Florig v. Estate of O'Hara

912 A.2d 318, 2006 Pa. Super. 335, 2006 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4131
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 27, 2006
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 912 A.2d 318 (Florig v. Estate of O'Hara) 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
Florig v. Estate of O'Hara, 912 A.2d 318, 2006 Pa. Super. 335, 2006 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4131 (Pa. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION BY

McEWEN, P.J.E.:

¶ 1 Appellants, Robert and John Florig, appeal from the order of the trial court denying their petition to open the judgment of non pros that had been entered against them. We reverse in part and affirm in part.

¶ 2 The litigation that has culminated in this appeal commenced on December 18, 1996, when appellants, who were owners of a parcel of property located in Montgomery County, filed a complaint in trespass against the following parties: the estate of William J. O’Hara, Sr., Betty O’Hara, Sanitary Landfill, Inc., William J. O’Hara, Inc., O’Hara Sanitation Company, Inc., R.T. Environmental, Inc. (R.T. Environmental), and C.S. Garber & Son, Inc. (Gar-ber). Appellants alleged in that complaint that the O’Haras, through companies owned by them, had conducted a landfill operation that had, surreptitiously and without legal permission, utilized a significant portion of appellants’ land for part of their landfill operation, and, as a consequence, had contaminated that portion of their land making it unusable for development. Appellants further alleged that R.T. Environmental and Garber had been engaged by the O’Haras to provide professional services related to the closing of the landfill operation, and, in fulfillment of their duties, had trespassed and placed monitoring equipment on appellants’ land.

¶ 8 In January and February of 1997, Betty O’Hara, R.T. Environmental, and Garber filed answers with new matter, and appellants filed a petition to amend the caption of their complaint to reflect that Betty O’Hara was the personal representative of the estate of William J. O’Hara, Sr. Thereafter, on March 7, 1997, a statement of death was filed with the trial court indicating that Betty O’Hara had died on January 28, 1997, and that William J. O’Hara, Jr., had been appointed as the executor of her estate, and had, as well, been appointed as personal representative of the estate of William J. O’Hara, Sr. In that dual capacity William J. O’Hara, Jr., on March 31, 1997, filed an answer with new matter on behalf of both the estate of William J. O’Hara, Sr., and the estate of Betty O’Hara.

¶4 On April 11, 1997, the trial court entered an order, upon a petition filed by appellants, consolidating a collateral action that had been filed by appellants against Ronald R. Hartman, doing business as International Exploration, and related companies. Then, on May 20, 1997, the trial court, without opinion, entered an order denying appellants’ request to amend the caption of their original complaint to reflect that Betty O’Hara was the personal representative of the estate of William O’Hara, Sr.

¶ 5 In the ensuing six and one-half years, the only docket activity was a series of notices filed by various attorneys for the *321 respective parties entering or withdrawing their respective appearances. Due to the lack of apparent docket activity, the trial court on or about October 24, 2003, acting pursuant to Pa.R.Civ.P. 230.2, issued a “notice of proposed termination of court case” to the parties. Almost, immediately, on October 28, 2003, appellants filed a statement of intention to proceed on their complaint, and no action was taken by the prothonotary. 1 Thereafter, during the next six months, the docket activity consisted solely of the filing of a withdrawal of appearance by one attorney and an entry of appearance by a new attorney for the estate of Betty O’Hara.

¶ 6 On April 6, 2004, the estate of Betty O’Hara filed a motion for entry of a judgment of non pros in which it alleged, 2 inter alia, that “no significant activity of any kind was undertaken by the plaintiffs]” in this case, and that it had “been prejudiced in its ability to present any sufficient [sic] factual information at the time of trial due to the fact that Mrs. O’Hara has died.” Motion for Non Pros, ¶¶ 5, 17. Noticeably absent from this petition was any mention of the extensive history of settlement negotiations, spanning the period from 1997 through 2003, that had taken place between the parties, and the fact that, at one point, the estate had offered to settle this dispute by paying to appellants an amount of more than three-quarters of a million dollars in exchange for the land at issue.

¶ 7 Defendant Garber and defendant R.T. Environmental joined in this motion of the estate of Betty O’Hara for judgment of non pros. Garber merely adopted the allegations contained in the original motion of the Estate of Betty O’Hara, 3 while R.T. Environmental raised, as a claim of prejudice, the fact that appellants had not provided discovery information over the six years that had transpired between their last request for discovery and the motion for judgment of non pros.

¶ 8 Appellants, in their response to the motion for judgment of non pros filed by the estate of Betty O’Hara averred, inter alia, that:

Plaintiffs [appellants] have actively and continuously engaged in extensive settlement negotiations with defendants, including, without limitation: (a) meetings, discussions, surveys, correspondence and telephone calls related to a land-swap agreement proposed by the O’Hara defendants in 1997-98; (b) appraisals, correspondence, phone calls, and meetings related to the proposed sale of the plaintiffs’ property to the O’Hara defendants, including negotiating the terms and revisions to the draft stipulation and agreement of sale, and undertaking separate negotiations with the remaining defendants, from 1998-2001; (c) meetings, correspondence, emails, and phone calls related to the three alternate settlement proposals before the parties, from 2001-2003; and (d) phone calls, a luncheon meeting between plaintiff Robert Florig and defendant William O’Hara, Jr., e-mails, and correspondence in 2003 related to new negotiations based on the land-swap first proposed in 1998.
[I]n 2001, plaintiffs granted the O’Hara defendants and their counsel entry onto *322 the Florigs’ land in response to their request for entry upon designated land for inspection [and] plaintiffs served document discovery on all defendants in this case in January 2004, after settlement negotiations with the O’Hara defendants terminated.
Any delays in prosecuting this case had no effect on defendant’s ability to present Mr. O’Hara’s testimony because he was never an available witness in the action [since he had died seven years before the complaint was filed]. Mrs. O’Hara died in January, 1997, one week after she answered the complaint. Delay that occurred after the death of Mrs. O’Hara had no effect on defendant’s ability to present her testimony, because she was no longer an available witness prior to any such delay.

Plaintiffs’ Reply to Defendant’s Motion for Non Pros, ¶¶ 5, 6, 16. Appellants also filed a response to the joinder motion filed by R.T. Environmental, but did not file a separate response to the joinder motion filed by Garber.

¶ 9 While neither an evidentiary hearing nor discovery proceedings followed the filing of the motion for entry of judgment of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
912 A.2d 318, 2006 Pa. Super. 335, 2006 Pa. Super. LEXIS 4131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/florig-v-estate-of-ohara-pasuperct-2006.