D.R. Malloy & E.C. Malloy v. N.A. Feigenbaum

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 9, 2024
Docket1027 C.D. 2022
StatusUnpublished

This text of D.R. Malloy & E.C. Malloy v. N.A. Feigenbaum (D.R. Malloy & E.C. Malloy v. N.A. Feigenbaum) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D.R. Malloy & E.C. Malloy v. N.A. Feigenbaum, (Pa. Ct. App. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Deborah R. Malloy and Edward C. : Malloy, : Appellants : : v. : No. 1027 C.D. 2022 : Nicole Aileen Feigenbaum, Barry C. : Dozor, and Geoffrey Moulton : Submitted: February 6, 2024

OPINION NOT REPORTED

MEMORANDUM OPINION PER CURIAM FILED: April 9, 2024

In this appeal, Appellants Deborah R. Malloy and Edward C. Malloy (collectively Appellants) challenge the Court of Common Pleas of Delaware County’s (Common Pleas) December 28, 2021 order, through which Common Pleas sustained Appellees Nicole Aileen Feigenbaum’s, Barry C. Dozor’s, and Geoffrey Moulton’s (collectively Appellees)1 preliminary objections to Appellants’ “Amended (Sixth) Complaint” (Sixth Amended Complaint) and dismissed that action with prejudice. Upon review, we affirm.

I. Background On April 16, 2021, Appellants filed an abuse of process action against Appellees in Common Pleas, to which Appellees responded by filing preliminary objections. Thereafter, the parties engaged in a repetitious dance of sorts, whereby Appellants would file a new, slightly revised version of their complaint, thereby rendering moot Appellees’ existing preliminary objections, only to have Appellees respond by submitting a new round of preliminary objections. Eventually,

1 As will be discussed infra, each appellee is, or was, employed by our Commonwealth’s judiciary. Appellants filed their Sixth Amended Complaint, which is the subject of this appeal, on November 5, 2021. Therein, Appellants confusingly allege that Appellees have abused the legal process by repeatedly challenging several other lawsuits filed by Appellants in Common Pleas via preliminary objections;2 Appellants characterize the arguments put forth by Appellees in those preliminary objections as being entirely spurious and improper. R.R. at 4a-36a. On November 24, 2021, Appellees responded to the Sixth Amended Complaint via preliminary objections. Specifically, Appellees argued that Appellants’ action should be dismissed for several reasons. First, Appellants’ abuse of process claims were barred by sovereign immunity. Id. at 64a-67a. Second, these claims were also barred by judicial privilege. Id. at 67a-68a. Third, Appellants’ claims against Dozor were barred by judicial immunity. Id. at 68a-71a. Fourth, Appellants had failed to state any legally viable claims for which relief could be granted. Id. at 71a-75a. Fifth, Appellants’ claims were barred by the doctrine of lis

2 Those underlying lawsuits revolve around Appellants’ belief that Dozor, a Common Pleas judge, has repeatedly failed to comply with the administrative case disposition reporting requirements imposed upon him by Pennsylvania Rule of Judicial Administration 703, as well as that Moulton, who was the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts’ (AOPC) Court Administrator until his retirement on September 30, 2023, was statutorily required to report such noncompliance to our Supreme Court and/or the Judicial Conduct Board (JCB). See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 4a-21a, 25a-32a; Pennsylvania Supreme Court Announces Upcoming Retirement of State Court Administrator Geoff Moulton, THE UNIFIED JUD. SYS. OF PA. (Apr. 25, 2023), https://www.pacourts.us/news-and-statistics/news/news-detail/1134/pennsylvania-supreme- court-announces-upcoming-retirement-of-state-court-administrator-geoff-moulton; Pa. R.J.A. 703 (judges in this Commonwealth are required to submit biannual reports to the AOPC’s Court Administrator, in which they must list all matters which have been assigned to them and have remained undecided for 90 or more days, while the Court Administrator must notify the JCB in the event a judge fails to file a timely report and, “where appropriate,” shall forward to the JCB any reports that list “one or more matters which have remained undecided for one year or more”). Feigenbaum is an attorney with the AOPC, who represented Dozor and Moulton in those lawsuits, and is Appellees’ attorney of record in this appeal. See R.R. at 21a-24a, 33a-36a; Appellees’ Br. at 33.

2 pendens, due to the fact that they had preexisting, pending cases, through which they were pursuing the same claims against Appellees as in this matter. Id. at 75a. Finally, Appellants had failed to state a legally viable conspiracy claim. Id. at 76a-77a. On December 28, 2021, Common Pleas sustained Appellees’ preliminary objections, dismissed Appellants’ Sixth Amended Complaint with prejudice, and precluded Appellants from filing a seventh amended complaint.3 Id. at 97a. Appellants appealed this ruling to our Court shortly thereafter. II. Discussion Appellants’ arguments are difficult to parse, as they are not coherently articulated in their brief, but we interpret them as falling into two categories. First, Common Pleas erred by concluding that Appellees were immune from Appellants’ abuse of process suit. Appellants’ Br. at 9-10, 13-15. Second, Common Pleas also erred when it determined that Appellants had failed to state a viable abuse of process claim against Appellees. Id. at 8-12. We need only address the second question in order to dispose of this appeal.4 “To prove a claim for abuse of process, the plaintiff must show that the defendant

3 On September 23, 2022, Common Pleas issued an opinion, in which it explained that it had sustained Appellees’ preliminary objections on the bases of demurrer and immunity. See R.R. at 111a-14a.

4 “Our standard of review in [an] appeal arising from an order sustaining preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer is de novo, and our scope of review is plenary.” Raynor v. D’Annunzio, 243 A.3d 41, 52 (Pa. 2020). A “demurrer is a preliminary objection to the legal sufficiency of a pleading and raises questions of law[.]” Raynor, 243 A.3d at 52. [A court can] sustain a demurrer only when the law undoubtedly precludes recovery; if doubt exists, [a court] should overrule the demurrer. Bilt-Rite Contractors, Inc. v. The Architectural Studio, 866 A.2d 270, 274 (Pa. 2005). “When ruling on a demurrer, a court must confine its analysis to the complaint.” (Footnote continued on next page…)

3 used a legal process against them primarily to accomplish a purpose for which the process was not designed.” Morley v. Farnese, 178 A.3d 910, 919 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2018). The common law tort of abuse of process involves the perversion of legal process after it has begun in order to achieve a result for which the process was not intended. Abuse of process has been described by the Supreme Court as the “use of legal process as a tactical weapon to coerce a desired result that is not the legitimate object of the process.” In order to state a cause of action for abuse of process it must be alleged that the defendant used a legal process to accomplish a purpose for which the process was not designed. The classic example is the initiation of a civil proceeding to coerce the payment of a claim completely unrelated to the cause of action sued upon. It is not enough that the defendant had bad or malicious intentions or that the defendant acted from spite or with an ulterior motive. Rather, there must be an act or threat not authorized by the process, or the process must be used for an illegitimate aim such as extortion, blackmail, or to coerce or compel the plaintiff to take some collateral action.

Orange Stones Co. v. City of Reading, 87 A.3d 1014, 1024-25 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014) (quoting Al Hamilton Contracting Co. v. Cowder, 644 A.2d 188, 191-92 (Pa. Super. 1994)).

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Bluebook (online)
D.R. Malloy & E.C. Malloy v. N.A. Feigenbaum, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dr-malloy-ec-malloy-v-na-feigenbaum-pacommwct-2024.