Dalfonso, T. v. Benson, R. ( 2016 )


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  • J-A23041-16
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P 65.37
    THOMAS A. DALFONSO,                    :     IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :           PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant           :
    :
    v.                               :
    :
    R. DONALD BENSON,                      :
    :
    Appellee            :      No. 62 WDA 2016
    Appeal from the Judgment Entered January 27, 2016
    in the Court of Common Pleas of McKean County
    Civil Division at No(s): No. 2009-1474
    BEFORE:    LAZARUS, STABILE, and STRASSBURGER,* JJ.
    MEMORANDUM BY STRASSBURGER, J.:            FILED NOVEMBER 17, 2016
    Thomas A. Dalfonso appeals from the judgment1 entered against him
    and in favor of R. Donald Benson following a non-jury trial in this mortgage
    foreclosure action. We affirm.
    In 1994, Omni Capital (Omni) lent $200,000 to United Business
    Enterprises (UBE) upon the personal guarantee of UBE’s owners Richard and
    Pamela Robidoux (the Robidouxs, collectively).      After UBE defaulted, a
    settlement agreement (the 1997 Agreement) was reached under which the
    Robidouxs agreed to pay $273,435 in installments.       The 1997 Agreement
    1
    Dalfonso filed his notice of appeal before judgment had been entered. The
    appeal was perfected, however, following this Court’s issuance of a rule,
    when judgment was entered on the verdict on January 27, 2016. See
    Pa.R.A.P. 905(a)(5) (“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.”).
    *Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    J-A23041-16
    was secured by mortgages on several of the Robidouxs’ properties, including
    the McKean County oil, gas, and mineral (OGM) rights at issue in the instant
    foreclosure action.   When the Robidouxs failed to meet their obligations
    under the 1997 Agreement, Omni obtained a judgment in Massachusetts
    against the Robidouxs for $273,435.
    In 2000, appellee Benson purchased at a tax sale the OGM rights to
    the McKean County properties at issue, subject to the mortgages executed
    as required by the 1997 Agreement.
    In 2002, with Omni’s judgment against the Robidouxs not satisfied,
    Omni entered into another settlement agreement with the Robidouxs and
    UBE (the 2002 Agreement).     Under the 2002 Agreement, Omni agreed to
    accept $55,400, to be paid in installments, in full satisfaction of the
    outstanding debts of UBE and the Robidouxs. The 2002 Agreement did not
    require mortgages as security, but did provide that if its terms were not
    met, the 1997 judgment “will be deemed to be in full effect, minus any sums
    that have been received, plus any applicable interest and costs.”      2002
    Agreement at ¶ 6.      The 2002 Agreement also contained the following
    integration clause: “This Agreement is the entire agreement among the
    parties with respect to the subject matter hereof and supercedes [sic] all
    prior and contemporaneous oral and written agreements and discussions.”
    Id. at ¶ 10. After the Robidouxs and UBE defaulted on the 2002 Agreement,
    Omni sold the debt to appellant Dalfonso in 2004 for $20,000.
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    In 2005, Benson filed an action to quiet title as to the McKean County
    OGM rights.   An order was entered in 2007 providing that Benson’s OGM
    interests were held subject to Dalfonso’s mortgages. However, the validity
    of the mortgages was not decided at that time.
    In 2009, Dalfonso filed the instant action to foreclose on the
    mortgages.    Following trial, the trial court filed a memorandum and order
    detailing its findings of fact and legal conclusions. Memorandum and Order,
    11/16/2015.     Therein, the trial court held that the 2002 Agreement
    constituted a novation of the 1997 Agreement, and that, because the 2002
    Agreement did not provide for mortgages as had the 1997 Agreement, no
    valid mortgages existed in 2004 when Dalfonso purported to purchase them
    along with the debt of UBE and the Robidouxs. Accordingly, the trial court
    entered a verdict in favor of Benson and against Dalfonso.
    On November 25, 2015, Dalfonso timely filed a post-trial motion which
    the trial court denied on December 11, 2015. Dalfonso timely filed a notice
    of appeal on January 6, 2016.     The trial court ordered Dalfonso to file a
    concise statement of errors complained of on appeal pursuant to Pa.R.A.P.
    1925(b), and Dalfonso timely filed a statement. The trial court subsequently
    filed a statement pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) directing this Court to its
    November 16, 2015 Memorandum and Order.
    Dalfonso presents this Court with the same question in his 1925(b)
    statement: “Whether the trial court erred in concluding that the 2002
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    Settlement Agreement invalidated or otherwise extinguished the OGM
    mortgages?” Dalfonso’s Brief at 4 (unnecessary capitalization omitted).
    Before we consider the merits of Dalfonso’s issue, we must determine
    whether Dalfonso has preserved it for our review. In support of his position
    that the trial court erred, Dalfonso argues (1) the 2002 Agreement did not
    replace an existing contract because the 1997 Agreement had merged into
    the judgment Omni obtained in 1997, and (2) even if a novation occurred,
    the mortgages were not affected as they are separate obligations.           Id. at
    15. Benson argues that Dalfonso has waived the bases for relief by failing to
    identify them clearly in his 1925(b) statement. Benson’s Brief at 9.
    The trial court, upon review of Dalfonso’s 1925(b) statement, indicated
    as follows: “It is impossible from [Dalfonso’s] concise statement to identify
    with any certainty which part or parts of my Memorandum and Order are the
    subject of his appeal.      Consequently, I am unable to further elucidate the
    findings   of   fact   or   discussion    contained   in   the   November    16th
    Memorandum.”       Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) Statement, 11/23/2016, at 1.
    “An overly vague or broad Rule 1925 statement may result in waiver.”
    Majorsky v. Douglas, 
    58 A.3d 1250
    , 1258 (Pa. Super. 2012). The reasons
    for this waiver rule are as follows.
    When a court has to guess what issues an appellant is appealing,
    that is not enough for meaningful review. When an appellant
    fails adequately to identify in a concise manner the issues sought
    to be pursued on appeal, the trial court is impeded in its
    preparation of a legal analysis which is pertinent to those issues.
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    In other words, a concise statement which is too vague to allow
    the court to identify the issues raised on appeal is the functional
    equivalent of no concise statement at all.                   While
    [Commonwealth v. Lord, [] 
    719 A.2d 306
     (Pa. 1998)] and its
    progeny have generally involved situations where an appellant
    completely fails to mention an issue in his concise statement, for
    the reasons set forth above we conclude that Lord should also
    apply to concise statements which are so vague as to prevent
    the court from identifying the issue to be raised on appeal. In
    the instant case, [the] appellant’s Concise Statement was not
    specific enough for the trial court to identify and address the
    issue [that the] appellant wished to raise on appeal. As such,
    the court did not address it. Because [the] appellant’s vague
    concise statement has hampered appellate review, it is waived.
    Commonwealth v. Reeves, 
    907 A.2d 1
    , 2 (Pa. Super. 2006) (quoting
    Lineberger v. Wyeth, 
    894 A.2d 141
    , 148 (Pa. Super. 2006)) (unnecessary
    capitalization omitted).
    Here, Appellant’s statement that “the trial court erred in concluding
    that the 2002 Settlement Agreement invalidated or otherwise extinguished
    the OGM mortgages” does not evoke the claims of merger and separateness
    upon which he bases his right to relief. The trial court has filed no opinion
    addressing these issues.       Our review of the issues unquestionably is
    hampered, as we are unable to determine whether the trial court’s resolution
    of those issues was erroneous when we have to guess at the legal and/or
    factual bases for the trial court’s rejections of Dalfonso’s positions.
    Accordingly, we hold that Dalfonso’s issues are waived.             See, e.g.,
    Majorsky, 
    58 A.3d at
    1258–59 (holding that arguments that the trial court
    erred in granting summary judgment on res judicata grounds because an
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    earlier    motion   was   denied   were   waived   on   appeal   because   “these
    considerations were not raised in clear terms in Appellants’ Rule 1925(b)
    statement, and the trial court did not address them in disposing of the res
    judicata issue in its original memorandum granting Appellees’ second motion
    for summary judgment or in its Rule 1925(a) opinion”).
    Even if Dalfonso had preserved his claims for our review, he has failed
    to convince us that the trial court erred and that he is entitled to relief as a
    result.2
    Our review in a non-jury case is limited to whether the findings
    of the trial court are supported by competent evidence and
    whether the trial court committed error in the application of law.
    We must grant the court’s findings of fact the same weight and
    effect as the verdict of a jury and, accordingly, may disturb the
    non-jury verdict only if the court’s findings are unsupported by
    competent evidence or the court committed legal error that
    affected the outcome of the trial. It is not the role of an
    appellate court to pass on the credibility of witnesses; hence we
    will not substitute our judgment for that of the factfinder. Thus,
    the test we apply is not whether we would have reached the
    same result on the evidence presented, but rather, after due
    consideration of the evidence which the trial court found
    credible, whether the trial court could have reasonably reached
    its conclusion.
    Lynn v. Pleasant Valley Country Club, 
    54 A.3d 915
    , 919 (Pa. Super.
    2012) (quoting Lebanon County Hous. Auth. v. Landeck, 
    967 A.2d 1009
    ,
    1012 (Pa. Super. 2009)).
    2
    In re Estate of Coombs, 
    784 A.2d 150
    , 155 (Pa. Super. 2001) (“It is the
    Appellant who has the burden of establishing his entitlement to relief by
    showing that the ruling of the trial court is erroneous under the evidence or
    the law.”).
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    The doctrine of novation, or substituted contract, applies where:
    (i) a prior contract has been displaced, (ii) a new valid contract
    has been substituted in its place, (iii) there exists sufficient legal
    consideration for the new contract, and (iv) the parties
    consented to the extinction of the old and replacement of the
    new. A novation is accepted by the parties as satisfaction of a
    pre-existing duty, [which] thus bars the revival of the pre-
    existing duty following a breach of the substituted contract.
    However, whether a contract has the effect of a novation
    primarily depends upon the parties’ intent. The party asserting
    its existence bears the burden of demonstrating the parties had
    a meeting of the minds.
    First Lehigh Bank v. Haviland Grille, Inc., 
    704 A.2d 135
    , 138–39 (Pa.
    Super. Ct. 1997) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    The trial court held that Benson proved all of the elements necessary
    to establish a novation.    Specifically, it held that: (i) & (ii) “[t]here is no
    dispute that both the 1997 [] Agreement and the 2002 [] Agreement are
    valid contracts. It could not be clearer, from the explicit terms of the 2002
    Agreement, that the latter replaced the former,” Trial Court Opinion,
    11/16/2015, at 5; (iii) there existed sufficient consideration for the new
    contract, as the 2002 Agreement included settlement of another civil action
    between the parties that had not been resolved, id.; and (iv) consent was
    proven by the terms of the 2002 Agreement itself, which stated that the
    parties “have entered into this Agreement willingly, and are not under
    duress.” Id. at 6. The trial court thus found that it was the intention of the
    parties that the 2002 Agreement supplanted the 1997 Agreement and the
    mortgage interests secured by it.     Id.   “Consequently, it follows, Dalfonso
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    cannot foreclose on mortgages that secured the 1997 Agreement when all
    that was transferred to him in his 2004 purchase from Omni was the
    obligations and related security arrangements contained in the 2002
    Agreement.” Id.
    In this Court, Dalfonso claims that the 2002 Agreement could not have
    constituted a novation of the 1997 Agreement because the 1997 Agreement
    ceased to exist as a valid contract when the 1997 judgment was entered, as
    the Agreement merged into the judgment. Dalfonso’s Brief at 17.
    Dalfonso cites no authority that provides that a contract ceases to be
    valid for novation purposes after a judgment is entered upon it. Rather, he
    constructs his argument upon the foundation of a federal bankruptcy court
    case in which the court noted that “[u]nder Pennsylvania law, it is well
    established that upon entry of a judgment the contractual relationship
    between the parties that gave rise to the debt merges into the judgment.” 3
    In re Foy, 
    469 B.R. 209
    , 214 (Bankr. E.D. Pa. 2012). Aside from the fact
    that the case has no precedential value in this Court, the issue decided
    therein is not at all analogous to the instant case.     The court in Foy
    3
    Pennsylvania cases relied upon by the Foy court in discussing Pennsylvania
    law provide not that a contract ceases to be “valid” after judgment is
    entered, but that the causes of action upon agreement, including both those
    actually litigated and those that could have been litigated, are what merge
    into a judgment. See, e.g., Kessler v. Old Guard Mut. Ins. Co., 
    570 A.2d 569
    , 573 (Pa. Super. 1990) (“[T]he finality of a judgment extends not only
    to matters actually determined but also to matters which could properly
    have been raised and determined therein.”).
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    determined that the creditor’s assignee of the debtor’s contract did not also
    obtain the judgment entered against the debtor on those accounts because
    the assignment referenced only the accounts and not the judgment. We fail
    to see the relevance of that case to Dalfonso’s argument that a judgment
    invalidates for purposes of a novation the contract which gave rise to the
    judgment. This argument does not persuade us that the trial court erred.
    Dalfonso also argues that, even if there had been a novation, the
    mortgage interests were not extinguished by the supplanting of the 1997
    Agreement because “a mortgage and the debt it secures are separate
    obligations.” Dalfonso’s Brief at 18. Again citing a non-binding federal court
    case, Dalfonso claims that it is “well established in Pennsylvania that a
    mortgagee may pursue remedies on both the mortgage and the underlying
    debt at the same time.” 
    Id.
     (citing Miners Sav. Bank of Pittston, Pa. v.
    United States, 
    110 F. Supp. 563
    , 566 (M.D. Pa. 1953)).4
    Dalfonso is correct that debts and the mortgages that secure them are
    separate obligations under Pennsylvania law.      However, as Benson aptly
    notes, it is also true that once the debt that a mortgage secures is
    eliminated for any reason, the mortgage is extinguished: “‘The debt being
    every thing, and the mortgage barely a security for the payment of it, it
    4
    Again, the case upon which Dalfonso builds his argument bears no
    resemblance to the instant case, as Miners Savings Bank was a quiet title
    action by a bank to prevent the federal government from foreclosing on a
    tax lien on a property against which the bank had already obtained an in
    rem judgment in mortgage foreclosure.
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    follows of necessity, that whatever affects the debt, will produce a
    corresponding effect upon the mortgage. If the debt be extinguished by any
    means, the mortgage will become so likewise.’”5         Benson’s Brief at 23
    (quoting Weir v. Potter Title & Mortgage Guarantee Co., 
    185 A. 630
    ,
    633 (Pa. 1936)). See also Kaylor v. Cent. Trust Co. of Harrisburg, 
    36 A.2d 825
    , 827 (Pa. 1944) (observing that a note and a mortgage “taken for
    the same debt are distinct securities, possessing dissimilar attributes subject
    to different remedies, but the payment of either discharges both, and a
    release or extinguishment of either, without actual payment, is a discharge
    of the other, unless otherwise intended by the parties” (citation and internal
    quotation marks omitted)).
    Dalfonso acknowledges that the mortgages “secure[d] payment of
    ‘$273,435.00 based upon the terms of a certain settlement agreement dated
    August 5, 1997’” among Omni and the Robidouxs. Dalfonso’s Reply Brief at
    10 (quoting the mortgages collectively admitted at trial as Dalfonso’s Exhibit
    5
    Benson also points out that, although Dalfonso obtained the mortgages in
    assignment from Omni, he did not obtain from Omni assignment of the
    underlying note, which in this case is the 1997 Agreement, and for that
    reason Dalfonso lacked the ability to foreclose. Benson’s Brief at 25 (citing
    CitiMortgage, Inc. v. Barbezat, 
    131 A.3d 65
    , 68 (Pa. Super. 2016) (“A
    person foreclosing on a mortgage, however, also must own or hold the note.
    This is so because a mortgage is only the security instrument that ensures
    repayment of the indebtedness under a note to real property. A mortgage
    can have no separate existence.” (citation omitted)); Carpenter v. Longan,
    
    83 U.S. 271
    , 274 (1872) (“The note and mortgage are inseparable; the
    former as essential, the latter as an incident. An assignment of the note
    carries the mortgage with it, while an assignment of the latter alone is a
    nullity.”)).
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    6).   The 2002 Agreement supplanted the 1997 Agreement.            The 2002
    Agreement provided that the 1997 judgment would once again “be deemed
    to be in effect” upon breach of the 2002 Agreement, 2002 Agreement at ¶ 6,
    but did not provide for revival of any part of the 1997 Agreement (as
    opposed to the 1997 judgment).
    Therefore, the trial court reasonably found that, based upon the terms
    of the 2002 Agreement, Omni ceased holding mortgages to assign because
    “the 2002 Agreement, as a substitute for the 1997 Agreement, did not
    require the entry of any mortgage as security or explicitly provide for the
    mortgages previously entered.” Trial Court Opinion, 11/16/2015, at 6-7.
    The trial court properly concluded that breach of the 2002 Agreement did
    not revive the duty to provide mortgages as security for the 1997
    Agreement. See Nernberg & Laffey v. Patterson, 
    601 A.2d 1237
    , 1239
    (Pa. Super. 1991) (“Since a substituted contract is accepted as satisfaction
    of a pre-existing duty, [it] thus bar[s] the revival of the pre-existing duty
    following a breach of the [substituted] contract….” (citation and quotation
    marks omitted)). As such, the trial court correctly held that “there were no
    valid mortgages for Dalfonso to purchase” in 2004.       Trial Court Opinion,
    11/16/2015, at 7.
    For the foregoing reasons, Dalfonso has failed to convince us that he is
    entitled to relief from this Court.
    Judgment affirmed.
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    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 11/17/2016
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