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,
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* 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.
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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
Tunc at 1 (some punctuation omitted). The next day, the lawyer “experienced
a medical condition of septic arthritis and was required to undergo emergency
surgery . . . .” Id. He remained hospitalized until June 16, 2021. Upon being
discharged, counsel “instructed his staff to prepare and file a notice of appeal,”
but his staff neglected to do so until June 17, 2021 – i.e., 31 days after the
magisterial district court entered the appealed-from judgment. Id. The
prothonotary docketed the appeal at case number 21-0303.
The Tenants moved to strike the Landlords’ appeal as untimely, because
they claimed the magisterial-district-court judgment “became final on June
16, 2021,” by operation of law. Tenants’ Motion to Strike Notice of Appeal at
1. In response, the Landlords alleged good cause for their untimely appeal –
namely, the emergency hospitalization of their attorney. “Except for the
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unforeseen emergency circumstances, [the Landlords] would have had the
capacity to appeal within 30 days after the date of the [magisterial district
court’s] judgment.” Answer to Motion to Strike Appeal at 2 (some
capitalization removed). The Landlords also contended the Tenants’ “capacity
to defend the claim [would not be] adversely affected by allowing [the
untimely] appeal to proceed.” Id.
Then, on August 6, 2021, the Landlords petitioned the trial court for
permission to appeal the magisterial district court’s judgment nunc pro tunc.
Nearly two months after the appellate deadline, the Landlords “recognized”
that a petition to appeal nunc pro tunc was the “vehicle to request a remedy
from a late filing of [a] notice of appeal based [on] good cause shown.”
Landlords’ Petition to Appeal Nunc Pro Tunc at 2.
Following a hearing, President Judge Michael T. Hudock granted the
Landlords’ petition to appeal nunc pro tunc and denied the Tenants’ motion to
strike. The trial court did not issue an opinion, and no transcript of the hearing
was filed in the certified record.
Two months later, the Landlords sent the Tenants another notice to
vacate by October 31, 2021. See Landlords’ Ex. 5. Therein, the Landlords
raised new allegations of breach. They claimed the Tenants “failed to pay
utility and service costs to the building” for heating oil, sewer bills, and grease-
trap cleaning, totaling $1,242.66. Id. at 1. The Tenants refused to leave.
On February 5, 2022, the Landlords served the Tenants with a third
notice to vacate by March 14, 2022. This notice increased the list of alleged
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breaches – i.e., that the Tenants failed to pay for a back-flow, plumbing test
required by law; more heating oil; additional sewer bills; grease-trap cleaning;
and garbage removal. The Landlords demanded $2,789.16 in unpaid utility
and service fees. See Landlords’ Ex. 8. Again, the Tenants disregarded the
eviction notice and remained in the premises past March 14th. See N.T.,
10/1/24, at 66.
A week later, the Landlords commenced a second action for breach of
contract in the magisterial district court. On April 14, 2022, the court found
in favor of the Landlords, and awarded $3,699.41, and granted them the right
to retake possession of the premises. The Tenants timely appealed to the trial
court, and the prothonotary docketed this new appeal at case number 22-
0256.
On June 30, 2022, the lease expired, and the Tenants left the premises.
See N.T., 10/1/24, at 95.
A month later, the trial court consolidated the two cases, and the matter
eventually proceeded to a jury trial. Judge Michael Piecuch presided, because
President Judge Hudock had retired at the end of 2021.
At trial, the Landlords abandoned their breach-of-contract claims in case
21-0303, but they continued to seek repayment for utilities and services costs
in case 22-0256. The Landlords sought $2,947 for utility and service costs
based on the following unpaid expenses:
12/8/20 Backflow Testing by Plumber $75.00
-7- J-S32018-25 2/19/21 Heating Oil $690.69 4/9/21 Sewage $210.62 8/31/21 Sewage $216.65 10/15/21 Sewage $225.23 10/20/21 Heating Oil $894.80 11/17/21 Refuse Removal $61.43 1/14/22 Sewage $172.58 7/22/22 Premises Cleaning $400.00
See Landlords’ Ex. 6, 7, 9, 10, 11, 13, and 14.
Additionally, the Landlords still sought attorney’s fees from their initial
lawsuit, i.e., case 21-0303. As evidence of attorney’s fees and costs, the
Landlords offered two bills. Notably, some of the legal services from case 21-
0303 appeared on both bills. See Landlords’ Ex. 4 and 15. The aggregate
demands for attorney’s fees and costs arising from case 21-0303 in Exhibits
4 and 15 were as follows:
1/25/21 Drafting Letter to Tenants’ Counsel $80.00 2/17/21 Drafting First Notice to Vacate $100.00 4/19/21 Drafting MDC Complaint $200.00 4/22/21 Filing of MDC Complaint Costs $180.00 5/11/21 Attending First MDC Hearing $600.00 6/16/21 Drafting Notice of Appeal to Trial Court $40.00 6/17/21 Late Filing of Notice of Appeal to Trial Court $176.25 6/28/21 Drafting Trial Court Complaint $400.00 7/9/21 Drafting Answer to Motion to Strike Appeal $150.00 8/2/21 Drafting Answer to New Matter $80.00
-8- J-S32018-25 8/2/21 Drafting Petition to Appeal Nunc Pro Tunc $200.00 5/18/22 Drafting Pre-Trial Statement $150.00 7/1/22 Attending Pre-Trial Conference $40.00
See id.2 Thus, the Landlords sought $2,396.25 in attorney’s fees and costs
from case 21-0303.
As for their second lawsuit (22-0256), the Landlords submitted evidence
of the following legal expenses:
2/9/22 Constable Service of Third Notice to Vacate $100.00 7/29/24 Jury Selection/Drafting Motion to Enforce $800.00 7/30/24 Filing Motion/Reviewing Exhibits $1,200.00 8/2/24 Preparing Exhibit Books $1,000.00 8/5/24 Preparing Exhibit Books $800.00 8/6/24 Meeting with Landlords to Review Exhibits $600.00 8/14/24 Drafting Answer to Rule to Show Cause $900.00 10/1/24 Trying Jury Trial $600.00
See Landlords’ Ex. 15. Thus, the Landlords claimed $6,000 in attorney’s fees
and costs from their second action. When combined, the amounts listed in
the two exhibits came to $11,343.25.
While cross-examining Mr. Biernstein, the Tenants’ attorney asked for a
sidebar, because he wanted to question Mr. Biernstein about the judgment
2 The first, third, and fifth items in the above table (drafting letter to Tenants’
counsel, drafting magisterial-district-court complaint, and attending hearing before magisterial district judge) appeared on both exhibits. Hence, we listed the combined prices of those items from both exhibits.
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the magisterial district court entered against the Landlords in case 21-0303.
See N.T., 10/1/24, at 59. The Tenants’ attorney indicated that many of the
items on the Landlords’ Exhibits 4 and 15 were for legal filings and work in
which the Landlords had not prevailed. He wanted to argue to the jury that
some of the attorney’s fees in Exhibits 4 and 15 should not be awarded to the
Landlords due to the Tenants’ prior legal victories.
The Landlords objected. See id. at 60. They contended that speaking
of the magisterial-district-court judgment entered in case 21-0303 would be
prejudicial to their breach-of-contract claims in case 22-0256.
After reviewing the history of the two cases, Judge Piecuch attempted
to give preclusive effect to the magisterial district court’s judgment in 21-0303
on the question of attorney’s fees. He opined from the bench that:
the first action involved alleged breach, alleged default, and [the Tenants] won that [action]. As a matter of law then, there cannot be attorney’s fees that would have been caused by [the Tenants’] default, because there was a judicial determination that [the Tenants] did not default.
. . . I’m going to rule, as a matter of law, that [the Landlords are] not entitled to attorney’s fees for that initial action which [the Tenants] won . . . If there [was] a judicial determination at an initial proceeding that [the Tenants were] not in default, then [the Landlords] would not be entitled to attorney’s fees under the contract.
Id. at 62-64.
The court then prohibited the Landlords from admitting Exhibit 4 into
evidence, because it represented attorney’s fees and costs from the
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magisterial-district-court case in 21-0303. The total amount that the
Landlords claimed in Exhibit 4 was $440. The court instructed the jury not to
consider Exhibit 4 and not to award the $440 billed therein. See id. at 86.
However, there was no recognition that Exhibit 15 contained attorney’s
fees from case 21-0303. As mentioned, Exhibit 15 included several items that
were on Exhibit 4, and which the trial court ruled inadmissible.
In light of the trial court’s ruling that Exhibit 4 was inadmissible, the
Landlords lowered their damage request by $440, and requested an award of
$10,436.17 at their closing argument. See id. at 82. That amount is almost
identical to the sum of all the items in Exhibit 15, plus the Landlords’ utility
and service bills, minus $440 from Exhibit 4 – specifically, $10,463.25.
The jury returned a verdict in favor of the Landlords. It awarded them
precisely the amount they requested: $10,463.17. Thus, the verdict included
attorney’s fees and costs from case 21-0303, which the trial court intended to
exclude from the award, as a matter of law.
The Tenants filed post-trial motions, including a renewed claim that the
trial court lacked appellate jurisdiction over case 21-0303. The trial court
denied relief, and this timely appeal followed.
III. Analysis
The Tenants raise three appellate issues as follows:
1. Did [the Landlords’] admission that they attempted to modify the lease, but not in writing, rendered their hands unclean, and should it have resulted in denial of their claims?
- 11 - J-S32018-25 2. Did the trial court err in denying [the Tenants] permission to explore the issue of precisely what attorney’s fees were warranted . . . ?
3. Was the award of counsel fees improper, excessive, and confiscatory . . . ?
Tenants’ Brief at 4. Before discussing those issues, however, we must decide
whether the trial court had appellate jurisdiction over case number 21-0303.
A. Trial Court’s Appellate Jurisdiction
While the Tenants do not challenge the trial court’s appellate jurisdiction
over case 21-0303 on appeal, they moved to strike the Landlords’ notice of
appeal as untimely below. Moreover, they raised the issue in their post-trial
motions and Rule 1925(b) statement.3 And, even if they had not taken those
3 At post-trial motions, the court declined to reconsider the jurisdictional issue
based on the court’s belief that the coordinate-jurisdiction rule prohibited it from reviewing and reversing President Judge Hudock’s ruling on the petition for nunc pro tunc relief. See Trial Court Opinion, 2/19/25, at 2. This belief was incorrect.
Historically, post-trial motions were made to the Court of Common Pleas en banc, a higher jurisdiction than any single judge of that court. Beginning with King Edward I’s Statute of 1285 on the structure of common-law courts, parties were granted the right to try jury trials before one judge of the Court of Common Pleas, in the county where the cause of action arose. See Riddell, “New Trial at the Common Law,” Yale Law Journal at 50, available at https://openyls.law.yale.edu/server/api/core/bitstreams/b2562e9f-be90- 427e-b37d-131220c913d6/content (last visited 10/22/25). This innovation of civil procedure “relieved juries from the trouble and expense of travelling up to Westminster or elsewhere out of their own county.” Id. These Courts of Nisi Prius (Latin, meaning “not unless first,” in other words, “courts of original jurisdiction”) were the forerunners of today’s trial courts. See id. at 51.
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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steps below, we would still “raise the issue sua sponte, because it affects the
jurisdiction of the [trial] court.” Brickman Group, Ltd. v. CGU Ins. Co., 829
A.2d 1160, 1163 (Pa. Super. 2003). “[T]he appealability of an order goes to
the jurisdiction of the appellate court and may be raised sua sponte.” Murphy
v. Brong, 468 A.2d 509, 510 (Pa. Super. 1983).
“Because jurisdiction is a pure question of law, our standard of review
is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.” Strasburg Scooters, LLC
v. Strasburg Rail Rd., Inc., 210 A.3d 1064, 1068 (Pa. Super. 2019). As we
explain below, the judgment of the magisterial district court became final on
Following a jury trial, the Statute of 1285 directed that the record and verdict “shall be returned into the Bench,” i.e., the Court of Common Pleas en banc, at Westminster, “and there shall judgment be given and there they shall be enrolled.” Id. at 50. Claims of error “could not be made to the Nisi Prius judge but [had to] be made to the court” en banc after the record returned to Westminster. Id. at 53. This established the practice of filing post-trial motions to correct prior errors before the Court of Common Pleas en banc. An argument before the court of common pleas en banc is still permitted under Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 227.2, but, typically, one judge hears and decides the post-trial motions. Even so, that single judge sits in the higher jurisdiction of the court of common pleas en banc. Hence, a single, post-trial- motions judge may review and reverse prior errors of a trial judge in the same case.
As the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania has held, “the post-trial motion process is distinct procedurally” from prior stages of the case, and “the considerations of the judge are different at each procedural stage (rendering a verdict at the conclusion of trial versus correcting mistakes made during the earlier trial process) . . . .” Riccio v. American Republic Ins. Co., 705 A.2d 422, 425–26 (Pa. 1997). Therefore, “the coordinate-jurisdiction rule does not apply to bar a substituted judge hearing post-trial motions from correcting a mistake made by [a prior] judge . . . .” Id.
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June 16, 2021 (30 days after the entry of judgment in that court). Thus, it
was no longer appealable on June 17, 2021.
Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1002(A) governs time and method
of appeals from magisterial district courts. According to the Rule, “A party
aggrieved by a judgment for money, or a judgment affecting the delivery of
possession of real property arising out of a nonresidential lease, may appeal
the judgment within 30 days after the date of the entry of the judgment by
filing with the prothonotary . . . a notice of appeal on a form . . . prescribed
by the State Court Administrator together with a copy of the notice of
judgment issued by the magisterial district judge.” Pa.R.C.P. M.D.J. 1002(A)
(some capitalization omitted). Critically, “The prothonotary shall not accept
an appeal from an aggrieved party that is presented for filing more than 30
days after the date of entry of the judgment without leave of court and upon
good cause shown.” Id. (emphasis added).
Rule 1002 is not merely a polite suggestion from the Supreme Court of
Pennsylvania. The Rule coincides with and effectuates the will of the General
Assembly regarding appellate jurisdiction of all courts in this Commonwealth.
The Constitution of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania expressly grants
the legislature exclusive power to set the jurisdiction of our courts. The
constitution dictates that courts of common pleas “hav[e] unlimited original
jurisdiction in all cases except as may otherwise be provided by law.” Pa.
Const. art. V § 5(b) (emphasis added). The legislature has provided by law
that “an appeal from a tribunal or other government unit to a court or from a
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court to an appellate court must be commenced within 30 days after the entry
of the order from which the appeal is taken . . . .” 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5571(b).
Because the magisterial district court entered its judgment in case 21-
0303 on May 17, 2021, the 30-day period for appealing that judgment to the
trial court expired on June 16, 2021. The Landlords’ notice of appeal, filed on
June 17, 2021 with the Prothonotary of Union County, was therefore facially
untimely. Hence, under Pa.R.C.P. M.D.J. 1002(A), the prothonotary should
not have accepted the notice of appeal for filing.
The Landlords do not dispute that their notice of appeal was untimely,
but they argued below that the untimeliness was excusable. The only grounds
that the Landlords relied upon was their attorney’s hospitalization during the
30-day appellate period. This is an insufficient basis for allowing an untimely
appeal to proceed, as a matter of law.
We have held that hardship alone is an insufficient ground to permit a
party to file an appeal beyond the 30-day deadline of Rule 1002(A). See
Amicone v. Rok, 839 A.2d 1109, 1113 (Pa. Super. 2003); Goldberg v.
Goldberg, 461 A.2d 1307, 1308-09 (Pa. Super. 1983). Rather, in a civil case,
such as this, a court may allow such an appeal only if the delay in filing is
caused by extraordinary circumstances involving fraud or a breakdown in the
court’s operation. See Amicone, 839 A.2d at 1113; Goldberg, 461 A.2d at
1309.
Here, the Landlords do not allege any fraud or a breakdown in court
operations. They also do not contend that they received the judgment of the
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magisterial district court in an untimely fashion. Nor do they assert that they
were misled concerning the requirements or deadline for filing the appeal. To
the contrary, the magisterial-district-court judgment correctly advised the
Landlords that “any party aggrieved by a judgment . . . may appeal within 30
days after the entry of judgment by filing a notice of appeal with the
Prothonotary/Clerk of the Court of Common Pleas, Civil Division.” Magisterial
District Court Judgment, 5/17/21, at 1.
Further, we do not find a non-negligent reason to excuse the Landlords’
untimely appeal to the trial court. In Bass v. Commonwealth, 401 A.2d
1133 (Pa. 1979), a minority-majority of the Supreme Court granted a petition
to appeal nunc pro tunc. There, an appellant’s attorney authored a notice of
appeal from Commonwealth Court to the Supreme Court and gave it to his
secretary for filing. However, the secretary fell ill and did not return to the
office until after the appellate period expired. Plaintiff filed a petition to
appeal nunc pro tunc with the Supreme Court, and three out of five Justices
voted to grant relief. Id. at 1134. In doing so, Bass held that parties should
not suffer the loss of their appellate rights, due to the non-negligent actions
of their attorneys.
Here, unlike the secretary in Bass, the Landlords’ attorney was not
hospitalized until after the appellate period expired. Instead, he left the
hospital on June 16, 2021, the last day on which to file the appeal, and he
directed his staff to do so. However, the attorney’s staff then failed to file
until the following day.
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Critically, the Landlords offer no reason for why the attorney’s staff
failed to file the notice of appeal on June 16, 2021. Had they been exercising
due and reasonable care, the Landlords’ attorney and staff would have acted
immediately to file the notice of appeal by close of business on June 16, 2021.
They did not.
Hence, we hold that the non-negligent exception to appellate deadlines,
as established in Bass for granting nunc pro tunc relief, does not apply. See
e.g. Carr v. First Commonwealth Bank, 335 A.3d 1199, 1201 (Pa. Super.
2025), appeal granted, 97 WAL 2025, 2025 WL 2649782 (Pa. 2025) (holding
that non-negligent-reason exception did not apply where an attorney’s family
member committed suicide during the appellate period from arbitration and
explaining that this Court has been reluctant to extend the holding of Bass).
See also Robinson v. Hutchinson, 831 MDA 2023, 2024 WL 1479455 (Pa.
Super. 2024) (non-precedential) (reaching the same result with respect to an
untimely appeal from the magisterial district court).
It is foreseeable that an attorney might suffer a medical emergency and
require hospitalization, but the timing of such emergencies is not. Thus,
attorneys are expected to have contingency plans in place to protect clients
from deadlines like here, where situations arise that are beyond the attorney’s
control. There is no evidence that the Landlords’ attorney had such a
contingency plan in place or that the plan fell through for a reason beyond
counsel’s control. Thus, the attorney’s failure to make contingency plans for
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a medical emergency, such as the one he suffered in June of 2021, is not a
valid reason to grant nunc pro tunc relief.
Additionally, counsel here further neglected to petition to appeal from
the magisterial district court nunc pro tunc until August 6, 2021 – 81 days
after the entry of final judgment in the magisterial district court and 51 days
after the notice of appeal was due. Hence, even if the Landlords had a
non-negligent reason for not filing their notice of appeal by June 16, 2021,
they do not explain the lengthy delay in seeking nunc pro tunc relief. We can
only conclude either counsel did not care or he did not know that the Rules of
Procedure required him to file a petition for permission to appeal nunc pro
tunc as soon as possible. Either way, even if we could excuse the Landlords’
untimeliness under the Bass exception in early June 2021, they forfeited the
exception by not petitioning for nunc pro tunc relief until August 6, 2021.
Simply put, the Landlords’ appeal to the trial court was untimely. They
proved no fraud, breakdown in court operations, or non-negligent reason for
their untimely appeal. Thus, the trial court erroneously granted the Landlords’
petition to appeal nunc pro tunc and erroneously denied the Tenants’ motion
to strike the notice of appeal in case 21-0303.
Because the trial court lacked appellate jurisdiction over case 21-0303,
we must vacate the judgment entered at that docket as a legal nullity and
reinstate the judgment of the magisterial district court. In light of our decision
that the Landlords’ appeal from the magisterial district court must be quashed,
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the Landlords are not the prevailing party in any of the activity that occurred
at docket number 21-0303 prior to the consolidation of the two lawsuits.
Under the lease, the Landlords could only recover attorney’s fees and
court costs in “an action to recover . . . any and all consequential damages
caused by” the Tenants’ breach. Landlords’ Ex. 1 at 5, ¶9. As Judge Piecuch
correctly opined during the jury trial, because the Landlords did not prevail
before the magisterial district court in 21-0303, they failed to prove a breach
by the Tenants in that case. Hence, the Landlords are not entitled to any
attorney’s fees from their first lawsuit.
Critically, a judgment of any court that lacked jurisdiction “is null and
void and is subject to attack by the parties in the same court or may be
collaterally attacked at any time.” Barnes v. McKellar, 644 A.2d 770, 773
(Pa. Super. 1994). We must therefore review the verdict and judgment, as
entered at 22-0256, to ensure that it will not be susceptible to collateral attack
due to the jury’s accidental inclusion of damages from case 21-0303.
As our review of the above facts reveals, several of the billable hours in
Landlords’ Exhibit 15 are for services rendered solely in the Landlords’
untimely appeal, as well as at the magisterial district court. Those legal
services and costs arising from the case at 21-0303 totaled $2,396.25. See
Landlords’ Ex. 4 and 15. But for the jurisdictional error of the trial court in
granting nunc pro tunc relief to the Landlords, the jury would have never
heard, seen, or considered any of those amounts. However, the trial court
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sent the full Exhibit 15 into the jury deliberations, and that exhibit formed the
basis for most of the verdict.
While the trial court rightly attempted to keep the legal fees that the
Landlords incurred at the magisterial district court from the jury, it is clear
that the jury awarded attorney’s fees and costs from that action. The
Landlords reincorporated the legal fees from the magisterial district court in
Exhibit 15, and the jury awarded the exact number of damages that the
Landlords requested in their closing argument. Thus, the jurisdictional error
in 21-0303 obviously influenced the verdict and judgment entered at 22-0256.
We must remedy that taint by imposing remittitur. Otherwise, the judgment
entered at 22-0256 will be open to collateral attack due to the lack of trial-
court jurisdiction in 21-0303. See Barnes, supra.
The only damages that the trial court and the jury had jurisdiction over
were those presented in case 22-0256, along with the legal fees that the
Landlords incurred in seeking those damages. The damages included all of
the utility and service bills, totaling $2,947. See Landlords’ Ex. 6, 7, 9, 10,
11, 13, and 14. Also, the Landlords submitted evidence that they owed their
attorney $6,000 for his work in the second lawsuit. See Landlords’ Ex. 15.
Given our determination that the trial court lacked appellate jurisdiction
over case 21-0303, the Landlords are only entitled to $8,947 in damages in
case 22-0256, as a matter of law. Therefore, we must reduce the verdict in
favor of the Landlords to that amount.
B. Doctrine of Unclean Hands
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Turning to the Tenants’ first appellate issue, they contend the Landlords
may not bring this action due to the equitable doctrine of unclean hands. They
believe that, because the Landlords gave them a six-month-grace period to
pay the $2,000 security deposit, rather than immediately commence eviction
proceedings, the Landlords showed a “willingness to operate outside the lease
agreement . . . when it suited their purposes.” Tenants’ Brief at 8. We are
told that the Landlords “lost the right to complain about supposed violations
of the agreement when they countenanced and indulged in the same.” Id. at
8-9.
The trial court summarily dismissed this claim, because, as the Tenants
admit, under the doctrine of unclean hands, a “court may deprive a party of
equitable relief.” Id. at 8 (quoting Terraciano v. Commonwealth,
Department of Transportation, 753 A.2d 233, 237 (Pa. 2000) (emphasis
added). As the trial court explained in its 1925(a) Opinion, “The concept of
requiring ‘clean hands’ applies when a party is seeking equitable relief (e.g.,
injunctive relief, specific performance). Here, the [Landlords] were seeking
legal remedies (money damages), not equitable relief.” Trial Court Opinion,
2/19/25, at 2-3.
We agree. A cause of action for breach of contract first emerged from
the law of torts in the 16th century as the writ of assumpsit. See William L.
Prosser, The Borderland of Tort and Contract, SELECTED TOPICS ON THE LAW OF
TORTS at 384 (1953). A writ of assumpsit for breach of contract has always
commenced an action at law, not a bill of equity. See id. Plaintiffs could
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thereafter “pursue a breach of contract action in a civil suit at law or an
equitable action seeking specific performance of the contract.” Caccavo v.
Caccavo, 565 A.2d 1199, 1201 (Pa. Super. 1989).
The Landlords sought monetary damages for the Tenants’ breaches of
the contract. Therefore, the trial court correctly ruled that this was an action
at law to which the equitable doctrine of unclean hands did not apply.
We dismiss the Tenants’ first appellate issue as meritless.
C. Apportionment of Attorney’s Fees
Next, the Tenants assert that the trial court erroneously denied them an
opportunity “to explore the issue of precisely what attorney’s fees were
warranted, [because] . . . there were several instances where [the Landlords]
filed against [the Tenants], but were rebuffed.” Tenants’ Brief at 9. They
claim that, “because the defense was not permitted to delve into specifics of
legal bills, [the Tenants] are now financially responsible for instances where
they were in the right and [the Landlords] were in the wrong.” Id. at 9-10.
The Landlords reply that no such error occurred, because the Tenants
were never denied the opportunity to explore the specifics of attorney’s fees
in Exhibit 15. In their view, the Tenants never attempted to litigate individual
charges, except for the sidebar on the magisterial-district-court proceeding in
21-0303. The Landlords claim that that discussion prompted the trial court to
exclude any evidence of their attorney’s fees from the magisterial district court
by refusing to admit Exhibit 4.
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As we explained, the trial court’s exclusion of Exhibit 4, while correct,
did not prevent all of the extra-jurisdictional evidence from reaching the jury.
Regardless, our decision to reduce the verdict by excluding pre-consolidation
attorney’s fees in Section III(A), supra, has rendered any error harmless.
Thus, we dismiss the Tenants’ second issue as moot.
D. Award of Attorney’s Fees & Costs
Lastly, the Tenants ask whether the jury’s award of attorney’s fees was
“improper, excessive, and confiscatory,” such that they must “be severely
diminished or eliminated?” Id. at 10. Because the Tenants have neglected
to present a legal argument in support of this issue, they have waived it.
“The issue of waiver presents a question of law, and, as such, our
standard of review is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.” Trigg v.
Children’s Hospital of Pittsburgh of UPMC, 229 A.3d 260, 269 (Pa. 2020).
The Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure require appellants to
present a cogent, complete argument for each issue raised in this Court. “The
argument shall be divided into as many parts as there are questions to be
argued; and shall have at the head of each part . . . the particular point treated
therein, followed by such discussion and citation of authorities as are
deemed pertinent.” Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a) (emphasis added). In other words,
legal analysis (applying the rules to the facts) is required to craft a reviewable
argument. It is insufficient to issue spot, quote a rule or rules, and simply
announce one’s conclusion.
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Such an approach leaves this Court in the position of having to guess at
what legal theories might support the claim of error. Moreover, it requires us
to act as appellate counsel and adjudicator, which is inappropriate in any issue
where this Court may not raise and decide the question sua sponte. Thus,
“[w]hen an appellant’s argument is underdeveloped, we may not supply it
with a better one.” Commonwealth v. Deible, 300 A.3d 1025, 1035 (Pa.
Super. 2023).
Here, the Tenants make no appellate argument whatsoever. They afford
their final issue one page of briefing. See Tenants’ Brief at 11. That page is
a string of quotations from In re Estate of LaRocca, 246 A.2d 337 (Pa.
1968), and ends in a block quote listing eleven factors that trial courts are to
consider when awarding attorney’s fees.
The Tenants offer no analysis of those factors, much less explain how
they relate to the jury’s finding of fact that the evidence of the Landlords’ legal
bills was credible. Instead, the Tenants simply provide us with one, conclusory
sentence: “Respectfully, the [Tenants] aver that under such an analysis, a
judgment of over $10,000 when over 70% of same in counsel fees results in
an injustice.” Tenants’ Brief at 12. Maybe so, but in the absence of any legal
analysis by the Tenants, we’ll never know.
Final issue dismissed as waived.
VI. Conclusion
In sum, the General Assembly and Rules of Procedure mandate that
appellants have 30 days to appeal from a magisterial district court to a trial
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court. Trial courts may only disregard the 30-day mandate to cure fraud, a
breakdown in the court system, or a non-negligent circumstance. There is no
proof that any of those extraordinary circumstances occurred in this matter.
Therefore, we must vacate the trial-court judgment entered at 21-0303 as a
legal nullity, reinstate the final judgment of the magisterial district court, and
modify the trial-court judgment entered at 22-0256 to comport with the
jurisdictional restraints that the legislature has placed upon courts of common
pleas.
Order denying post-trial relief affirmed to the extent it denies relief on
the issues that the Tenants raised in this appeal. Order denying post-trial
relief reversed to the extent it denies relief on the issue of whether the trial
court had jurisdiction over the appeal docketed at 21-0303. Order denying
motion to strike appeal reversed; order granting petition to appeal nunc pro
tunc reversed. Appeal to the trial court docketed at 21-0303 quashed.
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Judgment at docket 21-0303 vacated. Judgment at docket number MJ-
17301-LT-0000004-2021 reinstated. Judgment at docket number 22-0256
modified to $8,947; that judgment affirmed as modified.
PJ Lazarus joins this Opinion. PJE Stevens files a Concurring Opinion.
Judgment Entered.
Benjamin D. Kohler, Esq. Prothonotary
Date: 01/20/2026
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