Johnson v. Bullock-Freeman

61 A.3d 272, 2013 Pa. Super. 16, 2013 WL 310636, 2013 Pa. Super. LEXIS 21
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJanuary 28, 2013
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 61 A.3d 272 (Johnson v. Bullock-Freeman) 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
Johnson v. Bullock-Freeman, 61 A.3d 272, 2013 Pa. Super. 16, 2013 WL 310636, 2013 Pa. Super. LEXIS 21 (Pa. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION BY

BENDER, J.

In this landlord tenant action, Gwendolyn Bullock-Freeman and Morris J. Freeman (the Tenants) appeal an order of the Court of Common Pleas that denied the Freemans’ petition to satisfy an award of rent by the Philadelphia Municipal Court and an emergency motion to allow their continued occupancy of their rented house upon paying back rent and costs as documented on the writ of possession. The Tenants, with the support of amicus curiae, the Tenant Union Representative Network (amicus), contend that the court’s order violates section 250.503 of Pennsylvania’s Landlord Tenant Act, see 68 Pa.S.A. § 250.503(c), and infringes tenants’ rights to due process. The Tenants and amicus argue further that Pennsylvania law limits the amount collectible pursuant to a Writ of Possession to the total sum recorded on the face of the writ. Following careful consideration, we agree with the Tenants. Accordingly, we reverse the trial court’s order.

The history and procedural posture of this case focuses our attention on provisions of the Landlord and Tenant Act that guarantee a tenant’s right to redeem his or her home upon payment of rent due, notwithstanding the issuance of a writ of possession by a magistrate or, in this case, the Philadelphia Municipal Court. The Tenants, who formerly resided in a home rented from plaintiffs Danetta and Anthony Johnson (the Landlords), fell into arrears [274]*274on their rent payments prior to October 21, 2011. On that date, the Landlords filed a landlord/tenant complaint in Philadelphia Municipal Court. The court rendered judgment for the Landlords thereafter in the amount of $1881, solely for nonpayment of rent. The tenants then filed a timely appeal to the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County and obtained a supersedeas on the condition that they remit timely installment payments against the rent arrearages. On December 29, 2011, after the Tenants failed to make an agreed payment, the Court of Common Pleas terminated the supersedeas and the Landlords filed a writ of possession in Municipal Court. To avert a lockout, the Tenants’ attorney tendered the amount designated on the writ, but counsel for the Landlords declined the payment, choosing instead to move for an alias writ of possession, which the Municipal Court granted on January 17, 2012. Counsel for the Tenants responded with a petition to satisfy based on his clients’ attempt to pay the writ amount; nevertheless, the court denied the petition, prompting the Tenants, once again, to appeal to the Court of Common Pleas. Subsequently, on February 22, 2012, the Tenants also filed an emergency motion to “pay and stay,” but, following a hearing, the court denied both the petition to satisfy and the “pay and stay” motion.

The Tenants then filed this appeal, raising the following questions for our consideration:

A. Did the trial court in the First Judicial District commit an error of fact and/or law and/or abuse its discretion in ruling that “rent actually in arrears” is something other [than] the amount of the writ when the Supreme Court, through its explanatory note has defined “rent actually in arrears” as the judgment amount and [in] every other county throughout the Commonwealth common practice considers “rent actually in arrears” as the judgment amount including Philadelphia?
B. Would Philadelphia’s interpretation of the law be contrary to legislative intent?

Brief for Appellant at 7.

The Tenants’ questions challenge the trial court’s interpretation of a statute and therefore raise a question of law, of which our scope of review is plenary and our standard of review is de novo. See In re Wilson, 879 A.2d 199, 214 (Pa.Super.2005) (en banc). Thus, we review the entire record to the extent necessary, paying no deference to the trial court’s conclusions of law. See id. nn. 10, 11. In this instance, the statute subject to consideration directs the preparation, execution, and potential stay of writs for the possession of demised premises to the landlord following entry of a judgment. The provision at issue states, in its entirety, as follows:

§ 250.503. Hearing; judgment; writ of possession; payment of rent by tenant
(a) On the day and at the time appointed or on a day to which the case may be adjourned, the justice of the peace shall proceed to hear the case. If it appears that the complaint has been sufficiently proven, the justice of the peace shall enter judgment against the tenant:
(1) that the real property be delivered up to the landlord;
(2) for damages, if any, for the unjust detention of the demised premises; and
(3) for the amount of rent, if any, which remains due and unpaid.
(b) At the request of the landlord, the justice of the peace shall, after the fifth [275]*275day after the rendition of the judgment, issue a writ of possession directed to the writ server, constable or sheriff, commanding him to deliver forthwith actual possession of the real property to the landlord and to levy the costs and amount of judgment for damages and rent, if any, on the tenant, in the same manner as judgments and costs are levied and collected on units of execution. This writ is to be served within no later than forty-eight hours and executed on the eleventh day following service upon the tenant of the leased premises. Service of the writ of possession shall be served personally on the tenant by personal service or by posting the writ conspicuously on the leased premises.
(c) At any time before any unit of possession is actually executed, the tenant may, in any case for the recovery of possession solely because of failure to pay rent due, supersede and render the writ of no effect by paying to the unit server, constable or sheriff the rent actually in arrears and the costs.

68 P.S. § 250.503 (emphasis added).

Both the Tenants and the common pleas court1 acknowledge that the writ issued in this case sought recovery based solely upon failure to pay rent due, and that the Tenants attempted to pay the amount reduced to judgment plus costs as recorded on the face of the writ. They also acknowledge that the Landlords’ counsel refused to accept the Tenants’ payment on the premise that by the time of attempted execution, additional sums were due. The Tenants argued before the common pleas court that notwithstanding the accrual of additional sums in arrears, the ability of the Landlords to collect rent or evict tenants pursuant to an alias writ must be limited to amounts reduced to judgment and documented on the face of the writ. The Tenants contend, in addition, that said limitation is consistent with pre-existing practice in Philadelphia2 and with practice throughout the remainder of this Commonwealth established by the Rules of Civil Procedure for Magisterial District Judges, Rule 518.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A.3d 272, 2013 Pa. Super. 16, 2013 WL 310636, 2013 Pa. Super. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-bullock-freeman-pasuperct-2013.