Waddington v. Waddington

624 A.2d 667, 624 A.2d 657, 425 Pa. Super. 241, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1557
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedMay 12, 1993
DocketNos. 00702 and 00708
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 624 A.2d 667 (Waddington v. Waddington) 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
Waddington v. Waddington, 624 A.2d 667, 624 A.2d 657, 425 Pa. Super. 241, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1557 (Pa. Ct. App. 1993).

Opinion

TAMILIA, Judge.

Katrina V. Waddington, wife, appeals the Order of March 18, 1992, which acknowledged the June 8, 1990 Order as binding (No. 702 Pittsburgh, 1992), and the Divorce Decree filed April 6, 1992 and made retroactive to July 8, 1990 (No. 703 Pittsburgh, 1992).

Following four hearings based upon husband’s, Robert S. Waddington’s, complaint and amended complaint in divorce, the Master filed a special report including the following recommendations which were subject of wife’s exceptions and are now subject of this appeal: 1) all rights to husband’s pension (which was not valued) should be distributed to husband; 2) wife would be required to pay husband $16,666.67, that is, a one-third share of the value of the marital home; 3) husband’s payment of alimony pendente lite at the rate of $500 per month would cease April 30, 1990; and 4) husband would pay $2,000 for wife’s costs, and counsel fees. On June 8, 1990, the trial court entered an Order and supporting memorandum confirming the Master’s report in its entirety and dismissing [243]*243wife’s exceptions. Wife filed a petition for reconsideration under Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(3)(ii), Effect of Appeal Generally, on June 25, 1990. On that same date, the trial court filed a rule to show cause why the petition for Order granting reconsideration should not be granted and scheduled a hearing for July 2, 1990. ■ Apparently because wife’s attorney requested a continuance, said hearing did not occur and was never rescheduled thereafter (H.T., 3/18/92, p. 4). The matter lay dormant until December 18, 1991, when husband filed a petition for modification/termination of spousal support and a petition for Order for special relief under Pa.R.C.P. 1920.43, Special Relief, requesting therein that the court enter a final divorce decree and an Order making final the Master’s report and recommendations.

On March 18, 1992, following oral arguments on husband’s petitions, the court entered an Order finding that since no Order of reconsideration had been entered within thirty (30) days of the June 8, 1990 Order, it lost jurisdiction to further reconsider the case’s merits. The court found the effect of the June 8th Order to be binding and further ordered that the divorce be granted effective July 8, 1990, the final day of the 30-day appeal period. The court reasoned:

This Court notes that although we have used the word “affirmed” in this order, we believe that we have have [sic] affirmed nothing since we lack jurisdiction of this matter to entertain it on either the merits or on an equitable status. We acknowledge, in our judgment, that this matter became final on July 8, 1990, rendering both parties in contempt[,] we would reasonably expeet[,] for failure to abide the time periods during which certain things were likely to have been required of each after the passage of the appeal period on July 8, 1990. Since neither party has requested a finding of contempt and each has waited for the resolution of this issue, we exercise our own sound judgment, an exercise of judicial economy, by reinstituting (affirming) the Master’s Report as of this date to avoid contempt petitions which would be denied by this Court in any event on the fact of the record, both parties having awaited this decision.

[244]*244(Order, Carpenter, III, J., 3/18/92, p. 3.) Thereafter, on April 6, 1992, the court made final the divorce decree retroactive to July 8, 1990.

In addition to the allegations of error noted in her exceptions, supra, wife now argues the court erred in entering the divorce decree retroactively since, by so doing, wife’s right to due process was violated. She contends that since no final divorce decree was filed until recently, she never had the ability to appeal the equitable distribution findings, and a retroactive decree leaves her "without any remedy to appeal from the loss of her property rights.

Husband counters the court’s action was proper since no Order of reconsideration was entered within the 30-day period following the court’s Order of June 8, 1990 which confirmed the Master’s report and dismissed wife’s exceptions thereto. He argues the court correctly determined the effective date of the final divorce decree to be the date said decree could have been entered since both parties had lost any further rights of review.

While we recognize the basis for husband’s reasoning, we do not accept his ultimate conclusion. Retroactivity could be construed to be proper to avoid the consequence of an intervening marriage, but for purposes of appeal and distribution of marital'property, the effective date of the decree is the date it was filed by the trial court. Although appellant claims an appeal was filed in this Court and was quashed (Appellant’s brief, pp. 5, 8), appellant has not included a copy of the filed notice of appeal nor has she supplied us with an appeal number. Moreover, our review of the trial court’s docket entries and the record and our search of the indexing system/computerized files of this Court in our prothonotary’s office fails to disclose the filing of a previous appeal. This, however, is of no consequence to the wife’s right of appeal in this matter, as such an appeal would have been interlocutory and subject to quash or dismissal pending entrance of a final decree of divorce.

Pursuant to the trial court’s theory, under Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(3)(H) a timely ... within the 30 days and failure of the [245]*245court to grant reconsideration expressly within the 30-day period does not work as an extension of the appeal time and must be treated as a denial of reconsideration. Schoff v. Richter, 386 Pa.Super. 289, 562 A.2d 912 (1989). As discussed below, however, Rule 1701(b)(3)(ii) is not applicable in this situation and does not result in the loss of jurisdiction by the court or the loss of the right to appeal by the appellant. The Divorce Code has uniquely provided for the resolution of this issue. While the Master may be appointed pursuant to 23 Pa.C.S. § 3321, Hearing by master, to take testimony and make a report and findings, either party may demand a hearing de novo before the court. When the court, following exceptions by the wife, filed an Order and supporting Memorandum confirming the Master’s report and dismissing wife’s exceptions, all that remained to be done was entry of the decree by the court. The petition for reconsideration was redundant and unnecessary and Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(3)(ii) doe's not apply.

Rule 1920.55, Master’s report. Notice. Exceptions. Final Decree, provides:

(c) If exceptions are filed ... the court shall hear argument on the exceptions within ten days and enter an appropriate final decree. No motion for Posfi-Trial Relief may be filed to the final decree.

It, therefore, follows that the court in this case should have entered its decree following argument on the exceptions and appeal would lie directly from the decree. Despite the erroneous finding by the trial court that it lost jurisdiction of the matter after thirty days, it in fact had jurisdiction to enter the decree at any time.

In a very similar case, Campbell v. Campbell, 357 Pa.Super. 483, 516 A.2d 363 (1986) (en banc), we found that pursuant to Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(6), the court may “(6) [p]roceed further in any matter in which a nonappealable interlocutory order has been entered, notwithstanding the filing of a

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Bluebook (online)
624 A.2d 667, 624 A.2d 657, 425 Pa. Super. 241, 1993 Pa. Super. LEXIS 1557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waddington-v-waddington-pasuperct-1993.