Mariano, W. v. Rhodes, A. ( 2022 )


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  • J-S29018-21
    
    2022 PA Super 15
    WILLIAM FRANK MARIANO III                             :    IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :         PENNSYLVANIA
    :
    v.                                    :
    :
    :
    ALYSSA ANN RHODES                                     :
    :
    Appellant                    :    No. 2335 EDA 2020
    Appeal from the Order Entered October 26, 2020,
    in the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County,
    Civil Division at No(s): No. 2020-004278.
    BEFORE:         PANELLA, P.J., KUNSELMAN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*
    OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.:                                         FILED JANUARY 26, 2022
    In this matter, we consider whether the prothonotary’s rejection of a
    spouse’s imperfect pleadings constitute “a fatal defect apparent upon the face
    of the record,” thereby obligating a court to vacate a divorce decree under 23
    Pa.C.S.A. § 3332. Appellee, William Frank Mariano III (Husband), obtained
    what amounted to an uncontested divorce decree, after the responsive
    pleadings filed by Appellant, Alyssa Ann Rhodes (Wife), were rejected by the
    prothonotary’s office.               Although Wife’s counsel          timely-submitted   these
    pleadings,        counsel       neglected         to   enter   his appearance   and pay    the
    corresponding filing fee.                The prothonotary’s office then crossed out the
    timestamp on the pleadings, and informed counsel of his mistake. Counsel
    entered his appearance and paid the fee, but not until after the deadline
    ____________________________________________
    *   Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-S29018-21
    passed.       The trial court deemed these pleadings untimely and issued the
    divorce decree.           Wife filed a motion to vacate, arguing the prothonotary’s
    rejection constituted a fatal defect. The trial court denied Wife’s request, and
    she appealed. After careful review, we agree the prothonotary’s office lacked
    the authority to reject Wife’s pleadings, and thus we vacate the divorce decree
    and remand for further proceedings.
    The factual and procedural history is not in dispute. The parties married
    in August 2016 and separated in 2018. Two years after they separated, on
    July 6, 2020, Husband filed a complaint in divorce pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S.A. §
    3301(d) (“Irretrievable breakdown”).             By August 11, 2020, Husband had
    initiated the necessary steps to obtain a decree. He served Wife with the
    complaint, the requisite affidavit and blank counter-affidavit, as well as his
    notice of intention to file the praecipe to transmit record.
    Under the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure, once Wife was served
    with these documents, she had 20 days – i.e., until August 31 – to reply.
    Otherwise, Husband could file a praecipe to transmit the record and obtain a
    divorce decree, at which point Wife would forfeit any economic claims related
    to their marriage.1 Wife replied. She completed the counter-affidavit, as well
    as an answer and counterclaim, wherein she disputed Husband’s averments
    and requested equitable distribution.2 Counsel for Wife sent these pleadings
    to be filed with the Delaware County Office of Judicial Support (colloquially,
    ____________________________________________
    1See Pa.R.C.P. 1920.42(c).
    2See Pa.R.C.P. 1920.72; see also Pa.R.C.P. 1920.14; and see Pa.R.C.P.
    1920.15.
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    the prothonotary’s office).      The prothonotary’s office timestamped the
    pleadings on August 28, 2020 – within the 20-day deadline.
    However, the prothonotary’s office then informed counsel that he
    “needed to pay a fifty-dollar entry of appearance fee.” See Wife’s Brief at 3.
    On September 1, 2020 – one day after the 20-day deadline – Wife’s counsel
    went to the prothonotary’s office in person, filed an entry of appearance and
    paid the filing fee. At this point, counsel was under the impression that the
    defect had been cured.
    In the meantime, on August 31, Husband had filed the praecipe to
    transmit record. On September 29, 2020, the trial court issued the divorce
    decree, and Wife’s economic claims were forfeited.         Only then did Wife’s
    counsel realize that Wife’s responsive pleadings were never officially docketed
    or otherwise reinstated.      Although the responsive pleadings had been
    timestamped before the deadline, their timestamps were crossed out.
    October 6, 2020, Wife filed a motion to vacate the divorce decree. The court
    denied Wife’s motion on October 26, 2020, and she timely filed this appeal.
    Wife presents one issue for our review:
    Did the trial court abuse its discretion by failing to grant
    [Wife’s] motion to vacate the decree in divorce, seven days
    after its entry, due to a clerical docketing mistake?
    Wife’s Brief at 2 (superfluous capitalization omitted).
    We begin with our well-settled standard of review.         “A trial court’s
    exercise or refusal to exercise its authority to open, vacate, or strike a divorce
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    decree is reviewable on appeal for an abuse of discretion.”             Bardine v.
    Bardine, 
    194 A.3d 150
    , 152 (Pa. Super. 2018) (citation omitted). “An abuse
    of discretion is not merely an error of judgment but is found where the law is
    overridden   or   misapplied,   or   the   judgment   exercised    is    manifestly
    unreasonable, or the result of partiality, prejudice, bias or ill will as shown by
    the evidence or the record.” Fischer v. UPMC Northwest, 
    34 A.3d 115
    , 120
    (Pa. Super. 2011).
    Wife’s challenge involves the application of 23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3332, which
    governs a trial court’s authority to open or vacate a divorce decree. The intent
    of Section 3332 is “to codify the extraordinary circumstances which will
    outweigh the interests of the parties and the court in finality, and to delimit
    the time periods which within such circumstances must be established.”
    Bardine, 194 A.3d at 153 (citing Anderson v. Anderson, 
    544 A.2d 501
    , 505
    (Pa. Super. 1988)). Importantly, the concern is no longer about economic
    fairness. “[A] general plea to economic justice will not satisfy the stringent
    standard set forth [in Section 3332].” Melton v. Melton, 
    831 A.2d 646
    , 651
    (Pa. Super. 2003) (citing Justice v. Justice, 
    612 A.2d 1354
    , 1357 (Pa. Super.
    1992)). This “stringent standard” involves clear evidentiary requirements and
    time constraints on a court’s authority to open or vacate a divorce decree:
    § 3332. Opening or vacating decrees
    A motion to open a decree of divorce or annulment may be
    made only within the period limited by 42 Pa.C.S.A. §
    5505 (relating to modification of orders) and not thereafter.
    The motion may lie where it is alleged that the decree was
    procured by intrinsic fraud or that there is new evidence
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    relating to the cause of action which will sustain the attack
    upon its validity. A motion to vacate a decree or strike a
    judgment alleged to be void because of extrinsic fraud, lack
    of jurisdiction over the subject matter or a fatal defect
    apparent upon the face of the record must be made within
    five years after entry of the final decree. Intrinsic fraud
    relates to a matter adjudicated by the judgment, including
    perjury and false testimony, whereas extrinsic fraud relates
    to matters collateral to the judgment which have the
    consequence of precluding a fair hearing or presentation of
    one side of the case.
    23 Pa.C.S.A. § 3332.
    We observe Wife sought to vacate the decree, not open it. “For a motion
    to vacate, the [motion] must be filed within five years of the divorce decree
    where the attack is based on extrinsic fraud, lack of jurisdiction over the
    subject matter or a fatal defect apparent upon the face of the record.”
    Bardine, 194 A.3d at 153 (citing Fenstermaker v. Fenstermaker, 
    502 A.2d 185
    , 188 (Pa. Super. 1985)).
    Wife argues that the prothonotary’s rejection of her pleadings
    constituted a fatal defect under Section 3332, and that trial court abused its
    discretion for not finding the same.      Wife explains that the prothonotary
    timestamped her pleadings, and that these stamps showed that the pleadings
    were timely filed three days before the deadline. Wife’s counsel was then
    informed that he had to enter his appearance and pay the fee. See Wife’s
    Brief at 1, 2.   Counsel complied and “was left to believe the documents were
    now successfully filed with the court.” See id at 4. Thus, Wife concludes that
    that defect was either the prothonotary’s failure to file the pleadings after their
    initial receipt, or in the alternative, the prothonotary’s failure to reinstate the
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    pleadings after counsel entered an appearance. See 
    id.
     Wife also reasons
    that “defect” could be construed as “extrinsic fraud” on the part of the trial
    court. In other words, Wife reasons that she is entitled to relief under not
    one, but two criteria of Section 3332. See 
    id.
    In opposition to Wife’s appeal, Husband and the trial court maintain that
    the fault lies solely with Wife’s counsel. See Husband’s Brief at 9; see also
    Trial Court Opinion (T.C.O.), 3/24/21, at 6. The trial court specifically notes
    that Wife’s counsel compounded the original mistake by failing to ensure the
    pleadings were ultimately docketed after entering his appearance. See T.C.O.
    at 6.3
    Turning now to the merits, we agree with Wife’s position that the
    prothonotary’s rejection constituted a fatal defect apparent upon the face of
    the record.4 We cannot discern from the record what was the prothonotary
    office’s specific reason for rejecting Wife’s pleadings – whether it was counsel’s
    failure to enter his appearance, or counsel’s failure to pay the necessary fee
    to enter his appearance, or both.              In any event, the prothonotary’s office
    simply had no authority to reject Wife’s documents, either for counsel’s failure
    to enter his appearance or for his failure to pay the filing fee.
    ____________________________________________
    3We note that Wife’s counsel claims he could not ensure the pleadings were
    docketed, even after the entry of appearance, due to the Covid-19 closures
    and the inability to access the docket online.
    4 Based on this conclusion, we need not address Wife’s alternate theory of
    extrinsic fraud.
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    Upon our review, we discover no precise local rule requiring counsel to
    first enter an appearance in order to submit documents to the prothonotary’s
    office. But even if the trial court gleaned such an obligation from a local rule,
    counsel’s noncompliance with the local rule could not be a basis for rejecting
    Wife’s pleadings in this instance. “It is axiomatic that if a local rule conflicts
    with a statewide rule of procedure, the local rule is invalid.” Everhardt v.
    Akerley, 
    665 A.2d 1283
    , 1286 (Pa. Super. 1995) (citations omitted). Here,
    we have a statewide rule explicitly stating: “Entry of a written appearance is
    not mandatory.” See Pa.R.C.P. 1012(a).
    We can only assume the prothonotary’s basis for rejecting Wife’s
    pleadings was counsel’s noncompliance with Delaware County Local Rule
    205.2(b), which concerns cover sheets.5 Under Delaware County Local Rule
    205.2(b), a moving party – or a party filing an answer – must include a cover
    sheet accompanying the pleading. The record suggests that Wife’s counsel
    neglected to do this.
    On this point, there exists still another statewide rule, limiting the
    prothonotary’s ability to reject a pleading.         Pennsylvania Rule of Civil
    Procedure 205.2 provides: “No pleading or other legal paper that complies
    with the Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure shall be refused for filing by the
    prothonotary based on a requirement of a local rule of civil procedure or
    ____________________________________________
    5Our assumption is informed by the 2010 Explanatory Comment to Delaware
    County Local Rule 205.2(b), which explains that this local rule replaced
    Delaware County Local Rule 241(a) (“Civil Cover sheet and Entry of
    Appearance Form”).
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    judicial administration, including local Rules 205.2(a) and 205(b) [relating
    to cover sheets].” (Emphasis added).       The law could not be clearer.    The
    prothonotary may not reject a filing for noncompliance with the local rule
    concerning cover sheets, so long as the pleading complies with the statewide
    rule. The 1985 Comment to Pa.R.C.P. 205.2 explains why a local prothonotary
    must accept the filings:
    A number of courts of common pleas have recently
    promulgated local rules which purport to facilitate judicial
    administration but which function to impair the statewide
    practice of law by imposing prerequisites to the filing of legal
    papers with the prothonotary. These requirements include
    appending a cover sheet to a complaint and the filing of a
    separate written entry of appearance.
    While a local court should be free to require additional
    information to aid in the orderly administration of justice,
    an out-of-county attorney or litigant should not be
    penalized with a missed filing date because of the
    failure to supply the required information. Therefore,
    new Rule 205.2 requires the prothonotary to accept for filing
    all pleadings and other legal papers which comply with the
    statewide rules of civil procedure. Once the paper has been
    filed, the local court may require compliance with other local
    provisions. The new rule attempts to strike a balance
    between local court administration and the requirements of
    a unified judicial system.
    Pa.R.C.P. 205.2 – Explanatory Comment -1985 (emphasis added); see also
    Pa.R.C.P. 239 (“Local Rules”) – Explanatory Comment – 2003 (“The primary
    obstacle to the statewide practice of law has been the inability of lawyers to
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    learn how each court of common pleas actually operates, particularly with
    respect to the pre-trial applications.”).6
    Our holding does not obviate the need or requirement for an attorney
    to enter an appearance.                    Rather, we hold that the failure to enter an
    appearance cannot be a basis for a prothonotary’s rejection of the pleadings.
    The entry of an appearance is particularly important in domestic relations
    matters, where a great number of litigants vacillate between counsel-
    representation and self-representation.                 When attorneys cannot discern
    whether the opposing party is represented by counsel, those attorneys face
    ethical dilemmas – to say nothing of the difficulty they face when trying to
    provide proper notice. See Rule of Professional Conduct 4.2 (“Dealing with
    Unrepresented Person”) (“In representing a client, a lawyer shall not
    communicate about the subject of the representation with a person the lawyer
    knows to be represented by another lawyer in the matter, unless the lawyer
    has the consent of the other lawyer or is authorized to do so by law or a court
    order.”)      We do not hold that Delaware County’s procedures are unlawful,
    ____________________________________________
    6 Perhaps the source of the prothonotary’s confusion was Pennsylvania Rule
    of Civil Procedure 205.5(b), which states: “[t]he prothonotary shall not
    accept a filing commencing an action without a completed cover sheet.”
    (Emphasis added). However, this provision quite clearly does not apply to
    divorce actions. See Pa.R.C.P. 205.5(a)(1)(iv) (“This rule shall apply to all
    actions govern by the rules of civil procedure except the following: (iv) actions
    for divorce…”). And if counsel’s noncompliance with Pennsylvania Rule of
    Procedure 205.5(b) cannot be a legitimate basis for rejecting Wife’s divorce
    pleadings, neither can her noncompliance with the corresponding Delaware
    County Local Rule 205.2. See Everhardt, 
    supra.
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    merely that these procedures could not be a basis for rejecting Wife’s
    pleadings.
    To the extent that the prothonotary rejected Wife’s pleadings for
    counsel’s initial nonpayment of the filing fee, we similarly conclude that the
    prothonotary lacked the authority to do so. While our various Rules provide
    that parties must pay the requisite filing fees, we have routinely held that
    nonconforming pleadings have no bearing on their timeliness.
    For instance, Pennsylvania Rule of Procedure 205.1 provides, in relevant
    part:
    Any legal paper….may be delivered or mailed to the
    prothonotary, sheriff or other appropriate officer
    accompanied by the filing fee, if any. […] A paper sent
    by mail shall not be deemed filed until received by the
    appropriate office.
    Pa.R.C.P. 205.1. (Emphasis added).
    In Nagy v. Best Home Services, Inc., 
    829 A.2d 1166
     (Pa. Super.
    2003), we interpreted Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 205.1 to mean
    that, for purposes of time computation, a document was filed when it was
    received by the prothonotary, notwithstanding that document’s nonconformity
    with regular procedure.     In Nagy, the appellant sought to appeal from a
    judgment. The appellant mailed the notice of appeal, and the prothonotary
    received it. However, the prothonotary did not timestamp it or enter it on the
    docket.    Instead, the prothonotary returned the notice of appeal by mail
    because the notice was unsigned and because the notice did not include a
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    copy of the judgment. By the time counsel remedied the mistakes, the notice
    of appeal was untimely. Counsel for the appellant filed a petition with the trial
    court for leave to file the appeal nunc pro tunc, but the trial court denied the
    request. Nagy, 
    829 A.2d at 1167
    . Although we were tasked with determining
    whether the appellant complied with our Rules of Appellate procedure, we
    relied on our Supreme Court’s construction of Pennsylvania Rule of Civil
    Procedure 205.1 to conclude that a document is filed when the prothonotary
    receives it. 
    Id.
     at 1170 (citing Criss v. Wise, 
    781 A.2d 1156
    , 1159 (Pa.
    2001)); see also Griffin v. Central Sprinkler Corp., 
    823 A.2d 191
     (Pa.
    Super. 2003).
    We explained that, while the prothonotary can inspect documents for
    compliance, and inform a party of any defect, the prothonotary must still
    accept the pleading:
    A prothonotary may have the power, and even the duty, to
    inspect documents tendered for filing and to reject them if
    they are not on their face in the proper form specifically
    required by the Rules, but this power is limited. He is not
    in the position of an administrative officer who has
    discretion to interpret or implement rules and
    statutes.... The prothonotary must accept papers and file
    them. He must also collect fees fixed by the legislature. He
    has no discretion in this matter nor does he act in a judicial
    capacity.
    Nagy, at 1169-70 (citing Warner v. Cortese, 
    288 A.2d 550
     (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1972)   (emphasis      original)).   The      prothonotary’s   power   to   reject
    nonconforming documents is limited to notifying the proper party that the
    document is defective so that the defect may be corrected through
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    amendment or addendum. Id. at 1170. “To hold otherwise would be to confer
    on the prothonotary the power to ‘implement’ the Rules governing the form
    of an appeal and to determine, based upon criteria other than the day they
    are received, which appeals are timely.” Id.
    A ruling from our sister court is more factually analogous.            In
    Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp. Authority v. DiAntonio, 
    618 A.2d 1182
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 1992), Ercole DiAnonio was injured while a passenger on
    a bus operated by the Southeastern Pennsylvania Transportation Authority
    (SEPTA). DiAntonio’s lawsuit went unanswered by SEPTA, so DiAntonio sent
    a notice of intention to take a default judgment. Only then did SEPTA prepare
    and deliver an answer to the prothonotary. However, the answer was one of
    a number of pleadings SEPTA filed at the same time, and the filing fees were
    paid with a single check. The prothonotary timestamped the answer, but then
    discovered that the filing fee check was insufficient to cover all the pleadings
    SEPTA filed. Without explanation, the prothonotary decided to reject only the
    answer to DiAntonio’s complaint due to the deficient filing fee.       SEPTA’s
    answer was never entered on the docket.        The trial court entered default
    judgment in favor of DiAntonio. SEPTA then learned that its answer was never
    docketed.   SEPTA appealed and the Commonwealth Court reversed.            See
    Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp., 
    618 A.2d at 1183-84
    .
    The Commonwealth Court explained that SEPTA’s answer was deemed
    filed on the day it was timestamped by the prothonotary, and that it should
    have been timely docketed. 
    Id. at 1184
    . “To decide otherwise would eliminate
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    reasonable reliance by the parties on a prothonotary’s acceptance of a
    pleading.” 
    Id.
    Although the decisions of Superior Court are not bound by the decisions
    of the Commonwealth Court – and vice versa - it bears observing that the
    Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp. may be distinguished from Nagy in
    one significant way.       In Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp., the
    Commonwealth Court opined that the prothonotary retained authority to
    reject a pleading for the nonpayment of a filing fee, but that because the
    prothonotary timestamped SEPTA’s answer, the answer had to be deemed
    “filed” and could not be summarily returned. 
    Id.
     Thus, even if we were to
    limit our analysis to the facts of Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp., we
    would still conclude that Wife’s pleadings were improperly rejected, because
    the prothonotary’s office had to accept the pleadings, regardless of their
    defects, once they were timestamped.
    Finally, though somewhat less comparable, we also find persuasive our
    decision in First Union Nat’l Bank v. F.A. Realty Investors Corp., 
    812 A.2d 719
     (Pa. Super. 2002). There, the question was whether the appellant’s
    appeal should be dismissed due to counsel’s failure to pay the filing fee, at the
    time that the notice of appeal was filed. That case is less beneficial than the
    above precedents because the issue turned on the precise language in our
    Rules of Appellate Procedure. We determined that Pa.R.A.P. 905(c) imposes
    an absolute duty on an appellate to pay the required filing fee (or obtain leave
    to proceed in forma pauperis) at the time when the notice of appeal is filed,
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    but we held that a breach of that duty does not automatically render the
    appeal invalid. First Union Nat’l Bank, 
    812 A.2d at 722
    . “[T]he perfection
    of [an] appeal does not depend in any way on the payment of the filing fee.”
    
    Id. at 723
    . While the appellate court still retained discretion to dismiss the
    appeal based on the failure to tender the required fee, that remedy is
    discretionary. But, in any event, the filing of the notice will still be deemed
    timely. 
    Id.
     First Union Nat’l Bank is useful here, because it illustrates how
    a court is not without recourse when a party fails to pay the filing fee.
    Read together, these cases provide sufficient clarity for us to hold the
    prothonotary lacked the authority to reject Wife’s pleadings due to counsel’s
    initial failure to pay the filing fee. Although the prothonotary had the duty to
    inform counsel that the fee was owed, the prothonotary could not reject Wife’s
    pleadings for nonpayment – especially after they were received and
    timestamped (see Nagy; see also Southeastern Pennsylvania Transp.).
    At that point, counsel relied on the prothonotary’s acceptance of his client’s
    pleadings. Of course, counsel was not excused from paying the fee, and the
    trial retained discretion to dismiss a Wife’s counterclaim if the filing fee went
    unpaid (see First Union Nat’l Bank). But that question is distinct from the
    matter at hand, which is whether the pleadings were timely filed. We conclude
    that they were.
    Therefore, because Wife’s pleadings were timely filed, the divorce
    decree suffers from “a fatal defect apparent upon the face of the record.”
    Wife’s timely pleadings indicated that she neither admitted, nor failed to deny,
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    the averments contained in Husband’s affidavit under Section 3301(d) of the
    Divorce Code. See Pa.R.C.P. 1920.42(c)(1)(iii), (2). Thus, the court’s entry
    of the decree was improper. Consequently, the trial court erred when it denied
    Wife’s motion to vacate the divorce decree. See Danz v. Danz, 
    947 A.2d 750
    (Pa. Super. 2008).
    Divorce decree vacated and case remanded for further proceedings
    consistent with this Opinion. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 1/26/2022
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