Knisel v. Oaks

645 A.2d 253, 435 Pa. Super. 169, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2276
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 22, 1994
Docket1815
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 645 A.2d 253 (Knisel v. Oaks) 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
Knisel v. Oaks, 645 A.2d 253, 435 Pa. Super. 169, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2276 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

ROWLEY, President Judge:

At issue in this appeal is the propriety of the trial court’s order denying the petition of appellants Randy Oaks and Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company (“Nationwide”) to enforce a settlement allegedly reached with appellees William A. Knisel, Jr., and Doris J. Knisel, administrators of the estate of their daughter, Michele M! Knisel, who died as the result of injuries sustained in a motor vehicle accident. Having concluded, after careful analysis, that the order in question is not final and appealable, we are constrained to quash the appeal.

■ The facts of the case are as follows: On Decémber 29, 1991, Michele Knisel was a passenger in a vehicle which she owned and which was being operated by Randy Oaks, when that vehicle collided with a vehicle driven by Bruce Lamborn. Knisel was fatally injured. Nationwide insured the Knisel vehicle and had also issued a policy of motor vehicle liability insurance to Oaks. The Lamborn vehicle was insured under a *171 policy issued by State Farm Mutual Insurance Company (“State Farm”).

Appellees filed a wrongful death and survival action against Oaks, Nationwide, Lamborn, and State Farm, as well as an underinsured motorist claim against Nationwide. Appellants maintain that Nationwide made several offers to settle the underinsured motorist claim, all of which were rejected by appellees. Appellees assert that Nationwide denied their claim, “contending] (erroneously) that, as a prerequisite to their UIM [underinsured motorist] claim, [appellees] were required to exhaust Nationwide’s own liability coverage on Oaks” (Brief for Appellees at 5).

Eventually Nationwide made a settlement offer of $100,000 in bodily injury coverage, that amount being the policy limit for such coverage. State Farm offered $25,000, its bodily injury policy limit. Appellees accepted the offers and executed two releases, one releasing appellants Oaks and Nationwide from any further liability and the other similarly releasing Lamborn and State Farm. Each release contained the following provision: “THIS RELEASE DOES NOT AFFECT THE RIGHT OF THE ESTATE OF MICHELE M. KNISEL, OR WILLIAM A. KNISEL, JR. AND DORIS J. KNISEL IN THE CLAIM FOR UNDERINSURED BENEFITS PURSUANT TO THE NATIONWIDE POLICY.” In their petition to the trial court for leave to settle and compromise the actions for wrongful death and survival, appellees averred that “[t]here continues to be ongoing litigation concerning the underinsured motorist’s coverage with Nationwide Insurance Company” (Petition at 3). On February 18, 1993, the trial court entered an order approving the settlement as set forth in appellees’ petition and authorizing appellees “to accept the amount of $125,000.00 in settlement of decedent’s cause of action.”

Settlement was not accomplished, however. In a letter to Nationwide dated April 20,1993, appellees’ counsel offered the following explanation:

*172 I am returning Nationwide’s settlement draft No. 58-343314 dated April 2, 1993 in the amount of $100,000. As stated in my letter of March 31,1993, my clients agreed to accept the $100,000 BI [bodily injury] draft with the understanding that the Randy Oaks BI settlement would not prejudice the UIM [underinsured motorist] claim. Since Nationwide now contends that the proposed BI settlement defeats the UIM claim, your draft is enclosed. We will pursue the BI claim when the UIM claim has been resolved.

Appellants then filed a petition to enforce the settlement. On October 25, 1993, the trial court denied the petition in an order which reads as follows:

Now this 25th day of October, 1993, upon consideration of the Petition to Enforce Settlement filed by Defendants Randy Oaks and Nationwide Mutual Insurance Company and after hearing oral arguments thereon, it is hereby Ordered and Decreed that the Petition to Enforce Settlement is Denied; it is further Ordered and Decreed that this Court’s Order of February 18, 1993 approving the compromise and settlement of Plaintiffs’ Wrongful Death and Survival actions against Randy Oaks and his motor vehicle liability insurance carrier Nationwide ... and against Bruce Lamborn and his motor vehicle liability insurance carrier State Farm ... shall be held in abeyance until the pending Underinsured Motorist Arbitration is concluded so as not to prejudice Plaintiffs’ Underinsured Motorist Claim against Nationwide....

In this timely appeal of the trial court’s order, appellants assert that “the mere chance that the settlement agreement might prejudice [appellees] in the separate arbitration proceeding is an insufficient basis for denying enforcement of a settlement agreement” (Brief for Appellants at 7). Appellants argue further that absent fraud, duress, or mutual mistake, none of which has been shown in the present case, the agreement must be enforced.

Appellees contend that in fact Nationwide fraudulently induced them to enter into the settlement agreement. Accord *173 ing to appellees, “Nationwide knew at all relevant times that it had no intention of paying UIM benefits to [appellees], yet it intentionally misrepresented that it would act in good faith to resolve the UIM claim after the liability coverage was exhausted” (Brief for Appellees at 11).

Although the parties have not addressed the question of appealability in their briefs, counsel for appellees asserted at oral argument that the trial court’s order of October 25, 1993, is not appealable. Moreover, “[b]ecause the question of appealability implicates the jurisdiction of [this] Court, a nonwaivable matter,” Motheral v. Burkhart, 400 Pa. Super. 408, 414, 583 A.2d 1180, 1184 (1990) (en banc), we are not only permitted but required to determine the appealability of the order that we have been asked to review.

In support of his claim that the order in question is not final and appealable, counsel for appellees cited National Recovery Systems v. Perlman, 367 Pa.Super. 546, 533 A.2d 152 (1987), in which this Court stated that “the denial of a motion to enforce a settlement agreement is non-appealable.” Id. at 548, 533 A.2d at 152. The question is not as easily resolved as this statement suggests, however. In a later case, Lanci v. Metropolitan Insurance Company, 388 Pa.Super. 1, 564 A.2d 972 (1989), this Court held that a similar order was final and appealable under the collateral order doctrine enunciated by the United States Supreme Court in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corporation, 337 U.S. 541, 69 S.Ct. 1221, 93 L.Ed. 1528 (1949), and adopted by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Bell v. Beneficial Consumer Discount Co., 465 Pa. 225, 348 A.2d 734 (1975). Accordingly, we must determine which outcome is appropriate in the case before us.

The parties in Perlman

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Bluebook (online)
645 A.2d 253, 435 Pa. Super. 169, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 2276, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knisel-v-oaks-pasuperct-1994.