Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Fabinyi

650 A.2d 895, 437 Pa. Super. 559, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3485
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedDecember 2, 1994
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 650 A.2d 895 (Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Fabinyi) 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
Mellon Bank, N.A. v. Fabinyi, 650 A.2d 895, 437 Pa. Super. 559, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3485 (Pa. Ct. App. 1994).

Opinion

MONTGOMERY, Judge:

The plaintiff, Mellon Bank, N.A., instituted this action against defendant-appellant Josephine K. Fabinyi, claiming that the defendant was liable for payments to Mellon as a result of her alleged defaults under a motor vehicle lease agreement. Subsequently, after a number of pleadings were filed, which shall be described more fully below, the defendant filed a complaint against appellee Geza T. Fabinyi, to join him as an additional defendant in the case. Thereafter, Geza Fabinyi filed preliminary objections, which resulted in a trial court order dismissing the defendant’s complaint against additional defendant. The instant appeal followed.

It is appropriate to review the detailed procedural history of this case in the trial court. On June 22, 1992, plaintiff Mellon Bank filed a complaint against defendant Josephine K. Fabinyi, which sought damages based upon her alleged default on an automobile lease agreement, which had been assigned to Mellon by an automobile dealer. Mellon claimed that the defendant owed the amount of $12,222.97, plus legal fees and costs, as a result of her breach of contract. The defendant filed preliminary objections which challenged several aspects of the complaint. Without any ruling by the court on the preliminary objections, Mellon filed an amended complaint, adding some allegations which were not included in the original complaint. Defendant Josephine K. Fabinyi then filed preliminary objections to the amended complaint.

On August 13, 1992, eight days after the filing of her preliminary objections to Mellon. Bank’s amended complaint, defendant Josephine K. Fabinyi filed a complaint against additional defendant Dr. Geza T. Fabinyi a/k/a G.T. Fabinyi, to whom she had been married. In this complaint against additional defendant, she attached and made reference to both the complaint and amended complaint which had been filed by Mellon Bank against her, as well as the exhibits to those pleadings, including the purported motor vehicle lease agree *563 ment on which Mellon based its claims. She also attached copies of the preliminary objections she had filed as to both the original and the amended complaint. She then alleged, in three separate counts, her claims against the proposed additional defendant. In the first count, she asserted that by the terms of the motor vehicle lease agreement, Geza Fabinyi was jointly and severally liable with her to the plaintiff, on the plaintiffs cause of action. In her second count, she declared that at the time that the motor vehicle lease agreement was entered into, she and Geza Fabinyi were husband and wife, and that they had agreed that she was entitled to use the vehicle leased under the agreement, as a necessity of life. She claimed that Geza Fabinyi agreed to pay all costs of the rental and/or ownership of the said vehicle, as well as the costs of repair and maintenance thereof. Accordingly, in the second count, the defendant maintained that if she was liable to the plaintiff, additional defendant Geza Fabinyi was liable over to her. In the third count, she alleged that prior to entering the lease agreement, she and Geza Fabinyi had a 1988 motor vehicle which Geza Fabinyi had agreed was for her use, with the understanding that he would pay the costs of same. Further, she averred that Geza Fabinyi had negligently damaged the 1988 motor vehicle in January 1989, and had retained all rights to recover damages for the loss and damage to the vehicle. She contended that by reason thereof, Geza Fabinyi was, in effect, the lessor of the 1989 vehicle on which this action is based. She also claimed that her husband had directed her to secure the use of the 1989 vehicle solely for her use, at his cost and expense. Finally, she maintained that either Mellon Bank or Geza Fabinyi had made a recovery of an unknown sum of money from an insurer of the 1988 motor vehicle, but failed to advise her of the recovery and failed to account for that recovery and protect her rights in connection with the cause of action pleaded in the instant case by Mellon Bank. She claimed that all of these purported circumstances made it appropriate that Geza Fabinyi be held liable alone to Mellon, if it was entitled to any judgment in the action. Although it was not in a separate count, a final paragraph of the complaint to join additional defendant asserted a demand *564 that Geza Fabinyi account to the defendant for any recovery of any consideration or benefit which resulted from the loss or damage to the 1988 motor vehicle.

On August 14, 1992, the day after defendant filed her complaint against additional defendant, Mellon Bank filed a second amended complaint. It again named Josephine K. Fabinyi as the only defendant, repeated everything which had been alleged in the original and first amended complaints, and added additional allegations regarding its claim against the defendant. In the second amended complaint, Mellon increased its demand, seeking a recovery in the amount of $18,212.36, plus interest and costs.

On August 21, 1992, defendant filed an answer to plaintifPs second amended complaint, together with a counterclaim. The allegations in the counterclaim are not pertinent to the issues raised on the instant appeal. The answer denied almost all material allegations in the second amended complaint. Of note, however, is that in response to the third count of the second amended complaint, defendant admitted that she signed the name of Geza Fabinyi on the motor vehicle lease agreement, but averred that she did so with his prior knowledge, consent and ratification, as well as with the knowledge of the automobile dealer. She also asserted defenses based upon the matters raised in her complaint against the additional defendant.

On September 8, 1992, additional defendant Geza Fabinyi filed preliminary objections. First, he asserted a demurrer to the first count of the defendant’s complaint against him. He declared that the terms of the motor vehicle lease agreement did not, in and of themselves, make out any cause of action against him, and on that basis, asked that the first count be dismissed. A second demurrer in his preliminary objections stated that the particular luxury motor vehicle involved in this litigation was not a necessity of life under any circumstances, and that his wife had forged his signature and therefore had no action against him. On such grounds, he again requested that Mrs. Fabinyi’s complaint against him be dismissed. Finally, his preliminary objections asserted that allegations in *565 the third count of the complaint against additional defendant, concerning a previous vehicle being wrecked, were scandalous and impertinent, and should be stricken. He maintained that if such allegations were stricken, count three of the complaint against him should be dismissed.

On the same date, September 8, 1992, additional defendant Geza Fabinyi filed a counterclaim against defendant Josephine Fabinyi. In that pleading, he claimed that she filed the action knowing that he had never signed the lease agreement, nor authorized her to do so, so that her efforts to join him in the case as an additional defendant were arbitrary, vexatious, and in bad faith. On that basis, he sought an award of counsel fees against Josephine Fabinyi. It is noteworthy that he did not file any answer, to accompany this counterclaim.

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Bluebook (online)
650 A.2d 895, 437 Pa. Super. 559, 1994 Pa. Super. LEXIS 3485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mellon-bank-na-v-fabinyi-pasuperct-1994.