Gorzkowski, J. v. Modern Gas Sales, Inc.

CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedNovember 6, 2015
Docket163 MDA 2015
StatusUnpublished

This text of Gorzkowski, J. v. Modern Gas Sales, Inc. (Gorzkowski, J. v. Modern Gas Sales, Inc.) 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
Gorzkowski, J. v. Modern Gas Sales, Inc., (Pa. Ct. App. 2015).

Opinion

J. A26005/15

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

JOSEPH GORZKOWSKI, : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF : PENNSYLVANIA Appellant : : v. : No. 163 MDA 2015 : MODERN GAS SALES, INC. :

Appeal from the Order Entered December 18, 2014, in the Court of Common Pleas of Luzerne County Civil Division at No. 14465 of 2013

BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., WECHT AND PLATT,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED NOVEMBER 06, 2015

Joseph Gorzkowski (“Gorzkowski”) appeals from the order entered

December 18, 2014, sustaining defendant/appellee, Modern Gas Sales,

Inc.’s (“Modern Gas”) preliminary objection in the nature of a demurrer and

dismissing Gorzkowski’s complaint in declaratory judgment. After careful

review, we affirm.

In a prior decision of this court, Linda Herman v. Berwick Gas

Sales, Inc. and Joseph Gorzkowski, 984 A.2d 1027 (Pa.Super. 2009),

appeal denied, 991 A.2d 313 (Pa. 2010), we summarized the history of

this matter as follows:

Appellant/plaintiff below [Linda Herman (“Herman”)] and Appellee Joseph Gorzkowski/defendant[Footnote 1] below are siblings[Footnote 2] who since the late 1970’s were involved with their father in three family businesses

* Retired Senior Judge assigned to the Superior Court. J. A26005/15

selling propane gas and propane related products. In 1986, after the parties’ mother instituted divorce proceedings against their father, he, [Herman], and [Gorzkowski] agreed to issue backdated stock certificates in all three businesses to decrease the father’s apparent ownership interest, thus protecting it from exposure to economic claims related to the divorce. Pursuant to this objective, the certificates in Appellee Berwick, the only one of the businesses involved in this appeal, were allocated as 45 shares to [Gorzkowski], 30 to [Herman], and 25 to the father. The parties’ parents eventually reconciled, and an oral agreement to return to the father or destroy all the certificates was never executed even when, in the early 1990’s demand was made to the parties by their father.[Footnote 3] Their refusal was met by a complaint alleging a conspiracy to defraud filed against the parties and their father by the parties’ mother and another sibling who had been involved in the businesses, and who alleged that they were being deprived of their interests.

[Footnote 1] The singular is used to indicate both Appellees.

[Footnote 2] There are three other siblings only one of whom is involved in this matter, and that tangentially.

[Footnote 3] [Gorzkowski] disputed the existence of any such agreement.

In the settlement of that litigation, eventually reached in March of 1998, the parties to the instant matter were given full ownership of Appellee Berwick as well as identical cash payments of $546,600. From that point until 2003, the parties ran the business together, with [Gorzkowski] serving as president of the company and [Herman] as vice president, secretary, and treasurer, each receiving the same weekly salary and benefit package. In 1999 the parties elected to alter the status of their company from a “C” corporation to an “S” corporation. Both the application for “S” status

-2- J. A26005/15

and the company tax returns from 1998 to 2001 describe them as 50% shareholders.

In early 2003, however, [Herman] and her husband became involved in divorce proceedings, in the course of which [Herman]’s husband requested production of the company’s financial records. Operating on the notion that using the stock certificates to indicate [Herman] had only a 30% interest would alleviate the necessity for production of the requested documents, [Gorzkowski] instructed her to do so, and thereafter began relying on the certificates as support for his claim to be a 45% shareholder. The professional relationship between the parties, who had worked together amicably for over 25 years, began to deteriorate at about this time, to the extent that in May of 2003, [Gorzkowski] in his capacity as president of the company terminated [Herman]’s employment and that of her daughter who also worked at Appellee Berwick.

In March of 2003, [Herman] instituted the instant declaratory judgment action against [Gorzkowski] seeking a determination that she is a 50% shareholder, and, at the same time, filed a petition for injunctive relief from [Gorzkowski]’s exclusion of her from the company. After a hearing on the latter, [Gorzkowski] appealed the trial court’s entry of a preliminary injunction against him, and its finding that [Herman] had established the likelihood that she owned 50% of Berwick. This Court affirmed. Herman v. Berwick Gas Sales, Inc. and Joseph Gorzkowski, Nos. 927, 1061, 1062 MDA 2003, unpublished memorandum (Pa.Super. filed October 19, 2004).

In November of 2005, [Gorzkowski] moved for summary judgment in the declaratory judgment action on grounds that the 1998 settlement and accompanying release which ended the familial litigation constituted unassailable res judicata, establishing [Herman]’s interest as 30% of Appellee Berwick per the stock certificates issued

-3- J. A26005/15

during the divorce litigation of the parties’ parents in 1986. After a hearing, the trial court agreed, and this appeal followed.

Herman v. Berwick Gas Sales, et al., No. 1220 MDA 2008, unpublished

memorandum at 1-4 (Pa.Super. filed July 15, 2009). On appeal, this court

found the backdated stock certificates to be invalid, and the effects of the

1998 settlement documents on the parties’ ownership interests in Berwick to

be nugatory. Id. at 7. We reversed the order of summary judgment and

remanded for further proceedings.

On December 23, 2013, Gorzkowski brought the instant declaratory

judgment action, seeking a determination that if the 1998 settlement

agreement is invalidated, then he continues as an owner of 40 shares of

Modern Gas. Gorzkowski alleges that if the stock certificates were invalid at

the time of prior settlement, then neither he nor Herman ever relinquished

their ownership interests in Modern Gas. Gorzkowski filed an amended

complaint on February 21, 2014, and Modern Gas filed preliminary

objections to the amended complaint on March 13, 2014. On December 18,

2014, the trial court sustained Modern Gas’s preliminary objection in the

nature of a demurrer and dismissed the complaint. A timely notice of appeal

was filed on January 16, 2015. Gorzkowski complied with

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

Gorzkowski has raised the following issue for this court’s review:

Did the court err in granting demurrer against declaratory judgment action based on the conclusion

-4- J. A26005/15

that the action was based on events that may never occur?

Gorzkowski’s brief at 4.

Our scope of review is plenary when reviewing a trial court’s order sustaining preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer. See Glassmere Fuel Serv., Inc. v. Clear, 900 A.2d 398, 401 (Pa.Super. 2006). “In order to determine whether the trial court properly sustained Appellee’s preliminary objections, this court must consider as true all of the well-pleaded material facts set forth in the complaint and all reasonable inferences that may be drawn from those facts.” Id. at 402. In conducting appellate review, preliminary objections may be sustained by the trial court only if the case is free and clear of doubt. See Knight v. Northwest Sav.

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