Springborn v. Springborn

7 Pa. D. & C.5th 317
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County
DecidedFebruary 23, 2009
Docketno. 04-15734#1
StatusPublished

This text of 7 Pa. D. & C.5th 317 (Springborn v. Springborn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Berks County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Springborn v. Springborn, 7 Pa. D. & C.5th 317 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

KELLER, J.,

The defendant/appellant in the above captioned case appeals this court’s order of November 25,2008 granting the parties a divorce [319]*319and equitably dividing the marital property. The current appeal was filed by appellant’s counsel, Alan B. Ziegler, Esquire on December 26, 2008.

On January 7,2009, this court issued an order pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) directing the appellant in the above captioned case to file of record and serve upon this court a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal no later than 21 days after the date of that order. The concise statement was filed on January 21,2009 and raises a multitude of issues on appeal, indeed, it is not so concise a statement at all. Those issues, though long and containing run-on sentences that would cause an English professor to shudder on sight, are set forth fully below. They are:

“(1) Did the master and the lower court err in failing to fix the value of the marital home at 40 Beach Road, Mohnton, Berks County, Pennsylvania in the amount of $23 8,000 as established by the expert testimony of James McDevitt, the value being fixed in October 2005 when the husband repaired said property and moved out of the property so that it could be sold when the market in October 2005 to sell real estate was very good, but thereafter Wife changed her mind, refused to sell the property, moved back into the marital property, brought cats into the property which urinated on the rugs in the property and delayed the sale of the marital property until she again changed her mind and desired to sell the property, at which time the real estate market had substantially weakened?
“(2) Did the master and the lower court err in concluding ‘the master has averaged the (oral) offers that have been made on the house, and has determined that the average is $213,000. The master therefore believes it [320]*320would be equitable that the parties accept an offer for the house that meets or exceed [sic] the market value. The master believes that $213,00 [sic] is the market value of the home since it represents the results of five (oral) offers from five prospective buys in the open market?’
“(3) Did the master err in finding ‘Husband has refused to agree to sell the property because he wants more money than potential buys are offering’ and that Husband was ‘at fault’ in causing the property to have been on the market for an extended period of time?
“(4) The master and the lower court [erred] in finding ‘regarding the $6,000 escrow account that was to be funded by Wife, the master realizes that the $6,000 is Wife’s money, and not marital funds’ when the above sum was the estimated equity in the marital property, where the Wife was deeded sole title to the marital property in return for escrowing the sum and sold said marital property for a profit and therefore Husband received no equity from sale of the marital residence.
“(5) Did the master and the lower court err in concluding ‘the master therefore finds that since the payoff of the loans resulted in the $ 17,000.17 value as of April 20, 2005, the actual marital value of Wife’s 401k plan as of the date of final separation is $13,256.23’ rather then [sic] $27,000 as valued at time of trial?
“(6) Did the Honorable Scott Lash, the divorce master, and the Honorable Scott Keller err in failing to grant defendant’s motion for summary judgment and err in failing to grant defendant’s request for reasonable attorney’s fees when the plaintiff filed a petition for special relief to force the specific performance for the sale of the marital property at 40 Beach Road, Mohnton, Berks [321]*321County, Pennsylvania without enclosing therein a written agreement of sale for the purchase of said property in violation of the statute of frauds and when she withdrew the petition for special relief to avoid the court granting the motion for summary judgment and when the master failed to award attorney’s fees pursuant to the June 29, 2007 order of court?
“(7) Did the master and the lower court err in failing to award reasonable attorney’s fees to defendant by using an improper analysis for whether to award attorney’s fees? The factors to be reviewed in fixing attorney’s fees are the payer’s ability to pay, the requesting party’s financial resources, the value of the services rendered and the property received in equitable distribution.
“(8) Did the master and the lower court err in considering the testimony of Ann Springborn, North West, Lee Savant and Rita Savant concerning alleged martial misconduct concerning arguments that the plaintiff and defendant had and other alleged incidents more thoroughly enumerated herein since the testimony did not rise to the level of being marital misconduct as set forth in section 3701 of the Divorce Code, was not relevant to the case and was the basis for the mater’s [sic] justification of disregarding the testimony of the wife’s continual sexual infidelity to Husband during the marriage?
“(9) Did the master and the lower court err in refusing to direct Lee J. Savant and Rita Savant to testify whether Linda Springborn, plaintiff, was a beneficiary of their will, a beneficiary of their life insurance policy, a beneficiary of their retirement, a beneficiary of their Keogh plan and/or a beneficiary of their pension plan?
[322]*322“(10) Did the master and the lower court err in limiting the defendant/husband’s alimony from his wife to two years based on the circumstances of the case where Husband showed an overwhelming case for alimony and when the master and the lower court considered improper testimony presented by the wife and because the master and the lower court refused to admit and consider relevant testimony?
“(11) Did the lower court violate due process and equal protection under the Pennsylvania and United States Constitutions after the defendant filed a ‘motion to order production of transcription of record and refund of overpayment of transcription costs’ when the court did engage in the following:
“(a) signed an ‘order rule to show cause’ scheduling an ‘evidentiary hearing in disputed issues of material fact ... to be held on May 6, 2008, at 1:30 o’clock p.m., in courtroom 9 of Berks County Courthouse,’ but did not require the other parties to file an answer to the ‘motion to order production of transcription of record and refund of overpayment of transcriptions costs’ so that one could not determine what disputed facts had to be determined at the hearing;
“(b) failed to accept in the ‘motion to order production of transcription of record and refund of overpayment of transcription costs’ as admitted fact herein since no answers were filed to said motion;
“(c) failed to take testimony under oath;
“(d) failed to give the defendant credit in the transcription costs, appearance fee paid by plaintiff and defendant for July 17, 2007, August 17, 2007 and September 13, 2007 hearings so the defendant paid an excessive fee to have these records transcribed;
[323]

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Bluebook (online)
7 Pa. D. & C.5th 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/springborn-v-springborn-pactcomplberks-2009.