Broadwater, S. v. Materkowski, J. ( 2020 )


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  • J-S75028-19
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    SHELLY M. BROADWATER                       :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant               :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    JOSEPH E. MATERKOWSKI,                     :   No. 1021 WDA 2019
    INDIVIDUALLY AND AS AGENT FOR              :
    ABACUS MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS,                 :
    LLC; ABACUS MANAGEMENT                     :
    SYSTEMS, LLC; DEREK VIRGILI,               :
    INDIVIDUALLY AND AS AGENT FOR              :
    BERKSHIRE HATHAWAY                         :
    HOMESERVICES THE PREFERRED                 :
    REALTY; AND BERKSHIRE                      :
    HATHAWAY HOMESERVICES THE                  :
    PREFERRED REALTY                           :
    Appeal from the Order Entered June 11, 2019,
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County,
    Civil Division at No(s): 1725 of 2017 GD.
    BEFORE:      STABILE, J., KUNSELMAN, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY KUNSELMAN, J.:                        FILED NOVEMBER 30, 2020
    I.     Introduction
    In this dispute over a sale of residential property, Shelly M. Broadwater
    (“the Buyer”) appeals an order involuntarily discontinuing her lawsuit against
    all four defendants. Those defendants are (1) the company that flipped and
    sold her the home in question, (2) its manager,1 (3) the Seller’s real-estate
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1 We refer to defendants one and two (Abacus Management Systems and
    Joseph E. Materkowski) collectively as “the Seller.”
    J-S75028-19
    agent, and (4) the agent’s firm.2          During discovery, the Buyer settled her
    claims against the Seller for an undisclosed amount of money (“the Release”).
    The trial court concluded that the Release of the Seller also released the
    Agency, because the Agency had cross-sued the Seller for contribution and
    indemnification.
    Relying on Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 229, which governs
    voluntary discontinuances, the trial court involuntarily discontinued the entire
    lawsuit. This was incorrect. The Buyer did not execute a general release, so
    her claims against the Agency remain viable, as do the Agency’s cross-claims
    against the Seller. We therefore reverse the order discontinuing this action.
    II.    Factual & Procedural Background
    The Buyer purchased a remodeled home from the Seller. The Buyer
    alleges there were substantial defects that all defendants concealed prior to
    the closing. She therefore brought counts for fraud, breach of contract, and
    violation of the Real Estate Disclosure Act3 against Seller. She also brought a
    separate count of fraud against the Agency. Finally, the Buyer alleged a count
    for violation of the Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law 4 by
    all defendants.
    ____________________________________________
    2We refer to defendants three and four (Derek Virgili and Berkshire Hathaway)
    collectively as “the Agency.” Originally, the real-estate agency was Northwood
    Realty Service, but that defendant changed to Berkshire Hathaway while this
    matter was before the trial court.
    3   68 Pa.C.S.A. § 7301.
    4   73 Pa.C.S.A. § 201.1.
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    The Agency filed a cross-claim against the Seller, claiming if the Agency
    was ultimately liable to the Buyer, then the Seller is jointly and severally liable.
    In other words, the Agency sought reimbursement from the Seller for any
    money it might ultimately owe the Buyer.
    The Seller filed no Answer to the Buyer’s Complaint. Nor has it filed an
    Answer to the Agency’s cross-claim.
    After a year, the Buyer signed the Release and agreed to release the
    Seller:
    from any and all actions, causes of action, claims or
    demands, of whatever kind or nature, for any known or
    unknown injuries, losses, or damages allegedly sustained by
    [Buyer] and related in any way to the legal action instituted
    by the undersigned in the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette
    County, Pennsylvania, at Docket No. 1725 of 2017.
    Buyer’s 10/24/18 Release at 1. The Release made no direct reference to the
    Agency or the Buyer’s claims against the Agency.
    The Buyer then praeciped to discontinue her action against the Seller
    without permission from the trial court or the Agency. Four months later, the
    Agency asked the trial court to strike the discontinuance against the Seller,
    under Pa.R.C.P. 229. The court denied that request “without prejudice to re-
    present should the [Seller] fail to file a Motion for Leave of Court to discontinue
    the action” as to all defendants. 4/12/19 Order.
    Next, the Seller moved to terminate the Buyer’s case in its entirety,
    under Rule 229. The Seller argued that, because the Buyer did not obtain
    permission from the court or the Agency to file her praecipe to discontinue
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    regarding the Seller, the Buyer misled opposing counsel and the Seller into
    believing that they were fully and forever released and discharged from all
    actions or causes of action, claims, or demands in this matter.
    The Buyer replied to the motion by specifically denying she “intended,
    or represented, that the Praecipe to . . . Discontinue ended all claims against
    all Defendants. On the contrary, [the praecipe] clearly indicates, on its face,
    that it applies to claims against the [Seller] only.” Buyer’s Answer and New
    Matter to Seller’s 5/6/19 Motion at 2. She also indicated that Pa.R.C.P. 229
    does not allow the trial court to dismiss a case. See id. In her New Matter,
    the Buyer sought the trial court’s approval of her already-filed praecipe to
    discontinue as to the Seller, under Rule 229(b)(1). See id. at 4.
    The trial court entered an order discontinuing the action completely —
    i.e., as to all four defendants. This timely appeal followed.
    III. Analysis
    The Buyer raises two issues that we combine for ease of disposition –
    whether the trial court committed an error of law or abused its discretion by
    dismissing this case. See Buyer’s Brief at 4. In the Agency’s responsive brief,
    it argues that we should affirm the order discontinuing this case with prejudice
    on alternative grounds. See Agency’s Brief at 3-9. We address both parties’
    issues in turn.
    A.    Discontinuance under Rule 229
    With only two pages of argument, the Buyer’s brief is quite succinct.
    See id. at 7-8. She argues that Rule 229 does not authorize the trial court to
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    discontinue a case against all defendants as penalty for failure to obtain leave
    of court. She also contends her noncompliance with the Rule, if any, did not
    prejudice the defendants. Thus, the Buyer believes the trial court misapplied
    Rule 229 and thereby abused its discretion in discontinuing this case.
    The Seller’s response expresses frustration with what Seller perceives
    to be the Buyer’s anticipatory repudiation (if not outright breach) of the
    Release. The Seller claims the Buyer and her counsel “are acting in bad-faith,”
    and it should receive “attorney fees and costs per the full-and-final disclosure,
    which assures that [the Buyer] will reimburse for all losses or damages . . .
    sustained related in any way to legal action instituted by the [Buyer].” Seller’s
    Brief at 4 (some punctuation and capitation omitted). According to the Seller,
    “The trial court must be upheld and [the Buyer] and her counsel’s bad faith
    cannot    be    permitted     under    any     circumstances   as   this   conduct   is
    unconscionable in this Commonwealth.” Id. at 6. The Seller contends that
    the Buyer promised “full indemnification in exchange for the settlement
    payment.” Id. at 9 (emphasis in original). In the Seller’s view, the Buyer’s
    procedural error “clearly prejudiced” it, because the Seller fears exposure to
    liability from the Agency’s cross-claim “that [the Seller is] responsible for any
    and all wrongdoing.” Id. (emphasis in original).5
    ____________________________________________
    5 Also, Seller claims “that five contractors were paid $30,000.00 for the work
    done in the home” and that the decision to settle involved Ms. Broadwater’s
    alleged need to join those contractors as co-defendants. See Seller’s Brief at
    5-6, 13. Whatever may have transpired during settlement negotiations or
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    Initially, we observe that the Seller erroneously states our standard of
    review. It asserts “the trial court has absolute discretion over the application
    of discontinuances pursuant to Rule 229.” Seller’s Brief at 3 (citing Becker
    v. M.S. Reilly, Inc., 
    123 A.3d 776
     (Pa. Super. 2015)). Were we to afford
    trial court’s absolute discretion to discontinue a plaintiff’s case, we would
    abdicate our duty of appellate review. Instead, the Becker Court said, “The
    causes which will move the [trial] court to withdraw its assumed leave and set
    aside the discontinuance are addressed to its discretion . . . .” Becker, 123
    A.3d at 779. Thus, our “standard of review of a trial court’s order granting a
    request for discontinuance is [an] abuse of discretion.” Truesdale ex rel.
    Truesdale v. Albert Einstein Med. Ctr., 
    767 A.2d 1060
    , 1063 (Pa. Super.
    2001), as revised (Mar. 30, 2001).
    “An abuse of discretion occurs when the trial judge misapplies the law,
    or exercises his or her judgment in a manner that is manifestly unreasonable,
    or the result of bias, prejudice, or ill will.” 
    Id.
     (some punctuation omitted).
    In other words, we defer to a trial court’s decision to discontinue a party or
    parties, if (1) the ruling is reasonable and (2) it is based upon a correct
    interpretation of the rules of civil procedure.
    ____________________________________________
    may have appeared in discovery are absent from the record. Thus, these
    supposed facts are beyond our scope of review. Generally, if it is not in the
    record, it does not exist. See, e.g., Stumpf v. Nye, 
    950 A.2d 1032
    , 1041
    (Pa. Super. 2008).
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    “To the extent that the question presented involves interpretation of
    rules of civil procedure, our standard of review is de novo.” Brown v. Quest
    Diagnostics, 
    209 A.3d 386
    , 389 (Pa. Super. 2019). We owe the trial court’s
    interpretation of Rule 229 no deference whatsoever.
    When interpreting the rules of civil procedure our goal “is to ascertain
    and effectuate the intention of the Supreme Court.” Pa.R.C.P. 217(a). If “the
    words of a rule are clear and free from all ambiguity, the letter of it is not to
    be disregarded under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.” 
    Id.
     We must also
    strive to give effect to all of the words within a rule, if possible. See 
    id.
    Mindful of these directives, we turn to Rule 229, which provides, in
    relevant part:
    (a) A discontinuance shall be the exclusive method of
    voluntary termination of an action, in whole or in part, by
    the plaintiff before commencement of the trial.
    (b)(1) Except as otherwise provided in subdivision
    (b)(2), a discontinuance may not be entered as to less than
    all defendants except upon the written consent of all parties
    or leave of court upon motion of any plaintiff or any
    defendant for whom plaintiff has stipulated in writing to the
    discontinuance . . .
    (c) The court, upon petition and after notice, may strike
    off a discontinuance in order to protect the rights of any
    party    from   unreasonable     inconvenience,    vexation,
    harassment, expense, or prejudice.
    Pa.R.C.P. 229.
    Under the plain language of the Rule, the Buyer is correct. There is no
    penalty for violating Pa.R.C.P. 229, and it especially does not authorize the
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    imposition of summary judgment as to all defendants, which was the practical
    result of the trial court’s order. The Rule is not a proper basis for involuntary
    termination (a.k.a., “summary judgment”), because Pa.R.A.P. 229 is “the
    exclusive method of voluntary termination of an action . . . .” 
    Id.
     (emphasis
    added).
    The trial court acknowledged that “the Rule does not state a clear
    remedy when a party fails to comply with that Rule.” Trial Court Opinion,
    9/16/19, at 6. The court then said that there “does not appear to be any case
    law directly on point with this issue.”      
    Id.
       As we explain below, some
    precedent exists, but none of it supports the trial court’s order.
    Paragraph (b)(1) of the Rule specifically deals with cases such as this,
    where a plaintiff attempts to discontinue her action against less than all of the
    defendants in her lawsuit.       That paragraph’s language unambiguously
    supports the trial court and the Seller’s view that the Buyer needed to obtain
    “the written consent of all parties or leave of court . . . .” prior to praeciping
    to her discontinue as to only the Seller. Pa.R.C.P. 229(b)(1).
    However, in construing Rule 229, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
    has held that seeking leave of court before filing the praecipe is a technical
    formality, observed more often in the breach than in the keeping. The trial
    court presumptively grants its leave, as a matter of ancient practice, predating
    the rules of civil procedure. Rule 229(b)(1) “reflects the longstanding practice
    in Pennsylvania, which was well-described in Consolidated National Bank
    v. McManus, 
    217 Pa. 190
    , 
    66 A. 250
     (1907).            In McManus, the plaintiff
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    entered a discontinuance, the defendant filed a rule to show cause why it
    should not be stricken, and the [trial] court discharged the rule.” Fancsali
    ex rel. Fancsali v. Univ. Health Center of Pittsburgh, 
    761 A.2d 1159
    ,
    1161 (Pa. 2000).
    The McManus Court deemed the discharging of the rule to show cause
    as the “equivalent to a grant of leave” to discontinue, even though the plaintiff
    never moved for such leave. McManus, 66 A. at 250. The Court explained
    that:
    A discontinuance in strict law must be by leave of court, but
    it is the universal practice in Pennsylvania to assume such
    leave in the first instance . . . All the cases show that a
    discontinuance must be founded on the express or implied
    leave of the court. In England, this leave is obtained on
    motion in the first instance, [but, in American practice,] it is
    taken without the formality of an application, but subject to
    be withdrawn on cause shown . . . that is the
    whole difference.
    Id. at 250.
    The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania promulgated Pa.R.C.P. 229(b)(1) in
    light of McManus (as reaffirmed in Fancsali). The statement that a plaintiff
    “may not” enter a discontinuance without the consent of all parties or leave
    of court, then, is mandatory, but the Buyer’s violation of the Rule does not
    warrant the discontinuance of her action. In the American practice, the Buyer
    could presume that she had the leave of the court to file her praecipe without
    actually requesting it, if she were discontinuing the action as to all defendants.
    But that presumption does not apply to a discontinuance of only some
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    defendants. Where, as here, a plaintiff files a discontinuance as to only some
    defendants without express leave of court, the Rule allows her to do so without
    penalty. However, the remaining defendants may then move for the striking
    of the discontinuance, as the Agency did here. The burden of convincing the
    trial court to strike the discontinuance, then falls upon any remaining parties
    under 229(c).   See also, Becker, 123 A.3d at 779 (framing the issue as
    whether the trial court should “withdraw its assumed leave and set aside the
    discontinuance”) (emphasis added).
    Here, the Agency attempted to do just that, but the trial court denied it
    relief. Instead, the court essentially reinstated English procedure. By faulting
    the Buyer for not obtaining the court’s leave before filing the praecipe to
    discontinue, the trial court required that “leave [be] obtained on motion in the
    first instance.” McManus, 66 A. at 250. This was error; the trial court should
    have limited its inquiry to the single issue the Agency raised — i.e., whether
    the Buyer could discontinue as to the Seller without prejudicing the Agency.
    If the discontinuance of the Seller prejudiced the Agency, the proper remedy
    was not the discontinuance of the whole matter. Instead, the trial court should
    have stricken the discontinuance as to the Seller and allowed the case to
    proceed to trial against all four defendants.
    Under McManus, Fancsali, Becker, and Pa.R.C.P. 229(b)(1), the
    Buyer needed leave of court to discontinue the Seller. However, the trial court
    also erred as a matter of law when it manufactured a summary-judgment-like
    penalty for the Buyer’s Rule 229 violation and discontinued the case. There
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    is nothing in Rule 229 that calls for such a draconian result. Accordingly, we
    agree with the Buyer; the trial court committed an error of law by misapplying
    Rule 229.
    The court therefore abused its discretion when it discontinued this case
    as to all parties.
    B.      The Release and UCATA
    Our review cannot end here, however, because the Agency asks us to
    affirm the dismissal of the Buyer’s suit on alternative grounds. This Court is
    “not bound by the rationale of the trial court and may affirm on any basis.”
    Sw. Energy Prod. Co. v. Forest Res., LLC, 
    83 A.3d 177
    , 184 (Pa. Super.
    2013) (quotations and citations omitted).
    The Agency claims that the trial court properly interpreted and enforced
    the Release, which was the true basis for the trial court’s decision, not Rule
    229. In essence, the Agency asserts the Buyer signed a general release. It
    believes the Uniform Contribution Among Tortfeasors Act (“UCATA”)6 bars the
    Buyer from any additional recovery.
    This issue requires us to interpret the UCATA statute and the Release.
    “Because this claim raises an issue of statutory construction, which is a
    question of law, this Court’s standard of review is de novo, and the scope of
    review is plenary.”      Cash Am. Net of Nevada, LLC v. Com., Dep't of
    Banking, 
    8 A.3d 282
    , 289 (Pa. 2010). We use the same scope and standard
    ____________________________________________
    6   42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 8321 – 8327.
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    of review to interpret the Release, because the “interpretation of a contract is
    [also] a question of law.” Gen. Refractories Co. v. Ins. Co. of N. Am., 
    906 A.2d 610
    , 612 (Pa. Super. 2006).
    When interpreting a statute our goal “is to ascertain and effectuate the
    intention of the General Assembly.” 1 Pa.C.S.A. § 1921(a). “When the words
    of a statute are clear and free from all ambiguity, the letter of it is not to be
    disregarded under the pretext of pursuing its spirit.” 1 Pa.C.S.A. § 1921(b).
    “Words and phrases shall be construed according to rules of grammar and
    according to their common and approved usage,” while any words or phrases
    that have a “peculiar and appropriate meaning” are construed according to
    that meaning. 1 Pa.C.S.A. § 1903(a).
    Critically, statutes relating to the same subjects are in pari materia, and
    they “shall be construed together, if possible, as one statute.” 1 Pa.C.S.A. §
    1932. UCATA’s seven sections, 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 8321 – 8327, relate to the
    same subject – i.e., damages apportionment among joint tortfeasors,
    especially after a plaintiff has released less than all joint tortfeasors. Thus,
    we hold that UCATA’s provisions are in pari materia and must be read and
    construed together as one statute.
    As for the Release, “it is well settled that the effect of a release is to be
    determined by the ordinary meaning of its language.” Taylor v. Solberg,
    
    778 A.2d 664
    , 667 (Pa. 2001). In other words, we read and apply a release’s
    language like any other contract.
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    By way of background, the legislature enacted UCATA to supplant the
    common law. “UCATA abrogated the broader, common-law rule that payment
    by one tortfeasor would release all others regardless of the parties’ intent,
    insofar as it applied to joint tortfeasors.” Maloney v. Valley Med. Facilities,
    Inc., 
    984 A.2d 478
    , 481 n.4 (Pa. 2009). UCATA “drastically changed the law
    on this subject, and, since its enactment, a release by the injured party to one
    jointly liable does not release others also liable, unless the release expressly
    so provides.” Brown v. City of Pittsburgh, 
    186 A.2d 399
    , 402 (Pa. 1962).
    The statute therefore allows a plaintiff to execute a “general release.”
    General releases surrender the plaintiff’s right to sue, not only whichever
    defendants’ names appear in the release, but also the rest of the world. For
    example, in Buttermore v. Aliquippa Hospital, 
    561 A.2d 733
     (Pa. 1989),
    the plaintiff was severally injured in a car accident and the hospital treated his
    injuries.    According to Mr. and Mrs. Buttermore, medical malpractice had
    worsened his injuries and caused irreversible, nerve damage to his spine.
    They sued the hospital and its doctors, who moved for judgment as a matter
    of law, based on a release Mr. Buttermore had previously executed with the
    driver who caused the underlying accident. That release’s all-encompassing
    language was as follows:
    I . . . hereby remise, release, acquit, and forever discharge
    [negligent driver] et al. . . . and any and all other persons
    . . . or corporations, whether known or unknown, suspected
    or unsuspected, past, present and future claims, demands,
    damages, actions, third-party actions, causes of action, or
    suits at law or in equity, indemnity of whatever nature, for
    or because of any matter or thing done, omitted or suffered
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    to be done, on account of or arising from damage to
    property, bodily injury, or death resulting or to result from
    an accident which occurred on or about the 3rd day of
    December, 1981 at or near Aliquippa, Pennsylvania for
    which I/We have claimed the said [negligent driver] et al. to
    be legally liable . . . .
    Buttermore, 
    561 A.2d 733
    , 734 (quoting release).
    The trial court granted summary judgment to the hospital and doctors
    based upon the general release. This Court reversed, and the Supreme Court
    of Pennsylvania granted review and reinstated summary judgment as to Mr.
    Buttermore’s personal-injury claims.7 Citing the universality of the release’s
    language, the Supreme Court explained that “a release given to a particular
    individual and ‘any and all other persons whether herein named or not’
    [applies] to all tortfeasors, despite the fact that they were not specifically
    named.” Id. at 735.
    Litigants are therefore free to fashion settlement agreements however
    they wish.    If parties require that “the matter must end then and forever . . .
    they are at liberty to do so. They may agree . . . that they will not sue each
    other or any one [else] for the event in question. However, improvident their
    agreement may be or subsequently prove for either party, their agreement,
    absent fraud, accident, or mutual mistake, is the law of their case.” Id. Thus,
    one tortfeasor may demand that, as a condition for settlement, that a plaintiff
    forfeit all claims against other tortfeasors.
    ____________________________________________
    7The Supreme Court affirmed this Court as to Mrs. Buttermore’s claim for loss
    of consortium, because she had not signed the release. Her cause of action,
    while procedurally linked to her husband’s claim, stood alone.
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    The Release at bar, however, does not contain the universal language
    found in Buttermore. Unlike the Buttermore release, the Buyer’s Release
    contains no “et al.” and no “and any and all other persons . . . or corporations,
    whether known or unknown” clauses.        Additionally, this Release makes no
    mention of the Agency and no mention of the two counts that the Buyer has
    alleged against the Agency. Instead, it releases only the Seller:
    The [Buyer] hereby fully and forever releases, acquits, and
    discharges JOSEPH E. MATERKOWSKI and ABACUS
    MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, LLC from any and all actions,
    causes of action, claims or demands, of whatever kind or
    nature, for any known or unknown injuries, losses, or
    damages allegedly sustained by the [Buyer] and related in
    any way to the legal action instituted by the undersigned in
    the Court of Common Pleas of Fayette County,
    Pennsylvania, at Docket No. 1725 of 2017.
    Buyer’s 10/24/2018 Release at 1 (emphasis added). Thus, the Release was
    solely and exclusively as to the Buyer’s claims against the Seller.
    Because the Release does not provide for the discharge of the Agency
    (or anyone else other than the Seller), the Agency’s reliance upon the Release
    to exit this lawsuit is misplaced. Indeed, were we to apply the Release as the
    Agency suggests and end this case, we would override UCATA and return to
    the common law, when payment from one of many tortfeasors to a plaintiff
    terminated the remainder of the case.
    Still, the Agency argues that such a result would be unjust, because it
    has cross-claims for contribution and indemnification pending against the
    Seller, whom the Buyer has now fully and finally released from liability in this
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    action. The Agency believes that, in order for the Buyer to preserve her claims
    against it, she needed to include language in the Release so stating.
    This was also the primary concern for the trial court, which opined:
    The [Agency] filed a cross-claim against the [Seller],
    asserting that the [Seller was] responsible for any and all
    wrongdoing, or that [it was] jointly liable.
    The [Buyer] and the [Seller] then entered into the
    . . . Release, which released the [Seller] from the case in its
    entirety. The [Seller] paid consideration to the [Buyer] as
    a settlement. The [Buyer] then filed its Discontinuance as
    to the [Seller] only, without seeking leave of court or
    consent of the [Agency].
    Legally, however, a discontinuance between a plaintiff
    and defendants does not preclude cross-claims between
    defendants and additional defendants.           See Ross v.
    Tomlin, 
    969 A.2d 230
     (Pa. Super. 1997). This means that
    the [Agency’s] continued presence in the action would also
    continue [its] cross-claim against the [Seller]. As a result,
    the [Seller] could still be liable for damages to the [Buyer]
    if the [Agency] and the [Buyer] went to trial, even though
    the [Seller] settled [its] case with the [Buyer, who] released
    the [Seller] from the action.
    In deciding whether to grant the [Seller’s] Motion for
    Leave of Court to Discontinue as to All Parties, this Court
    determined that discontinuing against all defendants was
    the only option consistent with the apparent intention of the
    . . . Release between the [Buyer] and the [Seller]. Further,
    by not discontinuing the [Agency], [its] cross-claim against
    the [Seller] would have continued to be valid, which would
    have greatly prejudiced the [Seller].
    Trial Court Opinion, 9/16/19, at 7-8.
    The trial court’s reasoning ignores UCATA and impermissibly converts
    the Buyer’s specific release of only the Seller into a general release of the
    whole world. As explained above, under Buttermore, supra, the Buyer did
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    not execute a general release. Thus, the trial court’s discontinuance as to the
    Agency directly contradicted the General Assembly’s directives in UCATA that
    a “release by the injured person of one joint tortfeasor . . . does not discharge
    the other tortfeasors, unless the release so provides.” 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8326
    (emphasis added) (some punctuation omitted).
    Indeed, under the plain language of UCATA, the Seller remains liable to
    the Agency for contribution and indemnification, notwithstanding the Release
    of the Seller by the Buyer. The UCATA “does not impair any right of indemnity
    under existing law.” 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8323. “The right of contribution exists
    among joint tortfeasors.”       42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8324(a) (some punctuation
    omitted). Finally, a “release by the injured person of one joint tortfeasor does
    not relieve him [i.e., the released tortfeasor] from liability to make
    contribution to another tortfeasor . . . .”         42 Pa.C.S.A. § 8327 (some
    punctuation omitted) (emphasis added). The only exception to that provision
    is if “the release [(1)] is given before the right of the other tortfeasor to secure
    a money judgment for contribution has accrued and [(2)] provides for a
    reduction to the extent of the pro rata share of the released tortfeasor of the
    injured person's damages recoverable against all the other tortfeasors.” Id.
    (emphasis added).
    Currently, the Release only satisfies the first part of the exception, as
    Buyer gave it before the Agency’s right to secure its judgment for contribution
    from the Seller has accrued. As for the second part, the Release does not
    provide for a pro rata reduction of the Seller’s share from any judgment that
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    J-S75028-19
    the Buyer might, in the end, recover from the Agency. Hence, the exception
    to Section 8327 of UCATA does not apply, and we may not hold that this
    Release automatically relieves the Seller “from liability to make contribution
    to [the Agency]” under UCATA. Id.
    By concluding the Release automatically canceled the Agency’s cross-
    claim for contribution and indemnity against the Seller, the trial court failed
    to apply the plain language of 42 Pa.C.S.A. §§ 8323, 8324(a), 8327. Total
    discontinuation of this case relieved a released tortfeasor (Seller) from
    contribution to its potential, joint tortfeasor (the Agency), based solely upon
    the fact that the Buyer had entered a release with the Seller.      Automatic
    discontinuance of the whole action was error as a matter of law.
    IV.   Conclusion
    In sum, because the trial court misapplied Pennsylvania Rule of Civil
    Procedure 229, its effective grant of summary judgment under Rule 229 must
    be reversed. The pro tanto Release that Seller executed with Buyer does not
    permit the Seller to exit this lawsuit, because a pro tanto Release does not
    settle or discontinue Seller’s potential liability to the Agency on the cross-
    claims for indemnification and contribution.
    Order reversed. Case remanded for further proceedings.
    Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judge Stabile joins the memorandum.
    Judge Pellegrini concurs in the result.
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    J-S75028-19
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 11/30/2020
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