Lichtman, J. v. Williams, J. ( 2020 )


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  • J-A13019-20
    NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
    JOAN LICHTMAN                              :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
    :        PENNSYLVANIA
    Appellant               :
    :
    :
    v.                             :
    :
    :
    JEWELL WILLIAMS, JOSEPH                    :   No. 3074 EDA 2019
    VIGNOLA, AND PARIS WASHINGTON              :
    Appeal from the Order Entered September 26, 2019
    In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County Civil Division at
    No(s): No. 190801902
    BEFORE:      BENDER, P.J.E., LAZARUS, J., and STRASSBURGER, J.*
    MEMORANDUM BY LAZARUS, J.:                                 FILED MAY 19, 2020
    Joan Lichtman appeals, pro se, from the order, entered in the Court of
    Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, dismissing her complaint in mandamus.
    After careful review, we affirm on the opinion of the Honorable Arnold J. New.1
    ____________________________________________
    *   Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court.
    1 Although Lichtman’s brief complies with most of the structural appellate rules
    of court, it lacks substantive compliance. Lichtman’s argument is replete with
    irrelevant assertions, accusations, personal opinions and legal conclusions.
    Lichtman's legal argument is wholly undeveloped, contains no citations to
    authorities, and makes no attempt to apply any authority to the facts of the
    present case. See Pa.R.A.P. 2117(a)(4), 2119(b). Essentially, the argument
    section of Lichtman’s brief consists of a forty-five-page diatribe, alleging
    perjury, official corruption and administrative ineptness. While this Court is
    willing to liberally construe materials filed by a pro se litigant, an appellant is
    not entitled to any particular advantage because she lacks legal training.
    “[A]ny layperson choosing to represent herself in a legal proceeding must, to
    some reasonable extent, assume the risk that her lack of expertise and legal
    training will prove her undoing.” Branch Banking and Trust v. Gesiorski,
    J-A13019-20
    This appeal stems from a landlord-tenant action between Lichtman and
    Rittenhouse Plaza Inc. (Rittenhouse). From 1992 to 2007, Lichtman resided
    in Unit 8C of the Rittenhouse Plaza, located at 1901 Walnut Street in
    Philadelphia.    On September 26, 2007, Rittenhouse filed a landlord-tenant
    action against Lichtman in Philadelphia Municipal Court seeking past due rent
    and possession of the premises.           On October 19, 2007, the court entered
    judgment in favor of Rittenhouse for money damages and possession.
    Following various negotiations and attempts at settlement, Lichtman was
    evicted in 2008. For several years thereafter, Lichtman unsuccessfully sought
    to postpone and set aside the sheriff’s sale of the apartment.
    In its landlord-tenant complaint, Rittenhouse had alleged there were “no
    outstanding [Licensing and Inspections] violations.”        Lichtman claims this
    ____________________________________________
    
    904 A.2d 939
    , 942 (Pa. Super. 2006) (citation omitted). We strongly suggest
    Lichtman discontinue this campaign.
    We also note appellees did not file a brief. Counsel for appellees informed
    this Court that Lichtman did not serve them as required under Pennsylvania
    Rules of Civil Procedure 400 and 400.1. Appellees’ Letter, 2/21/2020.
    Lichtman acknowledges this lack of service in her brief. (“When failing to
    grant pauper status to [Appellant] in this matter, by improperly applying
    Pa.R.C.P. 240(j)(1)— i.e., [Appellant] not only qualifies for pauper status, but
    the absence of pauper status, simultaneously prevented service of original
    process to the [Appellees]—the trial court improperly made an erroneous
    decision ‘on the merits’ of the case, which defies the evidence, and without
    ever allowing the [Appellees] to know they were sued[.]”). Appellant’s Brief,
    at 5.
    -2-
    J-A13019-20
    allegation is a “perjured statement,” and since 2011, she has filed over
    twenty-five lawsuits litigating her grievances against various organizations
    and public officials.2 This case is the latest, following Lichtman’s August 14,
    2019 complaint in mandamus against defendants Jewell Williams, individually
    and in his capacity as Sheriff of Philadelphia County, Joseph Vignola, Esquire,
    individually and in his capacity as under-Sheriff of Philadelphia County, and
    Paris Washington, individually and in his capacity as Deputy Sheriff of
    Philadelphia County.          Judge New dismissed Lichtman’s complaint in
    mandamus, and Lichtman timely filed this appeal.
    ____________________________________________
    2  See, e.g., Rittenhouse Plaza, Inc. v. Lichtman, No. 745 EDA 2007,
    unpublished memorandum (Pa. Super. filed Aug. 22, 2007); Rittenhouse
    Plaza, Inc. v. Lichtman, unpublished memorandum, 
    26 A.3d 1187
     (Pa.
    Super. 2011), appeal denied, 
    32 A.3d 1278
     (Pa. 2011); Lichtman v. Chubb
    Group of Ins. Companies, et al., 
    107 A.3d 218
     (Pa. Super. 2014)
    (unpublished memorandum); Lichtman v. Glazer, 
    111 A.3d 1225
     (Cmwlth.
    2015) rehearing en banc denied, appeal denied 
    125 A.3d 779
     (Pa. 2015);
    Lichtman v. Prudential Fox Roach, unpublished memorandum, 
    107 A.3d 228
     (Pa. Super. 2014); Lichtman v. the Honorable Arnold New, No. 549
    C.D. 2015, unpublished memorandum (Cmwlth. filed August 27, 2015);
    Lichtman v. Bomstein, 
    134 A.3d 496
     (Pa. Super. 2015), appeal denied, 
    141 A.3d 651
     (Pa. 2016); Lichtman v. R. Seth Williams and Kathleen Martin,
    1435 C.D. 2017, unpublished memorandum (Cmwlth. filed May 8, 2018);
    Lichtman v. Kelley Hodge, John Delaney, R. Seth Williams, Kathleen
    Martin, 1563 C.D. 2017, unpublished memorandum (Cmwlth. filed Sept. 13,
    2018); Lichtman v. Bradley K. Moss and Sheila Woods-Skipper, No. 365
    EDA 2019, unpublished memorandum (Pa. Super. filed Nov. 7, 2019);
    Lichtman v. Krasner, 352 C.D. 2018, unpublished memorandum (Cmwlth.
    filed April 18, 2019); Lichtman v. Eric Feder, Deputy Court
    Administrator, Office of Judicial Records of Philadelphia County, 2551
    EDA 2019, unpublished memorandum (Pa. Super. filed March 2, 2020);
    Lichtman v. [Nine Judges of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas],
    1457 EDA 2019, unpublished memorandum (Pa. Super. filed March 25, 2020).
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    J-A13019-20
    Lichtman raises the following issues for our review:
    I.      The trial court erred and willfully abused discretion, when improperly
    applying Pa.R.C.P. 240(j)(1) as a convenient, fabricated ‘justification’
    for the trial court’s sua sponte dismissal of this case, and as the trial
    court’s artificially contrived tactic, so as to deny due process,
    preclude service of original process, and thereby, prevent this case
    from ever being heard at the trial level — all, as a means for
    Pennsylvania’s Judiciary to protect public servants, both private and
    public attorneys, and certain judges, including this trial judge,
    himself, from prosecution and/or disbarment for perjury and related
    crimes, intended to silence the crime victim and force an innocent
    human being into an early grave.3
    ____________________________________________
    3This issue has the following 13 sub-issues claiming the trial court erred and
    abused its discretion “while committing crimes:”
    A. By implying that a supposed twenty-five lawsuits, filed by Plaintiff, were
    somehow decided ‘on their merits’ against Plaintiff, when this same trial
    judge issued sua sponte dismissals—in the absence of due process and
    without service of original process—by improperly applying Pa.R.C.P.
    340(j)(1), as the trial court’s convenient, but invalid, excuse to silence
    this Plaintiff-Appellant, while burying ironclad evidence, so as to
    erroneously, and automatically, conclude that Plaintiff-Appellant never
    stated any claim upon which relief could be granted, i.e., all the hard,
    incontrovertible, sight unseen, never read evidence on the public record,
    in contradiction, ‘notwithstanding’;
    B. When concluding that, because two trial court tribunals ruled
    against Plaintiff, therefore, the ironclad evidence, proving beyond
    all doubt, that the underlying eviction complaint was willfully
    perjured, was never entered into the record by those judges,
    before those judges deliberately ignored the evidence, so as to
    rule in favor of the attorneys who willfully perjured the eviction
    complaint;
    C. When blindly relying on Superior Court’s June 24, 2008 sua
    sponte dismissal of Plaintiff’s appeal, which erroneously concluded
    that Lichtman did not file a post-trial motion, despite Plaintiff’s
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    J-A13019-20
    ____________________________________________
    two timely-filed, post-trial motions clearly docketed by the trial
    court on April 16, 2008;
    D. When failing to recognize that proof of perjury on the face of
    the record automatically caused the May 9, 2008 Judgment for
    Possession and Money to be void and unenforceable—no matter
    when that proof was provided to the tribunal;
    E. When the trial court proved its Ignorance of the Law, by the
    court’s egregious denials that issues of subject matter jurisdiction
    are never time-barred and can be raised any time at any level of
    court;
    F. When, after being handed ironclad evidence proving perjury on
    the face of the record, the trial court repeatedly refused to perform
    the judiciary’s mandatory duty—no discretion—of signing an Order
    to Strike a void Judgment, under the court’s own motion.
    G. When, in the face of Sheriff’s having executed the void
    Judgment, the trial court refused to Order—as required by statute
    (Philadelphia Code §§ 9-1603 – 9-1604)—that Sheriff return
    Plaintiff’s home, property, assets, and moneys, which Sheriff
    illegally seized, stole, and/or sold, when Sheriff executed and
    enforced the void judgment;
    H. When failing to apply Philadelphia Code, §9-1605, which
    addresses crimes committed by “any person(s)” who engage/d in
    .... or who assist/ed, in sustaining Plaintiff’s unlawful eviction, by
    the trial court’s issuing citations and/or arrest warrants, per
    Philadelphia Code, §9-1606.
    I. When failing to grant pauper status to Plaintiff in this matter,
    by improperly applying Pa.R.C.P. 240(j)(1) — i.e., Plaintiff not
    only qualifies for pauper status, but the absence of pauper status,
    simultaneously prevented service of original process to the
    defendants—the trial court improperly made an erroneous
    decision ‘on the merits’ of the case, which defies the evidence,
    and without ever allowing the defendants to know they were sued;
    J. By prohibiting service of original process and refusing to grant
    pauper status in this matter, the trial court made an invalid, ‘on
    the merits’ decision, which literally defies the evidence, which the
    trial court conveniently blocked from ever coming before the
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    J-A13019-20
    II. The trial court erred and abused discretion when failing to issue
    the Writ of Mandamus, and thereby, the trial court aids and abets
    ____________________________________________
    tribunal, and thereby, ruled in favor of Defendants, without their
    having even to enter their appearance in the case nor to provide
    any defense, whatsoever: i.e., the trial court obviated the need
    for Defendants even to participate in the case, before the trial
    court granted Defendants a wholly unsupportable ruling in their
    favor;
    K. When dismissing this case prematurely, the trial court
    egregiously protects Defendants from prosecution under
    Philadelphia Code, Chapter 9-1600, aka the Anti-Lockout Laws:
    i.e., the Defendants, Sheriff, Under-Sheriff and Deputy Sheriff,
    are publicly paid to obey and to enforce those criminal statutes,
    not break those laws for personal gain;
    L. When failing to recognize that Plaintiff stated a clear, valid claim
    for relief which can only be granted by a court of law, and,
    thereby, Plaintiff met the three-pronged criteria for issuance of a
    Writ of Mandamus, so as to force Sheriff to comply with Sheriff’s
    mandatory duties under Philadelphia Code, Chapter 9-1600, the
    trial court failed to Order the required Writ of Mandamus to be
    issued.
    M. When failing to recuse himself from this case, due to the trial
    court’s long history of bias and retaliation against this Plaintiff, as
    well as the trial judge’s being a defendant in a different, but
    concurrently being litigated, lawsuit, brought against him by this
    Plaintiff, Judge New interfered with the administration of justice,
    manipulation judicial machinery, and is protecting both attorneys
    and judges—especially himself—as well as public servants from
    prosecution, disbarment, and liability.
    Appellant’s Brief, at 4-6. We note that this recitation of sub-issues violates
    our rules of appellate procedure. See Pa.R.A.P. 2116(a) (“The statement of
    the questions involved must state the question or questions in the briefest and
    most general terms, without names, dates, amounts or particulars of any kind.
    It should not ordinarily exceed 15 lines, must never exceed one page, and
    must always be on a separate page, without any other matter appearing
    thereon. This rule is to be considered in the highest degree mandatory,
    admitting of no exception; ordinarily no point will be considered which is not
    set forth in the statement of questions involved or suggested thereby.”)
    (emphasis added).
    -6-
    J-A13019-20
    Sheriff’s, Under-Sheriff’s, and Deputy Sheriff’s crimes, and fails to
    force Defendants to obey and to enforce the law, while the trial
    court simultaneously, and egregiously, protects Defendants, the
    Judiciary, public servants, and attorneys from prosecution and/or
    disbarment for their collusions and crimes.
    Appellant’s Brief, at 4-6.
    “Our review of a decision dismissing an action pursuant to Pa.R.C.P.
    240(j) is limited to a determination of whether the plaintiff’s constitutional
    rights have been violated and whether the trial court abused its discretion or
    committed an error of law.” Ocasio v. Prison Health Servs., 
    979 A.2d 352
    ,
    354 (Pa. Super. 2009) (citation omitted). Rule 240(j) provides, in relevant
    part, as follows:
    If, simultaneous with the commencement of an action or
    proceeding or the taking of an appeal, a party has filed a petition
    for leave to proceed in forma pauperis, the court prior to acting
    upon the petition may dismiss the action, proceeding or appeal if
    the allegation of poverty is untrue or if it is satisfied that the
    action, proceeding or appeal is frivolous.
    Pa.R.C.P. 240(j)(1). “Under Rule 240(j), an action is frivolous if, on its face,
    it does not set forth a valid cause of action.” Ocasio, 
    979 A.2d at 354
     (citation
    and internal quotation marks omitted).
    Lichtman appears to argue that Judge New could not dismiss the
    complaint in mandamus under Rule 240(j)(1), that the “perjured statement”
    from the landlord-tenant complaint renders all subsequent court actions null
    and void, and that the court should have applied relevant provisions of the
    Philadelphia Code to this matter. As Judge New points out, Lichtman “seeks
    a Writ of Mandamus directing the Sheriff’s Office to immediately restore
    -7-
    J-A13019-20
    [Lichtman’s] possession of Unit 8C pursuant to [sections] 9-1603-9-1605 of
    the Philadelphia Code.”   Trial Court Opinion, 11/5/19, at 4.     “The crux of
    [Lichtman’s] request for mandamus relief rests on her averment the Writ of
    Execution was not issued by a court of competent jurisdiction because the
    landlord-tenant [c]omplaint was perjured.”       Id. at 5, citing Complaint,
    8/14/19, at ¶ 7.
    We agree with Judge New’s conclusion that the complaint is frivolous.
    As Judge New points out, the matter was litigated in Municipal Court, heard
    de novo before the Honorable Allan Tereshko, and appealed to this Court,
    which dismissed the matter in 2008.        See Rittenhouse Plaza, Inc. v.
    Lichtman, No. 1412 EDA 2008 (Pa. Super. filed June 24, 2008) (unpublished
    memorandum). Accordingly, we discern no error on the part of the trial court
    in dismissing Lichtman’s complaint under Rule 240(j)(1), Ocasio, 
    supra,
     and
    we rely upon Judge New’s opinion to affirm the order. See Trial Court Opinion,
    supra at 4-6. The parties are directed to attach a copy of that opinion in the
    event of further proceedings.
    Lichtman is prohibited from further IFP filings in the trial court or this
    Court; she is further precluded from filing future actions that have as their
    basis the issue of the alleged “perjured statement” in Rittenhouse’s landlord-
    tenant complaint. Lichtman has had a full and fair opportunity to litigate this
    claim in two prior proceedings, and a final judgment on the merits has been
    entered by a court of competent jurisdiction The fact that this Court dismissed
    her appeal on waiver grounds does not alter our conclusion. See Goldstein
    -8-
    J-A13019-20
    v. Ahrens, 
    108 A.2d 693
     (Pa. 1954) (when court of competent jurisdiction
    has determined litigated cause on merits, judgment entered and not reversed
    on appeal is, as between parties and privies, final and conclusive); see also
    BuyFigure.com, Inc. v. Autotrader.com, Inc., 
    76 A.3d 554
    , 561 (Pa.
    Super. 2013) (in light of policy behind application of res judicata, “[t]he rule
    should not be defeated by minor differences of form, parties, or allegations,
    when these are contrived only to obscure the real purpose, -a second trial on
    the same cause between the same parties.”), citing Stevenson v.
    Silverman, 
    208 A.2d 786
    , 788 (Pa. 1965).          Shuffling the parties will not
    nullify the rule.
    Order affirmed.
    Judgment Entered.
    Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
    Prothonotary
    Date: 5/19/2020
    -9-