Biernstein, T. v. Aleebanese Food, LLC

2026 Pa. Super. 12
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 20, 2026
Docket1876 MDA 2024
StatusPublished
AuthorKunselman
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2026 Pa. Super. 12 (Biernstein, T. v. Aleebanese Food, LLC) 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
Biernstein, T. v. Aleebanese Food, LLC, 2026 Pa. Super. 12 (Pa. Ct. App. 2026).

Opinions

J-S32018-25 2026 PA Super 12

TEDD AND SHARON BIERNSTEIN : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA v. : : ALEEBANESE FOOD, LLC AND ALI : KABALAN : : Appellants : No. 1876 MDA 2024

Appeal from the Judgment Entered March 3, 2025 In the Court of Common Pleas of Union County Civil Division at No(s): 21-0303, 22-0256

BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., KUNSELMAN, J., and STEVENS, P.J.E.*

OPINION BY KUNSELMAN, J.: FILED: JANUARY 20, 2026

I. Introduction

In this landlord-tenant dispute involving consolidated cases (docketed

below at 21-0303 and 22-0256), the Tenants, Aleebanese Food, LLC and Ali

Kabalan, appeal from the judgment of $10,463.17 entered on the jury verdict

in favor of the Landlords, Tedd and Sharon Biernstein. We vacate the

judgment entered in case 21-0303, because the trial court lacked appellate

jurisdiction over it. That lack of jurisdiction also partially sullied the judgment

at 22-0256. Thus, we must reduce the verdict and judgment in that case to

$8,947.

II. Facts & Procedural Background

On June 23, 2020, the Landlords and Tenants signed a two-year lease

for commercial property in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. According to the lease,

____________________________________________

* Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court. J-S32018-25

the Tenants owed the Landlords a $2,000 security deposit “prior to occupancy

of the premises.” Landlords’ Ex. 1 at 4, ¶8. Additionally, the Tenants agreed

to pay:

for all utility and service costs to the premises, including but not limited, to the following:

...

4.2 sewer service to the building;

4.5 trash servicing for the leased premises;

4.11 clean the grease trap no less than twice a year;

4.15 plumbing services within the leased property . . . .

Id. at 2-3, ¶4 (some capitalization omitted).

If the Tenants breached the lease, the Landlords could terminate it and

seek a judgment of possession. The Landlords could also bring “an action to

recover . . . charges due, . . . together with any and all consequential damages

caused by [the Tenants’ breach,] including reasonable attorney fees and court

costs.” Id. at 5, ¶9.

Immediately after signing the lease, the Tenants occupied the premises

and opened a restaurant. They did not pay the $2,000 security deposit. See

N.T., 10/1/24, at 6.

-2- J-S32018-25

Eight months later, in February of 2021, the Landlords sent the Tenants

a notice to vacate the premises. See Landlords’ Ex. 2. The Landlords accused

them of breaching the lease by (1) failing to pay the $2,000 security deposit;

(2) altering the premise without the Landlords’ consent by removing light

fixtures; (3) failing to clean the grease trap at least twice per year; and (4)

failing to clean the ice machine at least twice per year. See id. The Landlords

gave the Tenants until March 31, 2021 to vacate.

A day before the deadline, the Tenants paid the Landlords $2,000 for

the security deposit. See Landlords’ Ex. 3. They refused to leave. On April

22, 2021, the Landlords sued the Tenants in the Magisterial District Court of

Lewisburg and sought to evict them.1

Following an evidentiary hearing, the court ruled in favor of the Tenants

on all counts. The learned Magisterial District Judge Jeffery A. Rowe issued a

detailed, well-reasoned opinion explaining his decision as follows:

Regarding the [Tenants’] failure to pay the security deposit, the complaint specifically states that the lease has been breached due to the Tenants’ failure to pay the security deposit, not for the Tenants’ failure to timely pay the security deposit. There was much testimony at trial regarding the timeliness of the Tenants’ payments of either rent or security deposits, or lack thereof. However, the only allegation set forth in the complaint was that the Tenants failed to pay the security deposit. All parties agree that the security deposit has now been paid, albeit untimely; therefore, that breach has been cured . . .

1 The action originally received docket number MJ-17301-LT-0000004-2021.

For the sake of clarity, we refer to that initial proceeding before the magisterial district court by its trial-court docket number throughout most of this Opinion.

-3- J-S32018-25 [Also], the Tenants provided evidence that the grease trap and ice machine had been cleaned recently. The lease requires both of those items to be cleaned “no less than twice a year.” [Landlords’ Ex. 1 at 3, ¶4.10, 4.11.] While common sense would dictate that such a provision should be interpreted as requiring those items to be cleaned once every six months, that’s not what the lease states. The lease’s plain language sets forth the respective obligations of the parties and must control the outcome here. Because the lease was signed on June 23, 2020 – not yet a year ago – the Tenants cannot yet have breached the applicable provisions of the lease. Simply put, the Landlords’ claim is premature . . .

Further, [Mr. Biernstein’s] testimony was rather conclusory. [He] testified that the items had not been cleaned, yet [Mr. Biernstein] did not say on what date he observed those items in an unclean condition. When presented with pictures of the recently cleaned ice machine, [Mr. Biernstein] testified that it did not appear to have been cleaned in the same manner as it had been in the past by a different servicer. In [the magisterial court’s] judgment, this testimony does not rise to meet the burden of proof required [of the Landlords].

The Landlords’ final claim is that the premises was altered without [their] permission, specifically that “light fixtures have been removed and altered.” [Landlords’ Complaint in Magisterial Court. Mr. Biernstein] testified that shades or covers were removed from various lights in the store and that lights had been replaced. [But he] failed to provide any detail regarding how the lights were different from what was in place previously.

[Mr. Kabalan] testified that any shades or covers were removed with the Landlords’ permission and were carefully packaged and stored on the premises, should the Landlords desire to use them again in the future. [He] denied replacing any lights and insisted that the lights were raised simply by looping and securing the cable that extends from the ceiling to the light itself. Per [Mr. Kabalan], this is easily undone . . . Give that neither the removal of covers nor the repositioning of the lights [is] permanent, [the magisterial court] finds that the Tenants did not alter the lighting fixtures.

[Furthermore,] the Landlords asserted that a light and cover had been removed from an exterior light . . . Regardless of

-4- J-S32018-25 whether the light and cover were present [when] the Tenants took possession of the premises, or who removed the light and cover, this change is a purely aesthetic, non-permanent, and exceptionally minor change . . . it is easily undone. [The magisterial court] does not consider this to be an “alteration” as that word is commonly used in the lease contract.

Magisterial District Court Opinion, 5/17/21, at 1-3 (emphasis in original).

Finding no merit to the Landlords’ breach-of-contract claims, on May 17,

2021, the magisterial district court dismissed them and entered judgment in

favor of the Tenants. See Magisterial District Court Judgment, 5/17/21, at 1.

The judgment informed the Landlords that they had 30 days to appeal.

On June 10, 2021, the Landlords “instructed their legal counsel . . . to

prepare and file a notice of appeal.” Landlords’ Petition to Appeal Nunc Pro

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Bluebook (online)
2026 Pa. Super. 12, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biernstein-t-v-aleebanese-food-llc-pasuperct-2026.