Bernie Enterprises, Inc. v. Foster, M.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedAugust 17, 2016
Docket55 EDA 2012
StatusUnpublished

This text of Bernie Enterprises, Inc. v. Foster, M. (Bernie Enterprises, Inc. v. Foster, M.) 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
Bernie Enterprises, Inc. v. Foster, M., (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

J. A15013/16

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

BERNIE ENTERPRISES, INC., : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF DONALD METZGER AND BAILEY & : PENNSYLVANIA BILLERA ENTERPRISES, INC. : : v. : : MICHEAL FOSTER, INDIVIDUALLY, : MICHEAL FOSTER, TRUSTEE, AND : HEYWOOD E. BECKER : No. 55 EDA 2012 : APPEAL OF: MICHEAL FOSTER :

Appeal from the Order, November 23, 2011, in the Court of Common Pleas of Lehigh County Civil Division at No. 2006-C-0035

BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., DUBOW AND JENKINS, JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED AUGUST 17, 2016

Micheal Foster appeals from the order of November 23, 2011, granting

plaintiffs/appellees’ motion to declare the November 1, 2010 settlement

agreement complete and directing the clerk of courts to mark the matter

settled, discontinued, and ended with prejudice. We affirm.

The trial court has described the history of this matter as follows:

These attenuated matters proceeding under the above-captioned consolidated cases stem from disputes arising out of the disposition of proceeds and properties relating to real-estate purchase and investment schemes involving the parties. In the most general sense, the controversy concerns whether properties were purchased by Defendants individually on behalf of themselves or, conversely, J. A15013/16

on behalf of their employers or beneficiaries and held in trust therefor.

After protracted proceedings, including arguments over disqualification of counsel and various and sundry ancillary procedural wranglings and recriminations, the parties entered into a one-hundred-and-seventy-page settlement agreement, which was adopted as an order of court entered on November 1, 2010. A dispute thereafter arose concerning compliance with the settlement terms, whereupon Plaintiffs, on March 17, 2011, filed a motion to enforce the settlement agreement, contending in pertinent part that Defendant Heywood Becker was obliged to convey his interests in a subject Delaware corporation, Hanoverian, Inc., as well as a Pennsylvania entity under a similar name. Defendants countered with a motion for sanctions, filed on April 15, 2011, arguing that Plaintiffs had failed to discharge their responsibilities under the settlement agreement in respect to, among other things, proper recordation of the deeds to the subject properties. Argument on both issues was scheduled on June 15, 2011, and, thereafter, on October 5, 2011, a rule setting a hearing date for October 25, 2011, was issued on the parties to show cause why a special master, identified by the Court, should not be appointed to implement the settlement agreement, with the parties to incur the expenses of the master’s services.

At [the] hearing convened on October 25, 2011, Plaintiffs indicated they were now satisfied that the settlement agreement had been fully implemented and their motion was thus rendered moot. Defendants were represented by Ronald Clever, Esq., who was also proceeding pro se. Mr. Clever did not offer any legal authority or substantive evidence at the hearing to demonstrate why a master should not be appointed nor did he offer any evidence in support of the motion for sanctions. Instead, in an attempt to exalt form over substance, he contended, incorrectly, that the sole matter before the Court consisted of

-2- J. A15013/16

Plaintiffs’ March 17, 2011, motion. (See N.T., 10/25/2011, at 5-6, 9-10.) Counsel refused to accede to the appointment of a master to address the convoluted morass presented by his motion for sanctions for alleged non-compliance with the 170-page settlement agreement. Accordingly, on the basis of the evidence presented at [the] hearing, the Court invited Plaintiffs to file a motion to declare the settlement agreement resolved. (See id. at 11.) On October 28, 2011, Plaintiffs filed such a motion. After receiving Defendants’ response thereto on November 17, 2011, the Court on November 23, 2011, entered an order declaring the settlement agreement resolved and directing the clerk of judicial records to mark the matter settled, discontinued, and ended with prejudice.

Trial court opinion, 2/17/12 at 2-3. This timely appeal followed. Appellant

complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b), and the trial court has filed an opinion.

Appellant has raised the following issues for this court’s review:

A. When the court (sua sponte) has summoned the lawyers into court, to “show cause” why a “special master” should not be appointed to “implemen[t] the settlement agreement,” is it error for the court – instead – to expect a party to be prepared (then and there) to litigate his motion (and it is [sic] error to deem the motion “waived”)?

B. When the “settlement agreement” has obligations that continue into the future, and when there is a pending motion pointing out fraud by one of the parties and breach of those obligations, is it error to close the case (especially “with prejudice”) (and especially when the order to close the case arises out of the kind of “waiver” addressed in Argument Section “A” above)?

C. When deeds have already been signed, notarized, and delivered,

-3- J. A15013/16

. . . and when this was done, pursuant to a consent order,

. . . and when this was done, pursuant to a stipulation (in which each and every page of the deeds-to-be-signed had been initialed in advance by counsel for both parties),

. . . is it proper for the grantee/plaintiff to add extra pages – (pages designed to show the grantor making representations) (pages designed to fraudulently avoid real estate transfer taxes)?

Appellant’s brief at 4 (brackets in original; emphasis in original;

capitalization deleted).

At a hearing on April 15, 2011, appellant voiced his concerns that

appellees were making changes to the deeds before filing. (Notes of

testimony, 4/15/11 at 2-3, 17.) Counsel for appellee Bernie Enterprises,

Inc., Craig T. Edwards, Esq., explained that some of the deeds were not

accepted because appellant was not listed as the trustee. (Id. at 4-5.)

Therefore, Attorney Edwards inserted the word “trustee” in some of the

deeds. (Id. at 7.) Attorney Edwards also had to correct a deed that listed

the wrong parcel number. (Id. at 10.) According to Attorney Clever,

however, Attorney Edwards had made material and substantial changes to

the deeds before filing, including inserting trust agreements into them. (Id.

at 17.) The trial court expressed its impatience with the delay in

-4- J. A15013/16

implementing the settlement agreement, and set a new hearing date of

June 15, 2011:

THE COURT: You guys come back on June 15th, and you bring all the corrected deeds that you need to have signed in recordable form. And you bring your clients, and you guys are going to sit in this courtroom, and you are going to execute all of those documents, whatever it takes to get them done properly. I am not interested in anymore [sic] motions. I’m really not. I am interested in implementing an agreement that all of the parties agreed to in open Court under oath.

Id. at 14-15.

I have got the date of June 15th on my calendar. We are going to keep the date. You guys get this thing resolved between now and then. To the extent that you don’t, you come on back on June the 15th, and I will decide whatever I have to decide, but I am telling you right up front, I have no patience for this, I really don’t. And I am going to start imposing sanctions, including attorney’s fees, if there are attorneys, and/or other kinds of fines; reimbursements, to implement what you all agreed to. Now go back and read the agreement, figure out what you have got to do under the agreement, and go ahead and do it.

Id. at 18.

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Bluebook (online)
Bernie Enterprises, Inc. v. Foster, M., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bernie-enterprises-inc-v-foster-m-pasuperct-2016.