Murry v. Curotola

32 Pa. D. & C.5th 392
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County
DecidedAugust 20, 2013
DocketNo. AR 08-11771
StatusPublished

This text of 32 Pa. D. & C.5th 392 (Murry v. Curotola) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Alleghany County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Murry v. Curotola, 32 Pa. D. & C.5th 392 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

HERTZBERG, J.,

Plaintiff Susan Murry (“Ms. Murry”) paid defendant Lawrenceville Motors $1,500 for a used car, but three months later the police seized the car from her because it had been reported as stolen. Defendant Joseph Curotola (“Mr. Curotola”), agent for Lawrenceville Motors, signed the application to transfer title to Ms. Murry, certifying that Lawrenceville Motors could sell the car. Mr. Curotola now appeals to the Superior Court of Pennsylvania from my non-jury verdict against him in the amount of $2,411.50, and this opinion provides the reasons for my verdict. See Pa. R.A.P. No. 1925(a).

This confusing story begins in August of 2006 when Evelyn Stanton (“Ms. Stanton”) purchased the car, a 1996 Buick Regal, from Roland’s Auto Sales (“Roland’s”) via an installment payment plan. When Ms. Stanton did [394]*394not make payments, Roland’s sued her in December of 2006 and repossessed the car. The State Police listed the car as stolen on January 5, 2007, but Roland’s assigned possession and title to Lawrenceville Motors on February 8,2007. See Exhibit A. The lawsuit between Roland’s and Ms. Stanton concluded in May of2007 withRoland’s being ordered to return the car to Ms. Stanton. Lawrenceville Motors, however, maintained possession of the car, and Ms. Murry attempted to buy the car, then driven at least 140,110 miles, from Lawrenceville Motors on January 4, 2008. The police contacted Ms. Murry and informed her the car had been stolen from a previous owner, and on March 27,2008 the police came to Ms. Murry’s home and towed the vehicle away. Ms. Murry contacted Mr. Curotola and told him what had happened, but Mr. Curotola said “there was nothing they could do about it.” Transcript of non-jury trial of May 20,2013 (“T.” hereafter), p. 33.

Ms. Murry’s complaint in the captioned proceedings contains a negligence claim against the defendants for not determining that the vehicle they sold to her was stolen. The defendants filed and served Ms. Stanton with a complaint against additional defendant that averred Ms. Stanton was exclusively responsible for Ms. Murry’s damages because she falsely reported to the police that the car was stolen, when it had actually been repossessed.

I presided over the non-jury trial of the dispute on May 20, 2013. Ms. Stanton did not file a response to the complaint against additional defendant and she did not appear at trial. Five witnesses testified at trial and afterwards I entered a verdict against Lawrenceville [395]*395Motors, Mr. Curotola and Ms. Stanton for $2,411.501. Lawrenceville Motors and Mr. Curotola filed a motion for post-trial relief, which I denied. Ms. Murry then entered judgment on the verdict. Mr. Curotola then filed a timely notice of appeal from the verdict and a concise statement of the errors complained of on appeal. I will address these alleged errors in chronological order rather than the order in which they appear in Mr. Curotola’s concise statement of the errors complained of on appeal.

Because Ms. Stanton failed to respond to the defendants ’ complaint against her that alleged she falsely reported the car was stolen, Mr. Curotola argues I made an error by not holding her exclusively responsible for Ms. Murry’s damages. See concise statement per PA.R.A.P. 1925(b), fno. 2. I interpret this as an argument that it was Ms. Stanton rather than Mr. Curotola who caused Ms. Murry’s losses. However, my verdict against her was based exclusively on default from her failure to file a written response or to appear at trial. The only evidence against Ms. Stanton was the official record from Roland’s Auto Sales v. Evelyn Stanton, No. AR07-001640 in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County, which fails to establish that Ms. Stanton falsely reported to the police that the car was stolen.

That record shows Ms. Stanton purchased the car from Roland’s in August of 2006 with Roland’s retaining the title as lien holder. Roland’s filed suit against Ms. Stanton with a magisterial district judge in December of2006, then [396]*396appealed to the court of common pleas from judgment of $332 in its favor. Roland’s averred that Ms. Stanton had not made any installment payments that were due, it had repossessed the car2 and she owed it $1,445. Ms. Stanton averred in response that Roland’s did not make repairs to the car that it had contracted to make and she was entitled to get possession of the car back from Roland’s. The compulsory arbitration award dated May 21, 2007 is in favor of Ms. Stanton. It states that Roland’s did not appear at the hearing and provides Ms. Stanton with possession of the car. Neither party appealed this award, therefore it is a final judgment giving Ms. Stanton legal title to the car. 75 Pa.C.S. §§1114(a) and 1106(c).

Mr. Curotola established that the Department of Transportation entered the stolen status on to its record of the car on January 5, 2007, the car was towed from Ms. Murry’s residence on March 27,2008 and the Department of Transportation listed the car as recovered on March 27, 2008. Only a police department may report to the State Police that a car was stolen, which results in the Department of Transportation recording it as stolen. See 75 Pa. C.S. §7113. But, there was no evidence presented at the trial of any communication by Ms. Stanton to the City of Pittsburgh Police, hence no evidence that when [397]*397Roland’s repossessed the car she falsely reported to the police that it was stolen. See testimony of Corporal Scott, T., pp. 65-67. There are ways other than Ms. Stanton making a false report for the car to have been listed by the Department of Transportation as stolen. For example, the police or Ms. Stanton’s insurer may have decided to make the stolen car report. Therefore, Mr. Curotola’s claim that Ms. Stanton’s false report to the police that the car was stolen was the exclusive cause of Ms. Murry’s loss has no merit.

Mr. Curotola’s argument that Ms. Stanton was the exclusive cause of Ms. Murry’s losses also requires analysis of the “factual cause” of harm. See Restatement (Third) of Torts, Chapter 5. Assuming the liability by default of Ms. Stanton establishes that she was a cause of harm, Mr. Curotola’s conduct also is a factual cause if the harm would not have occurred absent his conduct. Id., section C. If Mr. Curotola had complied with Pennsylvania law and applied for a certificate of title to the car within six months of Lawrenceville Motors purchasing it (further explained below), he would have found the vehicle was reported stolen and known he could not sell it to Ms. Murry. Since Ms. Murry would then not have been harmed absent Mr. Curotola’s conduct, it is a factual cause sufficient to impose liability. It is Ms. Stanton’s allegedly improper conduct, occurring eleven months before Ms. Murry dealt with Mr. Curotola, that is more remote from the harm than the conduct of Mr. Curotola. Therefore, if any conduct could be argued as “too far removed from the transaction,” (Salvatore v. State Farm, 2005 PA Super 63, [398]*398869 A.2d 511, 515), it is that of Ms. Stanton. Accordingly, Ms. Stanton is not exclusively responsible for Ms. Murry’s damages, and I made no error by finding Mr. Curotola also responsible.

Mr. Curotola also alleges I made an error in my verdict because Ms. Murry did not provide evidence to support the averment in the complaint that Mr. Curotola was an owner, officer, stock-holder and/or managing agent of Lawrenceville Motors.

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Bluebook (online)
32 Pa. D. & C.5th 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/murry-v-curotola-pactcomplallegh-2013.