Lambakis v. Exar

490 A.2d 882, 340 Pa. Super. 483, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8888
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 22, 1985
Docket348
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 490 A.2d 882 (Lambakis v. Exar) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lambakis v. Exar, 490 A.2d 882, 340 Pa. Super. 483, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8888 (Pa. 1985).

Opinion

POPOVICH, Judge:

This is an appeal from an order granting a petition to open judgment. We affirm.

The appellant (Christos Lambakis) and appellee (Nicholas L. Exar) entered into an agreement dated November 1, 1982, whereby the appellant sold to the appellee, for $18,-000, an ongoing business (“Athens Pizza”). In securement of the purchase, the appellee executed a promissory note of even date in favor of the appellant in the amount of $3,000. Also, one of the conditions of the sale was the appellant’s agreement to refrain, for a period of three years, from “competing with the business being sold”.

On March 14, 1983, the appellant filed a complaint alleging that the appellee had defaulted in the payment of the *486 installment due on March 1, 1983, and, as a result, he was exercising his option to “demand that all remaining installments become immediately due and payable.” As a consequence, pursuant to the authority contained in the warrant of attorney, the appellant’s counsel appeared for the appellee and confessed judgment in favor of his client and against the appellee in the amount of $2,625. Additionally, on the date stated, the appellant filed a praecipe for writ of execution with the prothonotary of Lebanon County to levy upon and sell the personalty situated in the business establishment.

In response, counsel for the appellee filed, on March 24, 1983, a petition to open judgment wherein he alleged that, inter alia, no money was due the appellant on the promissory note because he (appellant) had violated the agreement of sale “by entering into another business in competition with the [appellee]”. In the remaining portion of the petition, the appellee raised new matter and a two-count counterclaim.

The reaction of counsel for the appellant was to file preliminary objections in the form of a motion to strike the petition/pleading of the appellee seeking, in part, liquidated damages. His belief was that the procedure followed and the relief sought were not contemplated by the Rules of Civil Procedure (e.g., 2959 & 2960). However, albeit mention of the appellee’s claim for violation of the non-competition clause was made, the appellant neither denied nor admitted the appellee’s assertion of contractual breach.

In a memorandum of law in opposition to the preliminary objections, the appellee wrote that “[t]he counts set forth in the Counterclaim”, which requested affirmative relief, “[we]re not relied upon by [him] in the Request to Open the Confessed Judgment.” Rather, the petition to open rested upon the contention that the appellant contravened the non-competition portion of the agreement to sell “and thus there [was] a failure of consideration relieving [the appellee] of [his] obligation to pay [the appellant] under the note, and thus th[e appellee was] not in default.”

*487 On praecipe by counsel for the appellant, the entire record was certified to the court below for disposition of the preliminary objections.

By order and opinion dated August 1, 1983, the court below opened the judgment entered against the appellee. In doing so, it wrote in its order:

The [appellant] is afforded twenty (20) days from the date of th[e] Order to plead to the Counterclaim included within the [appellee’s] Petition to Open Judgment.
The issues to be presented at trial shall include the claims raised in the [appellant’s] Complaint in Confession of Judgment and the defenses presented by the [appellee] thereto in his Petition to Open Judgment; and the claims raised by the [appellee] in his Counterclaim included within his Petition to Open Judgment and the defenses presented thereto in the [appellant’s] Answer, if any, as provided herein.

Further, in the Opinion prepared by the court below, we have insight as to the manner in which the appellant’s complaints were to be appeased:

The issues in the instant case are framed by the complaint in confession of judgment and the [appellee’s] petition to open that judgment. We are not unmindful, however, that since the matter is now before us on the [appellant’s] preliminary objections to the [appellee’s] petition to open judgment, the [appellant] has not been given an opportunity to respond to the counterclaim which was attached to that petition to open judgment. Having determined it appropriate to open the judgment, we will afford the [appellant] the opportunity to answer the counterclaim in the anticipation that the matter can then proceed to resolution.

Thereafter, this appeal ensued.

Instantly, the appellant argues that the court below erred in opening the judgment before he “had an opportunity to prepare and file an Answer to the Petition to Open Judg *488 ment and before the procedure required by Pa.R.C.P. No. 209 [ 1 ] could be followed.”

We begin our discussion with reference to the factors which the courts of this Commonwealth have looked to, traditionally, in evaluating a ruling on a petition to open a confessed judgment. To-wit, 1.) the petition must have been promptly filed; and 2.) a meritorious defense must have been averred. Foerst v. Rotkis, 244 Pa.Super. 447, 368 A.2d 805 (1976). Once a ruling either opening or refusing to open a confessed judgment is appealed, we, as an appellate court, will refrain from reversing a trial court’s decision unless it is shown that the court committed an error of law or manifestly abused its discretion. Wenger v. Ziegler, 424 Pa. 268, 226 A.2d 653 (1967).

It will be recalled that the appellant’s confessed judgment was followed by a petition to open by the appellee, which averred a contractual breach by the appellant relieving the appellee of any obligation (money) owed the appellant. Moreover, the petition included new matter and a counterclaim.

Our review of the new matter discloses that it merely repeats the appellee’s contention in the petition to open regarding the non-competitive clause. However, the counterclaim section sets forth two counts, one in assumpsit and equity seeking $7,000 for breach of the non-competition *489 clause as provided for in the agreement of sale. The second relates to statements purportedly made by the appellant and his father “to go[ing] into business in competition with [the appellee] and if he made any objection, they would make trouble for him.” In the same count, the appellee averred that the parties just referred to “informed” him that interference with their intention of going into competitive business would be met by the appellee’s employees’ filing, at their insistence, sexual harassment charges. Accordingly, the appellee sought compensatory and punitive damages against the appellant only in excess of $10,000.

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Bluebook (online)
490 A.2d 882, 340 Pa. Super. 483, 1985 Pa. Super. LEXIS 8888, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lambakis-v-exar-pa-1985.