Post v. Mendel

485 A.2d 1176, 336 Pa. Super. 467
CourtSupreme Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 10, 1985
Docket1639
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 485 A.2d 1176 (Post v. Mendel) 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
Post v. Mendel, 485 A.2d 1176, 336 Pa. Super. 467 (Pa. 1985).

Opinion

POPOVICH, Judge:

This is an appeal from the order entered by the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County in response to a *470 complaint in trespass filed by the plaintiff-appellant (Barton L. Post, Esquire). We affirm in part and quash in part.

We commence our discussion with the appellant’s filing of a 2-count amended complaint against the defendant-appellee (M. Mark Mendel, Esquire). The first count sounded in libel and the second in slander, and in each the plaintiff sought in excess of $20,000 for compensatory damages as well as an equal amount in punitive or exemplary damages.

In particular, the libel section averred the composition of a defamatory letter by the defendant, copies of which were mailed to a Bucks County judge (before whom the two were embroiled in litigation as opposing counsel), to the Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania and to a William H. Simon, M.D., a supposed client of the plaintiff and a witness in the on-going Bucks County suit. The letter, with the legend “M. MARK MENDEL, LTD.” and a listing of the 7-member firm, read:

September 17, 1981
Barton L. Post, Esquire
Post and Schell
12th Floor
210 West Washington Square
Philadelphia, Pa. 19106
Re: Your Conduct During The Course of This Trial.
Dear Mr. Post:
I have allowed the heat of anger to pass and under calm reflection, I have re-assessed what you did during the course of the examination of Dr. Beller when you insinuated that the doctor had two different reports and that there were two different reports, attempted to convey to the jury by use of the reports that the doctor had done an unethical act by writing two different reports when, in fact, you knew that there were two different reports, one being a supplement to the other. One was requested at the insistence of your partner, Mr. Arthur Toensmeir, and while Dr. Beller was testifying, you objected to my straightening the matter out, refused to stipulate that the three'letters, which are now Court exhibits (Nos. 1, 2 and *471 3) existed, and refused to stipulate, compounding your nefarious tactics in violation of the Canons in that those letters existed. Thus, your refusal to acknowledge what you had done was a patent, deceptive, nefarious act, calculated to deceive the Court and mislead the jury. There have been since that occurrence five trial days since you comported yourself in an unlawyerlike manner and have now compounded the matter by not only deceiving the Court, but allowing an expert to perjure himself with your assistance and aid. While Dr. Simon was on the stand, upon inquiry whether or not you represented him, you engaged and asked the Court to give him certain instructions or that you wished to confer with him. Dr. Simon elected, after the Court gave him an opportunity to indicate and candidly reveal your representation of him, a fact which would effect his prejudice and bias, to deny such representation when, in fact, you have represented him since March 5, 1981, in the matter of Mildred Wilson v. William H. Simon et al., Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, February Term 1981, No. 4306. You stood idly by while the jury and the Court were deceived. As an officer of the Court, that conduct is abhorrent and is a violation of four Canons — D.R. 1-101 —maintaining of integrity and competence of the profession; D.R. 7-102, Sections 3, 4 and 5, wherein you concealed and knowingly failed to disclose that which you are required by law to reveal where you knowingly used pequred testimony or false evidence and where you knowingly in your presence allowed a false statement of law and fact, and remained silent.
Under the circumstances, I hereby notice [sic] you that I intend to proceed with this matter to the Disciplinary Board irrespective of any outcome of this case. As an officer of the Court, I do not choose to practice with individuals who comport themselves in this manner and you are not fit to share a court room with any lawyer who at least has sufficient respect for the law to be at all times candid.
*472 You may not like my style, but I do not lie, sir — something that you, throughout this trial, have done. This serves notice on you. Since you have said that I “try by intimidation,” I assure you this is not intimidation; this is simply an obligation which I, as an officer of the Court, must fulfill so that piranhas like you are removed from the practice of law.
Respectfully,
/s/ M. Mark Mendel
M. Mark Mendel
MMM/cb
cc: Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court
Honorable George T. Kelton
William H. Simon, M.D.
As for the content of the slander count, the plaintiff asserted, in relevant part, that:
14. .. at various times and various places during September and October of 1981 defendant orally made statements that were slanderous and defamatory of plaintiff including statements that defendant [sic — plaintiff] in the course of the practice of his legal profession was guilty of nefarious tactics, had intentionally attempted to deceive the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County and a judge and a jury of that Court, had acted in an unlawyerlike manner, had permitted and encouraged the commission of perjury, that plaintiff was a liar and that plaintiff had lied throughout the course of the trial, that plaintiff lacked the integrity required of those practicing [in] the legal profession, that plaintiff was unfit to practice his profession, and that plaintiff had knowingly presented and used perjured testimony.
15. Plaintiff is advised, believes, and avers that the aforesaid statements were made, inter alia, to other attorneys and to officers and employees of the Court of Common Pleas of Bucks County, whose identities are presently unknown to plaintiff, outside of the course and of the proceedings of the trial referred to [as Edwards v. Hansen, CP Bucks County No. 76-2100-03-2 and being *473 heard by Judge Kelton], from on or about September 16, 1981 to on or about September 25, 1981, and at various times which are at present unknown to plaintiff including inter alia at and during the Bench Bar Conference and thereafter, to various other members of the legal profession and to persons who were clients or potential clients of plaintiff or who had or potentially might have professional associations with plaintiff, the identities of those members and other persons being presently unknown to plaintiff.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
485 A.2d 1176, 336 Pa. Super. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/post-v-mendel-pa-1985.