Wade v. Field & Country Meadows of Hershey

30 Pa. D. & C.5th 299
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County
DecidedMay 23, 2013
DocketNo. 2004 CV 2720 CV
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 30 Pa. D. & C.5th 299 (Wade v. Field & Country Meadows of Hershey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Dauphin County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wade v. Field & Country Meadows of Hershey, 30 Pa. D. & C.5th 299 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2013).

Opinion

TURGEON, J.,

— The issue presented in this case is whether a judgment creditor can garnish funds the judgment debtor prepaid to an assisted living facility for anticipated future expenses. As set forth below, I find that the prepaid monies are subject to garnishment under the facts presented and accordingly deny the garnishee’s petition to strike or open the judgment entered by admission upon a writ of execution.

Procedural and Factual Background

Plaintiffs Jerome and Cheryl Wade, husband and wife, initially brought this action in 2004 against Marjorie and Wendy Field, mother and daughter, to recover damages for breach of contract and in tort. With regard to Marj orie Field (hereinafter “defendant”), who bought and sold jewelry, plaintiffs alleged that she knowingly sold them numerous counterfeit and fake reproduction jewelry pieces over the course of a few years. They alleged as well that she failed to pay them $71,650 on a $ 100,000 personal loan they had extended to her in December 2000.

On October 24, 2011, just prior to trial, the plaintiffs and defendant Marjorie Field entered into a stipulated judgment for $228,651 in plaintiffs’ favor.1 At the time the [302]*302judgment was entered, defendant was 90 years old and allegedly incapacitated due to Alzheimer’s. She was then a resident at Country Meadows of Hershey, an assisted care facility where she had been residing since November 29, 2007.

On November 17, 2011, plaintiffs filed a praecipe to enter judgment against defendant upon the stipulated judgment as well as a writ of execution with interrogatories against Country Meadows of Hershey, as garnishee, directing the sheriff to attach property of the defendant in Country Meadows’ possession.2 Following service of the writ and interrogatories, Vincent Mizak, a Country Meadows’ senior vice president of finance, answered the interrogatories on Country Meadows’ behalf. He identified defendant’s “prepayment” funds as “maintained in a Country Meadows bank account” and that “the total amount of prepayment being held for Ms. Field amounts to $50,604.36.” (Joint exbt. 1 (Mizak dep. exbt. 3)) He explained that the funds had been provided by defendant to Country Meadows under her Resident Agreement with Country Meadows, which allows a resident to pay in advance towards anticipated future services. (Id.) Mizak explained that “[t]he residual value [prepayment] is maintained in a Country Meadows bank account until the resident moves from the facility at which time the remaining balance is refunded.” (Id.) Mizak also attached copies of two Citizens Bank Official Checks (i.e. teller’s checks) which he identified as the source of the prepayment funds.

[303]*303Based upon Mizak’s responses to the Interrogatories, which plaintiffs considered an “admission,” judgment was entered January 6,2012 against Country Meadows as garnishee for $50,604.36. On January 17,2012, defendant filed an application for stay and to set aside plaintiffs’ writ of execution, as against garnishee Country Meadows. Plaintiffs filed a timely response including an assertion that the two prepayments made to Country Meadows were a deliberate attempt to hide or shield defendant’s assets from plaintiffs. Following a conference with the parties, I denied defendant’s application for stay, June 1, 2012.3 Neither defendant nor Country Meadows filed an appeal from the entry of this order.

On July 2, 2012, Country Meadows filed a petition to strike or open the January 6, 2012 judgment entered against it as garnishee. At the hearing on the petition, the parties submitted into the record Mizak’s deposition as well as other exhibits. The relevant evidence submitted included the following:

Defendant’s resident agreement with Country Meadows permitted prepayment of services, as follows:

Payments in Advance. [Country Meadows] has established a special program for residents who pay in advance, one time each year, their entire Customized Service Rate for a twelve-month period. If You wish to participate, [Country Meadows] agrees to pay You six percent (6%) simple interest on the unearned balance [304]*304of the year’s customized Service Rate. Interest shall be credited monthly to Your account or, if our Agreement is terminated, principal and interest shall be paid at that time....

(Joint exbt. 2 (Application for stay, exbt. A (¶ E.2.12))) The resident agreement also included provisions in two other clauses that provided any unapplied (pre)payments made to Country Meadows would be refunded upon the resident’s decision to terminate the agreement and vacate the premises, or upon the resident’s death. (Id. exbt. A (¶G.3 and G.4))

Mizak testified at his deposition that Country Meadows provided monthly account statements to all residents, including defendant. These statements clearly identified the amount of any prepayment as a credit to the resident’s account, monthly interest earned on the prepayment and charges incurred. (Joint exbt. 1 (Mizak dep. at 33, 37 and dep. exbts. 2, 4)) All prepaid monies received by Country Meadows were placed in Country Meadows’ corporate operating account. (Id. (Mizak dep. at 29-30 and dep. exbts. 1, 2))

In June or July 2012, defendant’s son applied for aid from Country Meadows on his mother’s behalf seeking a reduced monthly fee. In the application, he indicated he had made the prepayment to Country Meadows on his mother’s behalf, explaining as follows: “when my mother’s lawsuit was ended I sold he[r] stock and prepaid total balance to Country Meadows also prepaid all her bank balances to Country Meadows ...” (Id. (Mizak dep. exbt. 4))

With regard to the two prepayments, the first was [305]*305made on September 27, 2011, just a few weeks before defendant’s attorney agreed to the entry of the stipulated judgment on defendant’s behalf in the underlying lawsuit, for $228,651. This first payment received was a Citizens Bank teller’s check for $43,175.37. According to Mizak, Country Meadows designated $28,318 as prepayment and the remainder applied to charges already incurred by defendant. (Id. (Mizak dep. at 21, 24 and dep. exbt. 1)) On November 7, 2011, just two weeks following entry of the stipulated judgment, Country Meadows received a second Citizens Bank teller’s check for $31,432.73 on defendant’s behalf. Country Meadows designated the entire amount of the second check as a prepayment since defendant was current on her payments. (Id. (Mizak dep. at 27-28 and dep. exbt. 2)) As of the date of the second check, these were the only prepayments defendant had ever made to Country Meadows since beginning her residency there in November 2007. {Id. (Mizak dep. at 29))

Legal Discussion

The issues presented by garnishee Country Meadows in its petition strike or open judgment, as supplemented at oral argument, are that (1) the judgment by admission should be stricken because the face of the record does not clearly show that Country Meadows admitted in its answers to interrogatories that it. possessed property belonging to defendant (Petition to strike ¶¶ 7-18); (2) the judgment should be opened because the record offered into evidence does not show that the prepaid monies were defendant’s property but instead belonged to Country Meadows (Petition to open ¶¶ 20-21 and N.T.

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Bluebook (online)
30 Pa. D. & C.5th 299, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wade-v-field-country-meadows-of-hershey-pactcompldauphi-2013.