitration award, and denied the defendants’ motion to set
    aside the award nunc pro tunc. 
    Id.
    On appeal, the defendants argued, inter alia, that the court erred in
    refusing to enforce the parties’ high/low settlement agreement. Power, 
    701 A.2d at 1373
    . The defendants insisted that Rule 2039 was intended to protect
    minors from exploitive, inept or dishonest counsel, not situations where
    counsel was attempting to protect the child’s potential recovery. 
    Id. at 1374
    .
    This Court, however, concluded Rule 2039 mandates trial courts “supervise
    all aspects of settlements in which a minor is a party in interest, and in
    considering whether to approve a settlement, [trial courts are] charged with
    protecting the best interests of the minor.” 
    Id.
     (citation omitted). Thus, the
    panel held that, when faced with the option of approving the $35,000
    arbitration award, or the $20,000 high/low settlement, the trial court “was
    compelled to deny [the] petition for a minor’s compromise for the lesser
    amount.” 
    Id. at 1375
    . The Power Court summarized:
    In closing, while we may accept [the defendants’] claim that
    all parties were at all times acting in good faith, and that both
    parties’ counsel perceived that they were acting in their client’s
    best interest when they entered into the high/low agreement, we
    must emphasize that Rule 2039 was specifically designed to
    remove from the litigants and their counsel the authority to
    subjectively determine what is right for the minor; the Rule makes
    the Court the final arbiter of what is in the minor’s best interest.
    It is imperative that all counsel appreciate the role that the court
    must play in evaluating any agreement which affects a minor’s
    recovery.
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    Id. at 1375-76
     (citation and footnote omitted).
    The facts in Power are distinguishable from those in the case sub judice.
    First, Power concerned the protection of the interests of a minor, who is
    incompetent to “choose” between competing settlement offers.             Second,
    although the parties in Power were acting in the minor’s best interest when
    they negotiated the high/low settlement agreement, they did not seek court
    approval of the agreement, as required by Rule 2039. Thus, the court properly
    determined the arbitration award, which had become final after the expiration
    of the appeal period, was “clearly in the minor’s best interest.” Power, 
    701 A.2d at 1375
    .
    With regard to the SSPA, this Court has explained:
    [The] active oversight on the part of the trial court . . . advances
    the SSPA’s primary objective of safeguarding recipients of
    structured settlements from the transferees that seek to persuade
    them to sell their future payments at sharp discount rates.
    Jacobs, 
    936 A.2d at 1165
    . Here, the trial court took an active part in the
    hearing to ensure Payee was fully aware she was “trading” substantial future
    payments for a lesser immediate payment.           See N.T., 2/12/20, at 15.
    Moreover, while Appellant’s offer may have had a slightly more favorable
    interest rate, Payee clearly explained that she felt “harassed” by Appellant and
    did not want to do business with them. Id. at 11-12. In its opinion, the trial
    court stated that, after the hearing, it received an affidavit from Payee in which
    she stated she was still being harassed by Appellant. See Trial Ct. Op. at 5-
    6. Thus, the court concluded that Payee’s “subsequent affidavit [left the court]
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    with zero regrets and no reservations as to this issue.” Id. at 12. We find no
    basis to disagree.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 12/11/2020
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Document Info

Docket Number: 395 WDA 2020

Filed Date: 12/11/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/13/2024