JAMES v. MCMANUS

CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedJune 27, 2024
Docket2:24-cv-02232
StatusUnknown

This text of JAMES v. MCMANUS (JAMES v. MCMANUS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
JAMES v. MCMANUS, (E.D. Pa. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE EASTERN DISTRICT OF PENNSYLVANIA

MOJIRADE JAMES : CIVIL ACTION : v. : NO. 24-2232 : GINETTE MCMANUS, BAXTER : CREDIT UNION, CITADEL CREDIT : UNION a/k/a CITADEL AGENCY LLC, : LINCOLN INVESTMENT a/k/a : LINCOLN INVESTMENT PLANNING, : LLC, TEACHERS INSURANCE AND : ANNUITY ASSOCIATION OF : AMERICAN – COLLEGE : RETIREMENT EQUITIES FUND, : WELLS FARGO BANK, N.A., : PRUDENTIAL FINANCIAL, INC :

MEMORANDUM

KEARNEY, J. June 27, 2024 Mojirade James won a judgment in Philadelphia state court against Ginette McManus. Ms. James then sued Ms. McManus before another state court (not the one defining her judgment) claiming Ms. McManus fraudulently transferred funds allegedly subject to her judgment to retirement and pension accounts managed by financial institutions to avoid paying her. She also alleged the financial institutions converted the money when it accepted Ms. McManus’s funds. Two of the financial institutions removed here. They pleaded complete preemption and we face significant questions of federal law arising under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA). Ms. James moved to remand. The financial institutions conceded complete preemption does not apply. They instead focus on our ability to exercise the sparingly-invoked “arising under” federal law basis for subject matter jurisdiction. They argue Ms. James’s state law execution claims require a court resolve Congress’s mandate in ERISA prohibiting the alienation of benefits under an employee benefit plan. We face a complex multi-layered issue of subject matter jurisdiction. The financial institutions do not meet their heavy burden as the removing parties of demonstrating our subject

matter jurisdiction reserved for a special and small category of cases “arising under” federal law. Ms. James’s state law claims do not require us to resolve significant federal issues creating “arising under” jurisdiction. We remand these issues, including the pending motions to dismiss, to the state court for analysis of Ms. James’s claim under defined Pennsylvania statutes. We find no basis to sanction the financial institutions for removing based on fairly presented arguments Ms. James’s claims arise under federal law. I. Background Ginette McManus sold a home to Mojirade James several years ago. Ms. James believed the purchased home contained undisclosed defects. She sued Ginette McManus in Philadelphia state court over four years ago for failing to disclose structural defects in real property she bought from Ms. McManus.1 Ms. James tried her claims to a Philadelphia County jury. The jury found in

favor of Ms. James on some claims, including under Pennsylvania’s Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law, and awarded Ms. James $43,300 in damages on March 16, 2023.2 Ms. James unsuccessfully attempted to increase the judgment amount. Ms. James then moved for treble damages, attorney’s fees and costs as allowed by Pennsylvania’s Unfair Trade Practices and Consumer Protection Law.3 The Honorable Angelo J. Foglietta denied treble damages on April 14, 2023 but awarded Ms. James $86,500 in attorney’s fees and costs and expert fees in the amount of $7,967.89.4 The total judgment in favor of Ms. James amounted to $137,767.89.5 Ms. James later recorded her judgment against Ms. McManus in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas.6 Ms. McManus’s counsel, Glenn A. Brown, moved to amend judgment after Ms. James’s counsel attempted to collect more than the judgment entered by Judge Foglietta.7 Judge Foglietta,

on March 21, 2024, granted Ms. McManus’s motion and clarified the total judgment in favor of Ms. James is $137,767.89, ordered Attorney Brown to amend the certificate of judgment filed in the Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, and ordered any writ of execution in the Philadelphia County Court of Common Pleas to reflect the correct amount of the judgment.8 Ms. James appealed Judge Foglietta’s Order to the Pennsylvania Superior Court.9 Judge Foglietta, “shocked by [Attorney Brown’s] unscrupulous conduct,” requested the Pennsylvania Superior Court either sanction counsel for “continuing to engage in this outrageous and unethical conduct” or remand the matter to him for a sanctions hearing.10 Attorney Brown seemingly ignores Judge Foglietta’s Order confirming an award of $137,767.89. Attorney Brown continues to represent in some filings in this Court Ms. McManus

“won” a judgment in the amount of $181,067.89, including in an amended Complaint Attorney Brown filed here bound by Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 11 knowing of Judge Foglietta’s judgment.11Attorney Brown lacks an objectively reasonable basis to continue to claim a Philadelphia County jury awarded his client a judgment in the amount of $181,067.89 when Judge Foglietta’s Orders clearly show otherwise and ordered him to correct the amount in his filing. Ms. James then sued Ms. McManus and others in Montgomery County to collect on the incorrect judgment amount.

Ms. James then sued Ms. McManus and Baxter Credit Union, Citadel Credit Union, Lincoln Investment, and Teachers Insurance in the Montgomery County Court of Common Plea for violations of Pennsylvania’s Uniform Voidable Transactions Act, 12 Pa. Cons. Stat. Ann. § 5101, et seq., conversion, and unjust enrichment in an effort to collect her judgment she continues to challenge on appeal.12 She tries to collect a judgment amount far beyond the amount ordered by Judge Foglietta while simultaneously disputing the judgment amount. Ms. James continued to assert a judgment in an amount greater than she is owed knowing of Judge Foglietta’s direct Order.

She chose to bring this suit in a state court outside of Philadelphia; she sued in Montgomery County. Ms. James alleged Ms. McManus fraudulently transferred monies to the Financial Institutions in an effort to hinder, delay, and defraud her and to render Ms. McManus insolvent, unable to pay the judgment.13 Ms. James asks the Montgomery County court (avoiding Judge Foglietta in Philadelphia) to determine Ms. McManus transferred monies in violation of Pennsylvania’s Uniform Voidable Transactions Act (assuming a final judgment); “deem” the transfers void and order Ms. McManus “return” all of her transferred assets to Ms. James; and issue injunctive relief “against any further disposition of the assets”, an order directing the Financial Institutions satisfy the judgment against Ms. McManus, an award of $181,067.89 plus

interest, punitive damages and attorney’s fees and costs; take judicial action “as is necessary to ensure” Ms. James’s “funds” held by the Financial Institutions are “frozen or otherwise secured and transferred;” order an accounting; direct the Financial Institutions be Ms. James’s debtor and to pay her; and grant other relief in law and equity.14 Lincoln Investment removed the Montgomery County action and moved to dismiss the complaint along with other Defendants.

Lincoln Investment removed Ms. James’s Montgomery County action.15 It invoked our federal question jurisdiction, alleging the monies Ms. James seeks to recover are held in Ms. McManus’s retirement accounts which may not be alienated under the Employee Retirement Income Security Act.16 Lincoln Investment asserts it is the custodian of Ms. McManus’s Internal Revenue Code section 403(b) retirement account and a rollover Individual Retirement Account both of which are “employee welfare benefit plans” as defined by ERISA.17 Lincoln Investment argues any claim by Ms. James to the monies “may arise under ERISA” creating a federal question for removal.18 Teachers Insurance supports removal asserting ERISA’s anti-alienation provision

governs Ms. McManus’s St.

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JAMES v. MCMANUS, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/james-v-mcmanus-paed-2024.