M. Ali v. Unknown CERT Team Members & PA DOC

CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 27, 2025
Docket592 C.D. 2024
StatusPublished

This text of M. Ali v. Unknown CERT Team Members & PA DOC (M. Ali v. Unknown CERT Team Members & PA DOC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
M. Ali v. Unknown CERT Team Members & PA DOC, (Pa. Ct. App. 2025).

Opinion

IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA

Mustafa Ali, : Appellant : : v. : : Unknown CERT Team Members and : Pennsylvania Department of : No. 592 C.D. 2024 Corrections : Submitted: March 4, 2025

BEFORE: HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge HONORABLE LORI A. DUMAS, Judge HONORABLE MATTHEW S. WOLF, Judge

OPINION BY JUDGE COVEY FILED: March 27, 2025

Mustafa Ali (Ali), pro se, appeals from the Schuylkill County Common Pleas Court’s (trial court) April 29, 2024 order sustaining the Pennsylvania Department of Corrections’ (Department) preliminary objections (POs) and dismissing his amended complaint (Amended Complaint) against the Department and unknown members of the Department’s Crisis and Emergency Response Team (CERT) (collectively, Defendants). The sole issue before this Court is whether Ali waived all issues in this appeal by failing to timely file a Concise Statement of Errors Complained of on Appeal pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure (Rule) 1925(b) (Rule 1925(b) Statement). After review, this Court remands this matter to the trial court. Ali is currently an inmate at the State Correctional Institution at Mahanoy.1 On or about September 28, 2023, Ali filed a complaint in the trial court against unknown CERT members, alleging their liability for damages to his personal

1 https://inmatelocator.cor.pa.gov/#/Result (last visited Mar. 26, 2025). property attributable to their alleged negligent acts. On February 21, 2024, Ali filed the Amended Complaint to add the Department as a defendant. On March 18, 2024, the Department filed POs to the Amended Complaint. On April 1, 2024, Ali filed a Motion to Compel the Department to disclose the CERT members’ names (Motion to Compel) as well as a Motion for Extension of Time to Respond to the Department’s POs (Motion for Extension). On April 15, 2024, the Department filed a Motion to Stay Discovery. On April 29, 2024, the trial court sustained the Department’s POs, denied Ali’s Motion to Compel and Motion for Extension, dismissed the Amended Complaint and denied the Department’s Motion to Stay Discovery as moot. Ali appealed to this Court. On May 28, 2024, the trial court issued an order directing Ali to file a Rule 1925(b) Statement within 21 days (May 28 Order). On June 21, 2024, the trial court issued its opinion pursuant to Rule 1925(a) (Rule 1925(a) Opinion), requesting that this Court quash Ali’s appeal because Ali did not timely file his Rule 1925(b) Statement and, as a result, Ali had waived all issues. On June 28, 2024, Ali sent a letter to this Court’s Prothonotary, copied the trial court administrator and the trial court judge, and explained that he did not timely file his Rule 1925(b) Statement because he did not receive the trial court’s May 28 Order. Ali also enclosed his inmate correspondence history and the Department’s Unacceptable Correspondence Forms he purportedly received, which reflect that the Department had returned correspondence it received on June 3, 13, and 28, 2024, addressed to Ali from the trial court because the trial court’s correspondence had invalid or missing control numbers (June 28 Letter).2 By July 15, 2024 Order, this Court directed the parties to address in their principal briefs whether Ali waived all issues on appeal.

2 Exhibit A attached to Ali’s brief is a February 24, 2021 letter from the Department addressed to Judges and members of the Administrative Office of Pennsylvania Courts stating that the Department is implementing a mail screening system that requires courts to utilize control numbers when sending mail to inmates. See Ali Br. Ex. A. 2 Ali contends that he did not waive his issues on appeal because the Department rejected the trial court’s May 28 Order due to the trial court’s failure to properly include a control number. As a result of said rejection, Ali did not receive the trial court’s May 28 Order until June 26, 2024, and he mailed his Rule 1925(b) Statement upon receiving the May 28 Order. The Department rejoins that Ali waived all issues on appeal because he did not request an extension to file his Rule 1925(b) Statement with the trial court nunc pro tunc before he filed it, and he did not petition this Court to remand the matter to the trial court for a hearing on the matter. Rule 1925(b) states, in pertinent part:

Direction to File Statement of Errors Complained of on Appeal; Instructions to the Appellant and the Trial Court. If the judge entering the order giving rise to the notice of appeal (“judge”) desires clarification of the errors complained of on appeal, the judge may enter an order directing the appellant to file of record in the trial court and serve on the judge a concise statement of the errors complained of on appeal (“Statement”). .... (2) Time for filing and service. (i) The judge shall allow the appellant at least 21 days from the date of the order’s entry on the docket for the filing and service of the Statement. Upon application of the appellant and for good cause shown, the judge may enlarge the time period initially specified or permit an amended or supplemental Statement to be filed. Good cause includes, but is not limited to, delay in the production of a transcript necessary to develop the Statement so long as the delay is not attributable to a lack of diligence in ordering or paying for such transcript by the party or counsel on appeal. In extraordinary circumstances, the judge may allow for the filing of a Statement or amended or supplemental Statement nunc pro tunc.

3 Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b)(2) (underline emphasis added). Here, Ali noted on his Rule 1925(b) Statement, which the trial court docketed on July 1, 2024, that he had only received the trial court’s May 28 Order on June 26, 2024. Thereafter, Ali sent the June 28 Letter explaining why he did not timely file his Rule 1925(b) Statement and enclosing evidence supporting his claim. This Court acknowledges that

[a]lthough the courts may liberally construe materials filed by a pro se litigant, pro se status confers no special benefit upon a litigant, and a court cannot be expected to become a litigant’s counsel or find more in a written pro se submission than is fairly conveyed in the pleading.

Kozicki v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Rev., 299 A.3d 1055, 1063 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2023) (quoting Commonwealth v. Blakeney, 108 A.3d 739, 766 (Pa. 2014)). Nonetheless, Pennsylvania Courts have construed appellants’ explanations of late filings as requests for nunc pro tunc relief.3 See Commonwealth v. Alaouie, 837 A.2d 1190, 1193 (Pa. Super. 2003) (“conclud[ing] that the trial court erred in dismissing [the appellant’s] appeal without entertaining his explanation for the untimely notices [and] . . . view[ing the appellant’s] offer of an explanation at trial

3 The law is well established: Nunc pro tunc relief may be granted only (1) in circumstances in which a party failed to make a timely filing as a result of a fraud or a breakdown in the court’s operations, or (2) where a party, a party’s counsel, or an agent of the party has failed to comply with a filing deadline due to non-negligent circumstances. Generally, nunc pro tunc relief may be afforded only where “extraordinary” circumstances exist to warrant it, and the burden of establishing the existence of such circumstances is on the party seeking nunc pro tunc relief. Harris v. Unemployment Comp[.] B[d.] of Rev[.], 247 A.3d 1223, 1229 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021)[.] Triple Crown Corp. v. Lower Allen Twp., 327 A.3d 748, 754 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2024) (citations omitted; emphasis added). 4 essentially as a request for nunc pro tunc relief”);4 see also Jaramillo v. Schuylkill Cnty. Tax Claim Bureau (Pa. Cmwlth. No. 1007 C.D. 2023, filed Jan. 22, 2025), slip op.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Commonwealth v. Alaouie
837 A.2d 1190 (Superior Court of Pennsylvania, 2003)
Lerch v. Unemployment Comp. Bd. of Review
180 A.3d 545 (Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania, 2018)
Commonwealth v. Blakeney
108 A.3d 739 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 2014)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
M. Ali v. Unknown CERT Team Members & PA DOC, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/m-ali-v-unknown-cert-team-members-pa-doc-pacommwct-2025.