Rubin, S. v. Kanya, S. ( 2022 )


Menu:
  • J-A04018-21
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    STEVEN RUBIN, EXECUTOR OF THE                 IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
    ESTATE OF MILTON RUBIN                           OF PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant
    v.
    STEPHEN KANYA, A/K/A STEVEN KANYA
    AND INSECTARIUM & BUTTERFLY
    PAVILION, INC.
    Appellee                No. 2049 EDA 2019
    Appeal from the Order Entered May 8, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
    Civil Division at No: 170600979
    BEFORE: STABILE, J., KING, J., and PELLEGRINI, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY STABILE, J.:                            FILED MARCH 1, 2022
    In 1989, Milton Rubin loaned Appellee Stephen Kanya $350,000.00 to
    purchase real property (“the Property”) located in Philadelphia. The loan was
    secured by a mortgage that recited material terms of the loan. During the
    1990’s, Kanya defaulted on the loan and Rubin died. In 2010, Kanya filed for
    Chapter 11 bankruptcy in Florida. On July 1, 2011, the Florida bankruptcy
    court confirmed a reorganization plan in which Kanya and Rubin’s estate
    agreed that (1) the estate had a mortgage on the Property secured by a lien
    of $350,000.00, (2) the estate would retain its lien and be paid in accordance
    with the terms of Kanya’s “contract,”1 and (3) Kanya would pay over
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1   Kanya’s Confirmation Plan, § 4.9.1.
    J-A04018-21
    $35,000.00 in arrearages on the mortgage. Over the next five years, Kanya
    made sporadic payments to the estate, but in 2016, Kanya transferred the
    property to Appellee Insectarium and Butterfly Pavilion, Inc. (“IBP”). In 2017,
    the estate filed a mortgage foreclosure action against Kanya and IBP. Kanya
    admitted all allegations in the estate’s amended complaint, but IBP vigorously
    defended against the estate’s action.    Following a non-jury trial, the court
    entered a decision against the estate and in favor of Kanya and IBP on the
    ground that the statute of limitations expired in 1994. Rubin’s estate appeals
    from the judgment entered on this decision.
    We hold that the trial court failed to recognize that the bankruptcy
    court’s confirmation of Kanya’s reorganization plan on July 1, 2011 constituted
    a binding contract. Any breach of this contract could not have taken place
    until after July 1, 2011, and therefore the statute of limitations for any such
    breach could not have begun running until after July 1, 2011. As a result, the
    trial court erred by concluding that the statute of limitations expired in 1994.
    We vacate the judgment and remand for a new trial.
    The trial court summarized the evidence adduced during trial as follows:
    [The estate] asserted that on March 14, 1989, Milton Rubin loaned
    Kanya $350,000.00 to purchase the property at 8046 Frankford
    Avenue (the “Property”). This loan was allegedly made pursuant
    to a purchase money note. However, the original note was never
    recorded and no copy was presented at trial. The debt was
    secured by a mortgage on the Property which was also executed
    on March 14, 1989. The mortgage was recorded and referred to
    the alleged note. The mortgage was not executed under seal.
    -2-
    J-A04018-21
    The mortgage required [Kanya] to make sixty monthly payments
    of interest only commencing on April 1, 1989. The loan was also
    a balloon mortgage, and Kanya was required to make a principal
    payment of $50,000.00 by September 14, 1990 (18 months from
    the date of closing). The entire principal balance of $300,000.00
    with interest2 was due on March 1, 1994. The mortgage provided
    that failure to timely make these payments constituted an event
    of default. Kanya failed to make these payments and therefore
    defaulted on the loan on September 14, 1990.
    The mortgage also prohibited the transfer of the Property by the
    mortgagor and provided that such transfer constituted an event
    of default. Kanya transferred the Property twice. On January 15,
    1999, he transferred ownership of the Property from himself solely
    to himself and his wife. On August 18, 2016, Kanya transferred
    the Property to [IBP] by quitclaim deed. Both of these actions
    were further events of default.
    Over the next 27 years[,] Kanya allegedly made irregular
    payments to the mortgagee, originally to Milton Rubin and then,
    after Milton Rubin’s death on January 13, 1996, to Rubin’s estate.
    However, no records were presented at trial detailing any
    evidence of the original transaction or of any payments made
    personally by Kanya. [The estate] presented evidence of checks
    it received from Kanya purportedly for mortgage payments but no
    detailed statements were ever produced. There was no way of
    knowing what these payments were for. Nor were they made
    pursuant to a consistent schedule.
    The estate claimed records related to the mortgage, including the
    original note, were lost in a fire in 2004. Kanya also claimed he
    lost his personal records. None [of] these explanations were
    substantiated and the Court found them not to be credible. There
    were no attempts to reconstruct the records of this loan, e.g.,
    [through] checks and HUD statements, even with a cooperating
    defendant as Kanya appeared to be.
    On February 22, 2010, Kanya filed for bankruptcy protection in
    Florida in the case styled In Re Stephen Kanya, Bkrtcy. M.D. Fla.,
    Chapter 11 Case No. 8:10-bk-03746-CPM. The estate made a
    claim in these proceedings for monies owed under the Mortgage.
    ____________________________________________
    2   The mortgage stated that the annual interest rate was ten percent.
    -3-
    J-A04018-21
    On July 1, 2011, an Order was issued by the Bankruptcy Court
    affirming Kanya’s Amended Plan of Reorganization which admitted
    only $35,000.00 in indebtedness.3 This is not close to the amount
    alleged by the estate. Said plan mentions the “secured claim of
    Steven Rubin” under the mortgage and provides “th[e] creditor
    shall retain its lien and be paid in accordance with the terms of his
    contract, and shall be impaired in the Plan.”
    At some point John Cambridge became involved with the
    operation of Kanya’s insect museum which is located at the
    Property subject to the instant mortgage. Cambridge assisted
    with the building of a new butterfly pavilion on the Property which
    was supposed to open in May of 2016 and ultimately opened in
    February of 2017. On August 18, 2016, Kanya and his wife
    executed a quitclaim deed transferring the Property to [IBP]. At
    that time Kanya owned 70% of the corporation and Cambridge
    30%. This deed was recorded on December 2, 2016. Kanya and
    Cambridge later had a falling out and Kanya is no longer an owner
    of [IBP] or the real estate at issue.
    On May 2, 2017, Kanya and the estate executed an alleged copy
    of the original note. The Court was convinced this note was a
    fabrication of a document executed 27 years earlier. On May 9,
    2017, the estate sent Kanya a letter constituting a notice of
    default and demand for payment by June 8, 2017. On June 9,
    ____________________________________________
    3   The pertinent provision of Kanya’s plan stated in its entirety:
    4.9 Class IX: Secured Claim of Steven Rubin
    4.9.1 The Claim of Steve Rubin consists of a mortgage secured by
    a lien on property located at 8046-48 Frankford Avenue,
    Philadelphia, PA 19136, in the amount of $350,000.00. The
    creditor shall retain its lien and be paid in accordance with the
    terms of his contract, and shall be Impaired in the Plan. Debtor’s
    arrearage on this mortgage in the amount of $35,463.00 shall be
    cured by making equal monthly payments of $1,000.00 until said
    arrearage is cured.
    IBP Exhibits at 203 (emphasis added). Read in context, “Steve Rubin” clearly
    meant “Steven Rubin in his capacity as personal representative of the estate
    of Milton Rubin,” i.e., the estate herein.
    -4-
    J-A04018-21
    2017, the estate filed the instant complaint [and later an amended
    complaint]. . . Kanya admitted all of the allegations [in the
    amended complaint].
    Trial Court Opinion, 10/4/19, at 2-4 (with minor additions).
    The record reflects that Rubin’s estate filed this action against Kanya
    and IBP on June 9, 2017. Subsequently, the estate filed a one-count amended
    complaint seeking foreclosure of the mortgage,4 claiming, inter alia, that
    Kanya defaulted under the 1989 note and mortgage by failing to make all
    required payments and further defaulted by transferring ownership of the
    Property to IBP.       The amended complaint averred that the final partial
    payment by Kanya was in late 2016.
    Kanya’s bankruptcy docket5 reflects that on February 27, 2018, almost
    nine months after filing suit, Rubin’s estate filed a motion in the Florida
    bankruptcy court seeking relief from the automatic stay in Kanya’s ongoing
    bankruptcy case to prosecute a mortgage foreclosure action against Kanya in
    ____________________________________________
    4The amended complaint did not include claims for any other cause of action,
    such as breach of contract.
    5 We generally cannot take judicial notice of records from other cases,
    Hvizdak v. Linn, 
    190 A.3d 1213
    , 1218 n.1 (Pa. Super. 2018), but there are
    exceptions to this rule. We can, for example, take judicial notice of other
    proceedings involving the same parties. 
    Id.
     Here, Appellant and Kanya are
    both parties in Kanya’s Chapter 11 bankruptcy, where Kanya is the debtor and
    Appellant is a creditor who filed a proof of claim against Kanya that was
    recognized under Kanya’s reorganization plan. Furthermore, the record in this
    case includes multiple references by the trial court and the parties to Kanya’s
    bankruptcy proceeding. Accordingly, we take judicial notice of the docket in
    Kanya’s bankruptcy case.
    -5-
    J-A04018-21
    Pennsylvania state court. On March 7, 2018, the Bankruptcy Court granted
    the estate relief from the automatic stay to prosecute the foreclosure action
    in Pennsylvania against Kanya.
    Following a two-day non-jury trial in February 2019, the trial court
    entered a decision in favor of Kanya and IBP and against the estate. The
    estate filed timely post-trial motions seeking judgment n.o.v. or, in the
    alternative, a new trial. Before the court decided the post-trial motions, the
    estate filed a notice of appeal to this Court.     Shortly thereafter, the court
    denied the estate’s post-trial motions and entered judgment in favor of Kanya
    and IBP. The premature notice of appeal does not affect the validity of the
    appeal due to the subsequent entry of judgment. Pa.R.A.P. 905(a) (“A notice
    of appeal filed after the announcement of a determination but before the entry
    of an appealable order shall be treated as filed after such entry and on the
    day thereof”). Both the estate and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P.
    1925.
    In its Rule 1925 opinion, the trial court gave the following reasons for
    entering a decision against the estate:
    The Court found that Kanya defaulted on the mortgage on
    September 14, 1990, when he failed to make the first of two
    required principal payments under the mortgage contract. [The
    estate] filed the instant suit on June 9, 2017, approximately 27
    years later. The statute of limitations for a mortgage contract not
    under seal is four years. 42 Pa.C.S.[A.] § 5525. Consequently,
    the statute of limitations would have long expired by the time of
    filing of this suit unless the debtor acknowledged the debt.
    -6-
    J-A04018-21
    The statute of limitations may be tolled by a renewed promise to
    pay the debt.      Huntingdon Finance Corp. v. Newtown
    Artesian Water Company, [
    659 A.2d 1052
    , 1054 (Pa. Super.
    1995)]. The obligor must make a “clear, distinct and unequivocal”
    acknowledgement of the debt as an existing obligation. 
    Id.
     In
    addition to acknowledging the debt, the obligor must make a
    promise to pay the debt. 
    Id.
    The Court as finder of fact is charged with making determinations
    of credibility and is permitted to believe all, part or none of the
    evidence. The Court found neither Stephen Kanya nor Steven
    Rubin to be credible. Kanya uttered repeated falsehoods and was
    clearly biased against his former business partner, John
    Cambridge, who stands to be harmed if the mortgage is foreclosed
    upon.
    The Court found that Kanya failed to unambiguously acknowledge
    the debt. The estate had no documents demonstrating consistent
    continuing payments on the debt after the 1990 default. Steven
    Rubin testified that records relating to the mortgage were
    destroyed in a fire. Rubin was not credible and the Court did not
    believe this explanation.     Rubin himself had no personal
    knowledge of the existence of the mortgage at the time of
    execution or default or for that matter any of the details of the
    underlying transaction.
    [The estate] submitted documents purportedly showing payments
    from Kanya to Rubin from 2003 and later. However, there were
    no annual statements and no amortization tables. The Court could
    not determine what these payments were for and they did not
    show a promise to pay in accordance with the original mortgage
    contract.
    [The estate] also failed to present the original note and the Court
    did not believe the explanation that it was lost in the fire. The
    Court did not accept the legitimacy of the new note which was
    executed only weeks before the filing of this litigation and long
    after the expiration of the statute of limitations.
    [The estate] asserts the Court was required by law to find the
    inclusion of the mortgage on Kanya’s Amended Plan of
    Reorganization after his bankruptcy was an acknowledgement of
    the debt. The Court rejected this argument for two reasons. First,
    the estate failed to enter the entire bankruptcy record into
    -7-
    J-A04018-21
    evidence, submitting only the plan of reorganization. Second, the
    decision of the bankruptcy judge was clearly erroneous on its face
    as the trustee should have realized the statute of limitations had
    expired. The Court was not required to accept it.
    [The estate] further asserts that the course of conduct between
    the parties shows an oral modification of the terms of the
    agreement which either shows Kanya acknowledged the debt or
    default did not occur in 1990. This was a commercial loan. The
    conduct of the parties made no commercial or economic sense and
    this argument also fails.
    Trial Court Opinion, 10/4/19, at 5-6.
    In its brief as Appellant in this Court, the estate failed to provide a
    Statement of Questions Presented, a Statement of Jurisdiction, a Statement
    of the Scope and Standard of Review, and a Statement of the Case. Although
    we do not condone these omissions, no sanction is necessary, because we are
    able to discern the estate’s position through review of the arguments in its
    brief. The estate argues the following: (1) the statute of limitation does not
    apply, because it ran from July 1, 2011, the date the bankruptcy court
    confirmed Kanya’s plan, but was tolled by Kanya’s partial payments of money
    owed under the note between July 1, 2011 and 2016; (2) alternatively, neither
    Kanya nor IBP could raise the statute of limitations because Kanya waived the
    right to raise the statute in his reorganization plan; and (3) IBP could not
    raise the statute of limitations as a defense, because IBP was not a bona fide
    purchaser of the Property, but was instead controlled by Kanya, so Kanya’s
    failure to raise the statute of limitations in his answer to the estate’s complaint
    -8-
    J-A04018-21
    precluded IBP from raising it.    IBP filed a brief in this Court in response to
    the estate’s brief. Kanya did not file any brief in this Court.
    In effect, the estate requests that we reverse the post-trial order
    denying judgment n.o.v. and enter judgment in its favor. Our standard of
    review of an order denying judgment n.o.v. is whether, viewing the record in
    the light most favorable to the verdict winner and granting the benefit of every
    favorable inference, “there is sufficient competent evidence to support the
    verdict.” Tillery v. Children’s Hosp. of Philadelphia, 
    156 A.3d 1233
    , 1240
    (Pa. Super. 2017).     Any conflict in the evidence is resolved in the verdict
    winner’s favor. 
    Id.
     Judgment n.o.v. may be granted “only where the movant
    is entitled to judgment as a matter of law . . . or [where] the evidence was
    such that no two reasonable minds could disagree that the outcome should
    have been rendered in favor of the movant.”        Quinby v. Plumsteadville
    Family Practice, Inc., 
    907 A.2d 1061
    , 1074 (Pa. 2006). We will disturb a
    trial court’s grant or denial of judgment n.o.v. “only for an abuse of discretion
    or an error of law.” 
    Id.
    The central question in this appeal is whether the trial court committed
    an error of law by concluding that the statute of limitations expired in the mid-
    1990’s. We conclude the court erred. The statute began running no earlier
    than an event of default after July 1, 2011, the date of confirmation of Kanya’s
    reorganization plan.
    -9-
    J-A04018-21
    The proper starting point for our analysis is to study the effect of
    confirmation of Kanya’s bankruptcy plan on this case. We take this step in
    accordance with the precept that “property interests are created and defined
    by state law . . . [u]nless some federal interest requires a different result.”
    Butner v. United States, 
    440 U.S. 48
    , 55 (1979). The “federal interest” that
    requires our attention is the effect of confirmation of Kanya’s plan under
    federal bankruptcy law, because confirmation materially affects the date that
    the statute of limitations began running herein on this foreclosure action.
    The United States Constitution authorizes Congress to establish
    “uniform Laws on the subject of Bankruptcies throughout the United States.”
    U.S. Const., Art. I, § 8, cl. 4. Under this grant of authority, Congress enacted
    the Bankruptcy Code in 1978, which is codified at Title 11 of the United States
    Code and which has been amended several times since its enactment. The
    bankruptcy statute relating to confirmation, 
    11 U.S.C. § 1141
    , provides in
    pertinent part that except in circumstances not relevant here,
    the provisions of a confirmed plan bind the debtor, any entity
    issuing securities under the plan, any entity acquiring property
    under the plan, and any creditor, equity security holder, or general
    partner in the debtor, whether or not the claim or interest of such
    creditor, equity security holder, or general partner is impaired
    under the plan and whether or not such creditor, equity security
    holder, or general partner has accepted the plan.
    
    11 U.S.C. § 1141
    (a). Under this provision, the confirmation of Kanya’s plan
    was binding on both Kanya (the “debtor”) and on the estate (a “creditor”).
    - 10 -
    J-A04018-21
    Kanya’s reorganization plan was confirmed in the Eleventh Circuit.
    “Although a confirmed plan is a judgment rendered by a federal court, the
    Chapter 11 plan itself is essentially a contract between a debtor and the
    creditors of the bankruptcy estate.”    In Re Westport Holdings Tampa,
    Limited Partnership, 
    614 B.R. 918
    , 921-22 (Bkrtcy. M.D.Fl., Tampa Div.
    2020). “For that reason, the Eleventh Circuit follows principles of contract
    interpretation when interpreting a confirmed plan of reorganization.” Id. at
    922. The confirmed plan becomes a binding contract between the debtor and
    his creditors. Id. In addition, a bankruptcy court’s confirmation order that is
    final and no longer subject to appeal becomes “res judicata to the parties and
    those in privity with them.” Travelers Indemnity Co. v. Bailey, 
    557 U.S. 137
    , 152 (2009). The res judicata effect of a confirmation order bars litigation
    of claims that were or could have been raised in a prior action. In Re FFS
    Data, Inc., 
    776 F.3d 1299
    , 1306 (11th Cir. 2015).
    Kanya’s bankruptcy plan provided that (1) the estate held a mortgage
    on the Property secured by a lien of $350,000.00, (2) the estate must be paid
    in accordance with this “contract,” and (3) Kanya would pay arrearages of
    over $35,000.00 to the estate. IBP Exhibits at 203; see also n.4, supra.
    The bankruptcy court’s confirmation of this plan made these terms a binding
    contract between Kanya and Rubin’s estate. Westport Holdings, 614 B.R.
    at 921-22.
    - 11 -
    J-A04018-21
    The trial court declined to find that the bankruptcy court’s confirmation
    of Kanya’s reorganization plan created a binding contract between Kanya and
    the estate, reasoning that (1) the estate “failed to enter the entire bankruptcy
    record into evidence, submitting only the plan of reorganization,” and (2) “the
    decision of the bankruptcy judge was clearly erroneous on its face . . .” Trial
    Court Opinion at 6.   We find both of these rationales faulty.     The estate’s
    “failure” to enter the entire bankruptcy record into evidence is of no moment
    in light of the fact that the confirmed plan, or the contract itself, was
    introduced into evidence. The confirmation of the plan was a fact the court
    could have taken judicial notice of from Kanya’s bankruptcy docket. See n.5,
    supra. More importantly, the court was not free to disregard the bankruptcy
    court’s confirmation as erroneous, because the confirmation order was entitled
    to full faith and credit, and the plan established and acknowledged that a
    “contract” existed between Kanya and the estate that was binding under the
    doctrine of res judicata. Travelers Indemnity Co., 
    557 U.S. at 152
    ; see
    also Holz v. Holz, 
    850 A.2d 751
    , 757-58 (Pa. Super. 2004) (federal district
    court judgment in wife’s declaratory judgment action that her waiver of
    pension rights in property settlement agreement was void under Employee
    Retirement Income Security Act was binding on state court in divorce
    proceeding under doctrine of res judicata, where federal district court was
    court of competent jurisdiction and its final judgment on merits was entitled
    - 12 -
    J-A04018-21
    to full faith and credit, and same parties appeared in state and federal court
    actions).
    The confirmation of Kanya’s bankruptcy plan renders erroneous the trial
    court’s determination that Kanya defaulted on his loan in 1990 and that the
    four-year statute of limitations expired in 1994. Regardless of whether Kanya
    defaulted on his debt in 1990, the fact remains that the Bankruptcy Court’s
    confirmation of Kanya’s reorganization plan created a binding contract
    between Kanya and the estate as of the date of confirmation, July 1, 2011.
    Westport Holdings, 614 B.R. at 921-22. Consequently, any breach of this
    agreement had to have taken place after July 1, 2011, so the statute of
    limitations on the estate’s foreclosure action had to have begun running after
    July 1, 2011 as well.
    Having determined that the statute of limitations expired in the mid-
    1990’s when it did not begin running until after July 1, 2011, we turn to the
    next question, whether the statute expired prior to commencement of this
    action.     Unfortunately, we cannot answer this question due to several
    unresolved questions of fact. For instance, we cannot ascertain the date(s)
    after July 1, 2011 when or if Kanya failed to make mortgage payment(s) to
    the estate under the “contract”, thus causing an event of default and the
    commencement of the statute of limitation period. See Bank of Am., N.A.
    v. Gibson, 
    102 A.3d 462
    , 464 (Pa. Super. 2014) (right to bring foreclosure
    action accrues upon default by mortgagor).      Nor can we tell whether the
    - 13 -
    J-A04018-21
    statute may have been tolled after July 1, 2011 by some principle of law such
    as a forbearance, a promise to pay the debt, or part payment of the debt.
    See Crispo v. Crispo, 
    909 A.2d 308
    , 313 (Pa. Super. 2006) (“clear, distinct
    and unequivocal acknowledgement of a debt as an existing obligation, such
    as is consistent with a promise to pay, is sufficient to toll the statute”); Cole
    v. Lawrence, 
    701 A.2d 987
    , 990 (Pa. Super. 1997) (“there can be no more
    clear and unequivocal acknowledgement of a debt than payment”). Since fact
    questions remain as to when or if a default occurred after July 1, 2011, and
    thus whether or when the statute of limitations began to run, the proper
    remedy is to remand this case for a new trial.
    We recognize that it is somewhat unusual to remand for a new trial
    when, as here, the only relief requested in this Court is judgment n.o.v.
    Nevertheless, some precedent exists for this remedy.            In McGuire v.
    Schneider, Inc., 
    534 A.2d 115
     (Pa. Super. 1987), the parties disputed
    whether the discharge of an employee constituted a breach of his employment
    agreement. The jury entered a verdict in favor of an employee, and following
    the denial of the employer’s posts-trial motions, the employer argued in this
    Court that it was entitled to judgment n.o.v. Although we held that the trial
    court committed an error of law by instructing the jury to apply the wrong
    legal standard, we declined the employer’s request for judgment n.o.v. and
    ordered a new trial instead, reasoning, “[O]n the record of this case we cannot
    say that at a new trial [the employee] will be unable to prove that his
    - 14 -
    J-A04018-21
    discharge was improper under the [employment] agreement.” 
    Id.,
     534 A.2d
    at 120. We believe that a similar remedy is appropriate here. Although the
    trial court committed legal error in determining that the statute of limitations
    expired in the mid-1990’s, we cannot say that in a new trial, IBP will be unable
    to prove that the statute of limitations expired at some point after July 1,
    2011. Accordingly, a new trial is the proper remedy instead of judgment n.o.v.
    in favor of the estate.
    Ordinarily, the grant of a new trial “means a new trial generally; it
    restores a case to the status it had before the trial took place and is fully open
    to be tried de novo as to all parties and all issues.” Rivera v. Philadelphia
    Theological Seminary of Saint Charles Borromeo, Inc., 
    507 A.2d 1
    , 11
    (Pa. 1986). In this case, however, trial de novo is not permissible on several
    issues because of the res judicata effect of the confirmation of Kanya’s
    bankruptcy plan.    Confirmation of the plan requires the trial court to find,
    without trial de novo, that a contract existed between Kanya and Rubin’s
    estate as of July 1, 2011, the date of plan confirmation, for Kanya to pay a
    mortgage of $350,000.00 as well as arrearages of $35,463.00 in equal
    monthly payments of $1,000.00. Westport Holdings, 614 B.R. at 921-22;
    Travelers Indemnity Co., 
    557 U.S. at 152
    .
    All other issues are subject to litigation de novo. Among those that we
    anticipate may be raised are (1) material terms of the “contract”, if any, not
    specifically addressed in the confirmation order (e.g., the interest rate) or (2)
    - 15 -
    J-A04018-21
    material terms of the lost note, if any, not already reflected in the mortgage.
    See 13 Pa.C.S.A. § 3309 (“Enforcement of Lost, Destroyed or Stolen
    Instrument”).6
    Assuming IBP raises the affirmative defense of the statute of limitations,
    it will bear the burden of proof on this issue. Pa.R.C.P. 1030 (listing statute
    ____________________________________________
    6   Section 3309 provides:
    (a) Enforcement.--A person not in possession of an instrument
    is entitled to enforce the instrument if:
    (1) the person was in possession of the instrument
    and entitled to enforce it when loss of possession
    occurred;
    (2) the loss of possession was not the result of a
    transfer by the person or a lawful seizure; and
    (3) the person cannot reasonably obtain possession of
    the instrument because the instrument was
    destroyed, its whereabouts cannot be determined or
    it is in the wrongful possession of an unknown person
    or a person that cannot be found or is not amenable
    to service of process.
    (b) Proof.--A person seeking enforcement of an instrument
    under subsection (a) must prove the terms of the instrument and
    the person's right to enforce the instrument. If that proof is made,
    [13 Pa.C.S.A. §] 3308 (relating to proof of signatures and status
    as holder in due course) applies to the case as if the person
    seeking enforcement had produced the instrument. The court
    may not enter judgment in favor of the person seeking
    enforcement unless it finds that the person required to pay the
    instrument is adequately protected against loss that might occur
    by reason of a claim by another person to enforce the instrument.
    Adequate protection may be provided by any reasonable means.
    Id.
    - 16 -
    J-A04018-21
    of limitations as affirmative defense). The estate may respond to this defense
    with evidence such as whether the statute was tolled by a promise to pay the
    debt or part payment of the debt. Pennsylvania’s statute of limitation is the
    governing law, even though some of the conduct pertaining to this case, such
    as Kanya’s bankruptcy, took place in Florida.          The Uniform Statute of
    Limitations on Foreign Claims Act (“USLFCA”), 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5521, provides
    in relevant part:
    (b) General rule.--The period of limitation applicable to a claim
    accruing outside this Commonwealth shall be either that provided
    or prescribed by the law of the place where the claim accrued or
    by the law of this Commonwealth, whichever first bars the claim.
    (c) Definition.--As used in this section “claim” means any right
    of action which may be asserted in a civil action or proceeding and
    includes, but is not limited to, a right of action created by statute.
    Id. Assuming the estate’s “claim” arose in Florida due to the confirmation of
    Kanya’s bankruptcy plan in Florida or some other consideration, the USLFCA
    requires application of Pennsylvania’s four-year statute, because the statute
    of limitations for foreclosure actions when the mortgage is not under seal is
    four years in Pennsylvania and five years in Florida. Compare 42 Pa.C.S.A.
    § 5525(a)(7) (Pennsylvania) with F.S.A. § 95.11(2)(c) (Florida). The same
    result occurs by comparing Pennsylvania’s statute for contract actions, 42
    Pa.C.S.A. § 5525 (four years), with Florida’s statute for contract actions,
    F.S.A. § 95.11(2)(b) (five years).
    We further observe that IBP, as transferee of the quitclaim deed to the
    Property, stands in the shoes of the transferor, Kanya, on remand. Levitt v.
    - 17 -
    J-A04018-21
    Patrick, 
    976 A.2d 581
    , 591 (Pa. Super. 2009) (when property subject to
    mortgage is transferred without payment of mortgage, property in hands of
    transferee continues to be security for performance of obligation, and for any
    default the mortgagee may seize and sell the property in hands of transferee).
    IBP claims in its appellate brief that the mortgage on the Property
    already has been satisfied. We leave this issue for the trial court to determine
    on remand whether both the mortgage of $350,000.00 and the arrears of
    $35,463.00 have been fully paid.
    We briefly address two other arguments in the estate’s appellate brief.
    The estate claims that Kanya and IBP are precluded from raising the statute
    of limitations either because of the bankruptcy court’s confirmation of Kanya’s
    reorganization plan or because of Kanya’s failure to raise the statute of
    limitations in his answer to the amended complaint. Neither argument has
    merit. First, Kanya’s reorganization plan only precludes defenses that were
    or could have been raised at or before the confirmation of the plan. FFS Data,
    776 F.3d at 1306.     Implicit in this principle is that confirmation does not
    preclude post-confirmation defenses. Here, the statute of limitations could
    not have begun to run earlier than the date of plan confirmation, thus
    rendering the statute of limitations a post-confirmation defense. Second, we
    reject the estate’s argument that, since Kanya failed to raise the statute of
    limitations as an affirmative defense in his answer to the estate’s complaint,
    IBP, whom the estate suggests is Kanya’s alter ego, could not raise it either.
    - 18 -
    J-A04018-21
    We do not know of any rule, nor does the estate cite any, that prevents one
    defendant from raising affirmative defenses that another defendant fails to
    raise. Further, the evidence does not support IBP as an alter ego of Kanya.
    While Kanya at some point owned seventy percent of IBP and was chairman
    of the board, he no longer is an owner of IBP or of the real property in
    question. IBP was represented by its own counsel during trial, presented its
    own evidence, filed its own pleadings and motions, and is a separate legal
    entity.    Moreover, as the trial court observed, Kanya and IBP are on
    antagonistic terms.7
    We vacate the judgment entered in favor of Kanya and IBP and remand
    for further proceedings consistent with our instructions in this memorandum.
    Judgment vacated. Case remanded for new trial in accordance with this
    memorandum. Jurisdiction relinquished.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 3/1/2022
    ____________________________________________
    7 It is not clear to us how the estate may pursue a foreclosure action against
    Kanya, the only action alleged in the amended complaint, since Kanya
    transferred the Property to IBP. “Mortgage foreclosure in Pennsylvania is
    strictly an in rem or ‘de terris’ proceeding.” Nicholas v. Hoffman, 
    158 A.3d 675
    , 697 (Pa. Super. 2017).
    - 19 -