Barak, G. v. Karolizki, E.

196 A.3d 208
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 18, 2018
Docket1672 WDA 2017
StatusPublished
Cited by50 cases

This text of 196 A.3d 208 (Barak, G. v. Karolizki, E.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barak, G. v. Karolizki, E., 196 A.3d 208 (Pa. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.:

I. Introduction

Golan Barak filed a lis pendens 1 in the Allegheny County Department of Court Records' judgment index against a certain piece of real estate. 2 In reviewing the lis *212 pendens , the trial court applied the wrong legal test - namely, the standard for a preliminary injunction - and ordered the court clerks to remove the lis pendens from their judgment index. In that same order, the trial court also erroneously directed that the proceeds from a sale of the real estate be placed into escrow pending this litigation's outcome. Mr. Barak appeals that order, and we vacate it in both respects. However, jurisdictional concerns and judicial restraint require us to remand, so a trial judge can apply the second part of Pennsylvania's lis pendens law in the first instance.

II. Factual Background

In January of 2016, Mr. Barak filed a "Praecipe for Writ of Summons in Equity - Index as Lis Pendens " against Eyal Karolizki and Gal Zeev Schwartz to litigate ownership of a piece of real estate in Wilkinsburg. Mr. Barak's complaint contains one count of quiet title. Through it, he prays for (1) the voiding of Mr. Karolizki and Mr. Schwartz's deed and (2) restoration of his title. See Barak's Second Amended Complaint at 5.

After filing an answer and new matter, Mr. Karolizki and Mr. Schwartz moved the trial court to strike Mr. Barak's lis pendens , because they had found a potential buyer for the property. However, the buyer would not consummate the sale subject to the lis pendens .

The trial judge conducted a hearing on their motion to strike. Instead of presenting any competent testimony or evidence of record to prove that the equities required removal of the lis pendens , counsel for Mr. Karolizki and Mr. Schwartz offered the court his version of the facts and the law. The attorney even brought someone out of the gallery, who, without taking an oath or affirmation, identified herself as "Hope Feldman ... a real estate broker" to give her opinions on the property. N.T., 10/26/17, at 34. Thus, the defendants' attorney called no actual witnesses, moved the admission of no exhibits, and produced no record in support of the motion to strike the lis pendens .

In Mr. Barak's complaint, which we will accept as true due to the lack of any contradictory evidence from the defendants, he claims to be the rightful owner of the Wilkinsburg property. He further alleges that he attempted to sell it to Alon Rimoni in 2015, 3 and they entered into a sales agreement to do so. At the closing, after executing a deed of transfer to Mr. Rimoni, Mr. Barak learned that Mr. Rimoni did not bring any money to pay for the land. However, Mr. Barak did not tear up or void the signature page of the executed deed.

Instead, Maximillian F. Beier, Esq., the attorney facilitating the closing, agreed, in writing, to hold Mr. Barak's executed deed in escrow until Mr. Rimoni produced the funds. See Exhibit D of Second Amended Complaint. A few days later, at the direction of Mr. Rimoni, Attorney Beier used Mr. Barak's signature page as grantor from the deed in escrow and attached it to a new deed. This new deed purported to transfer title from Mr. Barak directly to Mr. Karolizki and Mr. Schwartz. Attorney Beier recorded this fraudulent deed in the *213 Allegheny County Department of Real Estate. 4

Mr. Barak says he received no compensation from that transfer. He wants to regain legal title to the land, so he sued Mr. Karolizki and Mr. Schwartz in this action.

At the hearing on the lis pendens , counsel for Mr. Karolizki and Mr. Schwartz argued that, to maintain a lis pendens in the court's records, "plaintiffs have to show six things under the case law ... because the courts have said already ... that a lis pendens acts as an injunction." N.T., 10/26/17, at 12-13.

After the defendants' attorney explained in detail why Mr. Barak did not deserve a preliminary injunction, he offered a convenient solution:

Now, what I have proposed ... is that we allow the lis pendens to be removed and ... the money from the sale be placed into the Department of Court Records, and it cannot be touched by any party during this litigation. In fact, what I am proposing ... [is] that we would need a court order ... [to] release the funds at the conclusion of the litigation, not before. And whoever wins takes the money.

Id. at 19. Without even hearing Mr. Barak's side of the case, the trial judge decided that the "escrow sounds like a good idea to me." Id. at 20.

But Mr. Barak's attorney, skeptical of defense counsel's proposal, still wished to be heard. "Your Honor, if I may," he interrupted, "Your Honor, Chris Hasson for Golan Barak who's the plaintiff in this matter." Id.

Attorney Hasson then attempted to draw the judge's attention to a chart and several documents he had passed to the bench. But he managed two sentences before the judge, fixated on defense counsel's proposal, asked:

THE COURT: Well, what's wrong with the escrow?
HASSON: My client doesn't want to sell the property. He wants to keep the property.
THE COURT: Well, he sold it already.
HASSON: He did not sell it already.
THE COURT: What was he doing in Beier's office?
HASSON: He was attempting to sell the property, but the proceeds for the sale were never produced.
THE COURT: Well -
HASSON: If Your Honor will give me a moment to explain what happened ...
THE COURT: You're going into the whole program. I want to know why escrow isn't a good thing.

Id. at 20-21.

After discussing purchase prices, various offers, and where the parties live, the judge allowed Attorney Hasson to present his argument. See id. at 22-26. He explained that his client filed suit to undo the allegedly fraudulent deed that Attorney Beier had created and recorded. He also said that Mr.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
196 A.3d 208, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barak-g-v-karolizki-e-pasuperct-2018.