Malanchuk, I. v. Sivchuk, I.

148 A.3d 860, 2016 Pa. Super. 213, 2016 Pa. Super. LEXIS 533, 2016 WL 4943061
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedSeptember 15, 2016
Docket1379 EDA 2012
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 148 A.3d 860 (Malanchuk, I. v. Sivchuk, I.) 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
Malanchuk, I. v. Sivchuk, I., 148 A.3d 860, 2016 Pa. Super. 213, 2016 Pa. Super. LEXIS 533, 2016 WL 4943061 (Pa. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION BY

BOWES, J.:

Ihor.Malanchuk appeals from the March 26, 2012 order granting summary judgment to Appellees, Alex Tsimura,.both individually and trading as Impressive Win *862 dows and Alexis Impressive Windows, and Tatyana Tsimura, both individually and trading as Impressive Windows and Alexis Impressive Windows, and Alexis Impressive Windows, Inc. After careful review, we reverse.

Appellant was an independent contractor who, beginning in 2007, performed carpentry work for Ilya Sivchuk’s wholly-owned enterprise, Four Brothers Construction Co. (“Four Brothers”), on various construction jobs on a project-by-project basis. Also in 2007, Four Brothers hired Mr, Tsimura to act as a supervisor and field manager of its construction projects. There was no written contract between Four Brothers and Mr. Tsimura, who was treated as an independent contractor and allegedly performed his work through his wife’s businesses, Impressive Windows and Alexis Impressive Windows. Four Brothers engaged in residential and commercial interior construction and employed between ten and fifteen contractors to do carpentry and trim work.

On May 2, 2008, Mr. Sivchuk had two of Four Brothers’ contractors, Appellant and Mr. Tsimura, perform work at his own residence. Appellant was severely injured after he fell from scaffolding located at Mr. Sivchuk’s home. On May 27, 2008, Appellant filed a claim under a workers’ compensation policy that was issued by State Workers’ Insurance Fund and that Appellant purchased for himself as a condition of working for Four Brothers. That insurance company joined Four Brothers as a defendant in the worker’s compensation action, which was settled for $30,000 on June 2, 2010. Four Brothers contributed to the settlement, and that accord contained a clause stating that it was agreed there was no employer-employee relationship between Appellant, on the one hand, and Four Brothers/Mr. Sivchuk, on the other hand.

On May 21, 2009, Appellant filed a personal injury action against Mr. Sivchuk and Four Brothers (collectively “Sivchuk”) at docket number 3249 May Term 2009 in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County. On April 30, 2010, Appellant filed a separate action against Alex Tsimu-ra, both individually and trading as Impressive Windows and Alexis Impressive Windows, and Tatyana Tsimura, both individually and trading as Impressive Windows and Alexis Impressive Windows, and Alexis Impressive Windows, Inc. (collectively “Tsimura”) at docket number 4727 April Term 2010 in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County. In each action, Appellant raised causes of action sounding in both negligence and products liability, which were premised upon the respective defendants’ action of supplying the scaffolding from which Appellant fell. Upon Sivchuk’s motion filed pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 213(a), 1 the court ordered consolidation of the two lawsuits “for the purpose of discovery, arbitration and if [the arbitration is] appealed, trial” under docket number 3249 May Term 2009. Order of Court, 6/6/11, at 1.

Discovery was completed and, on May 2, 2011, Sivchuk filed a motion for summary judgment, while Tsimura followed suit on December 5, 2011. Appellant filed responses to the respective motions and submitted exhibits in support of his request that the motions be denied. Appellant withdrew his products liability claim against Tsimura,

*863 On March 26, 2012, the court granted summary judgment in favor of Tsimura as to all counts pled in the action instituted against them, granted partial summary judgment in favor of Sivchuk as to Appellant’s products liability count, and denied Sivchuk’s motion for summary judgment with respect to the negligence counts presented in the action against Sivchuk. Appellant filed the present, timely appeal from the portion of the March 26, 2012 order that granted summary judgment in favor of Tsimura. The court issued a Pa. R.A.P. 1925(a) opinion in which it considered this appeal to be improperly filed from an interlocutory order, and in which it supported its decision to grant summary judgment to Tsimura.

A panel of this Court concluded that we had jurisdiction over the appeal under Kincy v. Petro, 606 Pa. 524, 2 A.3d 490 (2010), wherein the Supreme Court analyzed the effect of a trial court order that consolidated two separate actions pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 213(a). In Kincy, there were different parties and different theories of liability involved in each action but both lawsuits pertained to the same traffic accident. One vehicle involved in the collision contained a driver and passenger (“vehicle number one”), and that car was struck by a vehicle (“vehicle number two”) occupied solely by the driver and owned by that driver’s mother. The driver of vehicle number one filed an action against the mother of the driver of vehicle number two. Vehicle number one’s driver alleged therein that the mother was negligent in her operation of her car. This complaint was never amended, even after discovery clarified that the mother owned vehicle number two but was not driving it when the accident occurred. Vehicle number one’s passenger and his wife then filed another lawsuit against both the daughter/driver and mother/owner of vehicle number two, and they raised averments of negligent driving and negligent entrustment, respectively, against the daughter/mother defendants.

The separately-filed actions by the passenger/wife and driver of vehicle number one were consolidated under Pa.R.C.P. 213(a) “for all purposes,” including appeal. Id. The consolidated matter proceeded to arbitration, where the passenger in vehicle number one and his wife prevailed, and then settled their case. The driver of vehicle number one lost at arbitration and appealed to the court of common pleas. The case proceeded to trial, where nonsuit was entered in favor of the owner of vehicle number two since she was not driving her car when the collision transpired and the only allegations raised in the complaint in the action involved negligent operation of vehicle number two. The Superior affirmed.

On appeal to the Supreme Court, vehicle number one’s driver argued that, due to entry of the consolidation order as to all purposes, her complaint merged with that of the passenger and his wife and that their, allegations of negligent driving against vehicle number two’s driver should be considered as raised in the action by vehicle number one’s driver. Our Supreme Court rejected that position. The Kincy Court concluded that a consolidation order entered under rule 213(a) “does not result in the. complete consolidation of such actions, such that the pleadings are merged and/or the actions shed their separate identities.” Id. at 491. It noted that consolidation

is used in three different senses: First, where all except one of the several actions are stayed until one is tried, in which case the judgment in the one is conclusive as to the others; second, where several actions are combined into one and lose their separate identity and become a single action in which a single *864

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 A.3d 860, 2016 Pa. Super. 213, 2016 Pa. Super. LEXIS 533, 2016 WL 4943061, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/malanchuk-i-v-sivchuk-i-pasuperct-2016.