J. A15006/16
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION – SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
MARTHA GALARZA-PADRON AND : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
ABEL PADRON (H/W), : PENNSYLVANIA
:
Appellants :
:
v. :
:
MARY KIRKALDIE, EXECUTRIX OF THE : No. 1658 EDA 2015
ESTATE OF LOUIS KIRKALDIE AND :
MARY KIRKALDIE :
Appeal from the Judgment Entered May 12, 2015,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County
Civil Division at No. 2013-11961
MARTHA GALARZA-PADRON AND : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
ABEL PADRON (H/W), : PENNSYLVANIA
:
Appellants :
:
v. :
:
MARY KIRKALDIE, EXECUTRIX OF THE : No. 3323 EDA 2015
ESTATE OF LOUIS KIRKALDIE AND :
MARY KIRKALDIE :
Appeal from the Order, October 7, 2015,
in the Court of Common Pleas of Chester County
Civil Division at No. 2013-11961
BEFORE: FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E., DUBOW AND JENKINS, JJ.
MEMORANDUM BY FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.: FILED SEPTEMBER 23, 2016
J. A15006/16
Martha Galarza-Padron and Abel Padron, husband and wife, appeal
from the judgment entered May 12, 2015, and the order entered October 7,
2015. The appeal at No. 1658 EDA 2015 has been taken from the May 12,
2015 order granting summary judgment and dismissing with prejudice all
claims against Louis Kirkaldie, the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie, and
Mary Kirkaldie, in her capacity as personal representative of the Estate. The
appeal at No. 3323 EDA 2015 has been taken from the October 7, 2015
order sustaining the preliminary objections of Mary Kirkaldie and dismissing
with prejudice all claims against her in her individual capacity. These
appeals were consolidated sua sponte. After careful review, we affirm.
The procedural history of this matter was set forth by the trial court in
its October 7, 2015 order sustaining Mary Kirkaldie’s preliminary objections
in the nature of a demurrer:
This action arises out of a motor vehicle
accident that occurred on December 23, 2011
involving Louis Kirkaldie and plaintiff Martha
Galarza-Padron. Defendant Mary Kirkaldie, in her
individual capacity, has filed preliminary objections in
the nature of a demurrer to all claims against her.
This case has a lengthy procedural history.
1. Procedural History
As noted above, the accident at the center of
this case occurred on December 23, 2011.
Louis Kirkaldie died on September 19, 2012, due to
reasons unrelated to the accident. (See Defs.’ Prel.
Obj. at ¶2.). Plaintiffs commenced this action on
December 13, 2013, by filing a Writ of Summons.
The Writ named as defendants Louis and
Mary Kirkaldie, as husband and wife. On
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December 23, 2013, the day the statute of
limitations was to run, plaintiffs filed a “Summons in
Civil Action for Additional Defendant,” which was
issued to the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie (the “Estate”).
The Writs were then re-issued approximately every
thirty days between January, 2014 and October,
2014.
Plaintiffs finally filed a complaint on
October 29, 2014. The complaint then named as
defendants Mary Kirkaldie as Executrix of the Estate
of Louis Kirkaldie and Mary Kirkaldie, individually. At
the same time, plaintiffs filed a “Praecipe to Amend
Caption of Complaint in Civil Action” requesting the
Prothonotary amend the defendants’ side of the
caption to change it from Louis Kirkaldie and
Mary Kirkadlie [sic] (h/w) and Estate of
Louis Kirkaldie to Mary Kirkaldie, as Executrix of the
Estate of Louis Kirkaldie and Mary Kirkaldie,
Individually. Moving Defendants acknowledge that
the praecipe was filed with the consent of the
parties. Thereafter, Defendants Louis Kirkaldie and
Mary Kirkaldie, as Executrix of the Estate of
Louis Kirkaldie, filed an Answer and New Matter and
asserted as a defense the statute of limitations.
Defendants Louis Kirkaldie and Mary Kirkaldie, as
Executrix of the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie, eventually
filed a motion for summary judgment based upon
the statute of limitations, and the court granted the
motion on May 12, 2015. On June 11, 2015,
plaintiffs appealed the court’s summary judgment
order.
On June 25, 2015, Ms. Kirkaldie’s present
counsel entered his appearance in this matter. On
July 2, 2015, Ms. Kirkaldie filed preliminary
objections to plaintiffs’ complaint. According to
Ms. Kirkaldie, although plaintiffs claim in various
portions of their complaint that Ms. Kirkaldie was
negligent, the only specific, factual allegations
against her are that she was the wife of the [sic]
Mr. Kirkaldie and was the holder of an excess
insurance policy that potentially covers the accident.
Ms. Kirkaldie requested oral argument on her
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preliminary objections, the court then scheduled
[oral argument].
Plaintiffs failed to file a response of any kind to
Ms. Kirkaldie’s preliminary objections. Plaintiff[s] did
attend the oral argument.
Order, 10/7/15 at 1-2 n.1; Docket #39.
On October 30, 2015, appellants filed a timely notice of appeal from
the October 7, 2015 order. Appellants have complied with
Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b), and the trial court has filed Rule 1925(a) opinions
addressing both the May 12, 2015, and October 7, 2015 orders.
Appellants have raised the following issues for this court’s review:
1. Did the trial court abuse its discretion or err as
a matter of law by granting summary
judgment when the record established that:
• Plaintiffs had filed suit against the
administrator of the estate of the
driver of the vehicle that collided with
plaintiff’s vehicle;
• The lawsuit was filed within the
applicable statute of limitations;
• The estate of the deceased driver
was opened within the applicable
statute of limitations;
• Plaintiffs filed a Praecipe to Join the
estate of the deceased driver as a
party within the applicable statute of
limitations; and,
• The Complaint alleged claims against
the estate?
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2. Alternatively, does a Summons, which names
an Estate and the Executrix of the Estate as
Defendants, but does not identify the Executrix
in that capacity until the Complaint is filed, set
forth a valid cause of action under 20 Pa.C.S.
§3373, which requires that an action be
brought against a personal representative but
does not require that the action specify that
the personal representative is being named as
a defendant in that capacity?
Appellants’ brief at 4.
In a supplemental brief, appellants raise the following additional issue:
1. Does a trial court have jurisdiction over
Preliminary Objections while the case is on
appeal to the Superior Court from an Order
granting Summary Judgment in the same
proceeding?
Appellants’ supplemental brief at 4.
We will briefly address appellants’ last issue first. In its opinion filed
June 29, 2015, the trial court opined that the May 12, 2015 summary
judgment order was interlocutory. The May 12, 2015 order dismissed any
and all claims against Louis Kirkaldie, the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie, and
Mary Kirkaldie, in her capacity as personal representative of the Estate of
Louis Kirkaldie; however, the May 12, 2015 order did not dismiss appellants’
claims against Mary Kirkaldie, individually. Therefore, according to the trial
court, the May 12, 2015 order did not end the litigation as to all
claims/parties and was not a final order. (Trial court opinion, 6/29/15 at
1-2.) It is well established that an order granting judgment against one
defendant but leaving pending the complaint against other defendants is not
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a final order. Pa.R.A.P. 341. See Estate of Considine v. Wachovia Bank,
966 A.2d 1148, 1153 (Pa.Super. 2009) (order granting summary judgment
to one of multiple defendants not subject to interlocutory appeal as of right).
Since, according to the trial court, the May 12, 2015 order was not a final
order appealable as of right, then it retained jurisdiction to rule on
Mary Kirkaldie’s preliminary objections filed July 7, 2015.
Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(6); see Deeter v. Dull Corp., Inc., 617 A.2d 336,
338 n.3 (Pa.Super. 1992), appeal denied, 629 A.2d 1380 (Pa. 1993)
(plaintiffs’ notice of appeal from nonappealable interlocutory order did not
prevent trial court from accepting untimely amended complaint and
dismissing it for failure to state cause of action). Appellants counter that the
May 12, 2015 order was a final order because the remaining claim against
Mary Kirkaldie, individually, was “illusory.” (Appellants’ supplemental brief
at 9.) Appellants state that Louis Kirkaldie was driving the vehicle in the
underlying accident and that they did not assert any negligence claims
directly against Mary Kirkaldie. (Appellants’ brief at 7.) The only allegations
in the complaint against Mary Kirkaldie were in her capacity as executrix of
the Estate and for potential excess insurance coverage. (Id.) Appellants
cite Breslin v. Ridarelli, 454 A.2d 80 (Pa.Super. 1982), for the proposition
that “the happenstance of a spousal relationship does not per se impose
liability upon a spouse for the other spouse’s negligence.” (Appellants’
supplemental brief at 9.) See Breslin, 454 A.2d at 83 (“Negligence will not
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be imputed to the husband of a motorist where the uncontradicted evidence
is that the motorist was on a mission of her own and that her husband had
not ordered or requested her to do any thing for him.” (citation omitted)).
Here, appellants alleged in their complaint that Louis Kirkaldie ran a
stop sign and struck plaintiff-wife, Martha Galarza-Padron, pushing her
vehicle across the road and into a utility pole. Appellants alleged, inter
alia, that Louis Kirkaldie was inattentive and traveling too fast for the
conditions. There were no allegations of a master/servant or principal/agent
relationship, or that Louis Kirkaldie was acting at his wife’s direction. See
Breslin, 454 A.2d at 83 (“Although such relations, legally speaking, may
exist between a husband and wife, it is only in rare instances that they
do.”). As such, appellants argue that the May 12, 2015 order granting
summary judgment disposed of all viable claims against Mary Kirkaldie and
was in reality a final and appealable order, which divested the trial court of
jurisdiction. (Appellants’ supplemental brief at 10.)
Even assuming, as the trial court determined, that the May 12, 2015
summary judgment order was not a final order because Mary Kirkaldie,
individually, remained in the case, there is no jurisdictional impediment to
our review because the October 7, 2015 order sustaining Mary Kirkaldie’s
preliminary objections in the nature of a demurrer ended the case and put
the litigants out of court. Therefore, the October 7, 2015 order rendered the
May 12, 2015 partial summary judgment order final for appeal purposes.
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See K.H. v. J.R., 826 A.2d 863, 869 (Pa. 2003) (“Thus, in an action
involving multiple defendants, and in the absence of an express
determination by the trial court under Rule 341(c), an order granting
summary judgment as to one party is treated as appealable as of right only
after the disposition of the claims involving the remaining parties. See
generally Gutteridge v. A.P. Green Servs., Inc., 804 A.2d 643, 650
(Pa.Super. 2002) (stating that an order settling a case as to the remaining
parties rendered the prior orders granting summary judgment final under
Rule 341).”).
Alternatively, even if the May 12, 2015 order was a final order because
the claims against Mary Kirkaldie, individually, were “illusory,” as appellants
argue, and therefore, the trial court lacked jurisdiction to rule on
Mary Kirkaldie’s July 2, 2015 preliminary objections, the matter is basically
moot. Appellants failed to respond to Mary Kirkaldie’s preliminary
objections, and they concede on appeal that their negligence claims against
Mary Kirkaldie were based solely upon Louis Kirkaldie’s negligence in the
underlying accident. (Appellants’ brief at 14.) There were no factual
allegations in the complaint connecting Mary Kirkaldie to appellants or the
subject accident. The only facts alleged were that she was Louis Kirkaldie’s
wife and was the policyholder of excess liability coverage. According to
appellants, by barring them from proceeding against Mary Kirkaldie in her
role as executrix of the Estate, the trial court effectively determined the
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rights of the parties and extinguished all of appellants’ viable claims.
(Appellants’ brief at 13.)
We now turn to appellants’ primary argument on appeal, which is that
by naming Mary Kirkaldie and the Estate as defendants before the statute of
limitations ran, they satisfied 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 3373, which provides, “An
action or proceeding to enforce any right or liability which survives a
decedent may be brought by or against his personal representative alone or
with other parties as though the decedent were alive.” Appellants argue that
the statute merely requires that the action be brought against the
decedent’s personal representative, not that a defendant be named in that
role. (Appellants’ brief at 18.) According to appellants, “The statute does
not require, or render it a fatal defect, if the caption does not state that the
person is named as a defendant in his or her capacity as the personal
representative.” (Id.) Therefore, appellants argue that the trial court
should have focused on whether they listed the personal representative of
the Estate as a defendant, which they did. (Id. at 17.) Appellants argue
that it was not a fatal defect that they did not identify Mary Kirkaldie in her
capacity as executrix until after the statute of limitations had expired, and
therefore, the trial court erred in granting summary judgment. (Id. at
16-17.) We disagree.
Th[e] scope of review of an order granting summary
judgment is plenary. Our standard of review is
clear: the trial court’s order will be reversed only
where it is established that the court committed an
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error of law or clearly abused its discretion.
Summary judgment is appropriate only in those
cases where the record clearly demonstrates that
there is no genuine issue of material fact and that
the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
of law. The reviewing court must view the record in
the light most favorable to the nonmoving party,
resolving all doubts as to the existence of a genuine
issue of material fact against the moving party.
When the facts are so clear that reasonable minds
cannot differ, a trial court may properly enter
summary judgment.
Atcovitz v. Gulph Mills Tennis Club, Inc., 812 A.2d 1218, 1221-1222
(Pa. 2002).
As stated above, the accident in this case occurred on December 23,
2011. Louis Kirkaldie died on September 19, 2012, and an Estate was
raised on August 13, 2013. Appellants filed a writ of summons on
December 13, 2013, naming Louis and Mary Kirkaldie as defendants.
However, it is well settled that an action filed against a dead person is void
ab initio. See Custren v. Curtis, 572 A.2d 1290, 1291 (Pa.Super. 1990),
appeal denied, 593 A.2d 419 (Pa. 1991) (“A dead man cannot be a party
to an action, and any such attempted proceeding against him is completely
void and of no effect.” (citations omitted)).
On December 23, 2013, the day the statute of limitations was to
expire, appellants filed a “Summons in Civil Action for Additional Defendant,”
issued to the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie. However, appellants did not name
Mary Kirkaldie, in her capacity as personal representative of the Estate, as a
defendant. See Nelson v. Estate of Massey, 686 A.2d 1350, 1351
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(Pa.Super. 1996), appeal denied, 694 A.2d 622 (Pa. 1997) (estate of the
decedent is not a proper party-defendant; rather, any action that survives a
decedent must be brought by or against the personal representative), citing
Finn v. Dugan, 394 A.2d 595, 596 (Pa.Super. 1978); Marzella v. King,
389 A.2d 659, 660 (Pa.Super. 1978) (“It is well settled that all actions that
survive a decedent must be brought by or against the personal
representative.”) (citations omitted).
Appellants finally filed a complaint on October 29, 2014, outside the
applicable 2-year statute of limitations, naming as defendants Mary Kirkaldie
as Executrix of the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie and Mary Kirkaldie, Individually.
They also filed a praecipe to amend the caption, requesting the prothonotary
to amend the defendants’ side of the caption from Louis Kirkaldie and
Mary Kirkaldie (h/w) and Estate of Louis Kirkaldie, to Mary Kirkaldie, as
Executrix of the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie and Mary Kirkaldie, Individually.
Unfortunately for appellants, it was too late to amend the caption at that
point, as the statute of limitations had run. Marzella, supra (affirming trial
court’s order granting defendants’ motions to dismiss and denying plaintiffs
leave to amend their complaint, after the running of the statute of
limitations, to name the administrator of the estate as a party, where they
knew the decedent had died when they filed the praecipe for writ of
summons naming the estate as a defendant, but made no effort to revise
the praecipe to designate the administrator as a party); Finn, supra (an
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amendment to the complaint to later name the personal representative of
the estate could not be made since the statute of limitations had run);
Thompson v. Peck, 181 A. 597, 598 (Pa. 1935) (reversing an order
granting the plaintiff’s petition to name the decedent defendant’s executors
as the proper parties after the running of the statute of limitations, stating,
“[t]here can be no amendment where there is nothing to amend. In any
event, an amendment, the effect of which is to bring in new parties after the
running of the statute of limitations, will not be permitted.” (citations
omitted)).
As discussed above, the crux of this appeal is whether appellants’
naming of Mary Kirkaldie as a defendant within the two-year limitations
period is sufficient to satisfy 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 3373. Appellants argue that
there is no authority for the proposition that failure to specify the
defendant’s role as personal representative is a fatal defect. (Appellants’
brief at 19.) Appellants contend that all that is required is that the personal
representative be appointed prior to expiration of the statute of limitations,
and that the personal representative be named as a defendant before the
expiration of the statute of limitations. (Id. at 18.) We disagree.
We find the following decisions to be instructive. In Lovejoy v.
Georgeff, 303 A.2d 501 (Pa.Super. 1973), the underlying accident occurred
on November 8, 1968. Id. at 502. The alleged tortfeasor, the driver of the
vehicle, died the day following the accident, which was known to the
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plaintiffs. Id. After settlement negotiations fell through, the plaintiffs had
citations issued to the decedent’s parents notifying them that letters of
administration on his estate had been applied for, and directing them to
appear before the Register of Wills to take action or explain their position
with regard to the application. Id. The citations were issued on
November 2, 1970, within two years of the accident, but they permitted the
parents to appear as late as November 12, 1970, after the two-year period
would have elapsed. Id.
On November 5, 1970, the plaintiffs filed a writ of summons naming as
defendants Nicholas Georgeff, both as an individual and in his capacity as
“administrator” of the tortfeasor’s estate, and Robert J. Georgeff as an
individual. Id. at 502-503. However, Nicholas Georgeff, the father of the
driver, had not applied for letters of administration until November 12, 1970,
the final day permitted in the citations for appearance. Id. at 502. The
mother of the driver renounced her right to letters. Id.
On July 7, 1971, following the filing of the plaintiffs’ complaint,
Nicholas Georgeff moved for judgment on the pleadings, which was granted
insofar as the pleadings related to Nicholas Georgeff as administrator. Id. at
503. The plaintiffs appealed, and this court affirmed, finding that because
Nicholas Georgeff had not yet received letters of administration on
November 5, 1970, when the writ of summons was issued, the statute of
limitations barred any claim against him in his capacity as administrator.
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This court in Lovejoy refused to toll the statute by relating back the
appointment of Nicholas Georgeff to the time of the filing of the writ of
summons. Id. at 503-504. The Lovejoy court found that with the exercise
of ordinary diligence, the plaintiffs could have secured the appointment of an
administrator prior to suit within the two-year time period:
Here appellants knew of the tortfeasor’s death the
day after the accident, knew what they had to do to
raise administration, and slept on their rights until a
few days before the 2-year statutory period was to
expire.
Id. at 504. Thus, in Lovejoy, even though the timely writ of summons
named Nicholas Georgeff, “administrator” as a defendant, it was held that
the statute of limitations acted as a complete bar to recovery:
Absent a relation back of letters to that date
[(November 5, 1970)], no personal representative of
the decedent can be considered to have been in
existence at the time of filing of the summons.
Id. at 503 n.3 (citation omitted).
Consequently, unless the appointment of Nicholas
Georgeff related back to the time of filing of the
summons, the filing would not have tolled the
statute of limitations with respect to the deceased
driver’s estate.
Id.
Similarly, in Miller v. Jacobs, 65 A.2d 362 (Pa. 1949), the plaintiff
brought suit against “Harry P. Jacobs, Administrator of the Estate of
J.A. Jacobs, Deceased.” Id. at 364. The victim, James Edward Miller, died
in 1945 while a passenger on a ferryboat operated by Harry P. Jacobs, and a
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wrongful death action was instituted to recover damages for his death. Id.
at 363-364. J.A. Jacobs had operated the ferry until his death in 1904. Id.
at 363. Miller had been pushed off the ferry by an automobile rolling
forward and striking him, and he drowned. Id. The negligence alleged was
failure to secure the automobiles on the ferry and failure to have an
employee stationed on the boat, in violation of federal regulations. Id. at
364. Recovery was being sought from the estate and not from the
administrator in his individual capacity. Id. However, the decedent’s estate
was exempt from liability. Id. at 364-365.
On appeal from the grant of judgment notwithstanding the verdict, the
plaintiff, the administratrix of Miller’s estate, argued that she should be
allowed to amend the name of the defendant by striking off the words
“Administrator of the Estate of J.A. Jacobs, Deceased,” leaving Harry P.
Jacobs named as an individual. Id. at 365. Our supreme court rejected the
plaintiff’s position, stating,
While it is true that the name of a party already on
the record may be corrected at any time, it is
elementary that a new party, or a party in a
different capacity, cannot be brought on the record
after the statute of limitations has become a bar.
Id. (emphasis in original).
So in Stine v. Herr, Administratrix, 78 Pa. Super.
226, the court refused to allow a judgment in an
action of trespass against a defendant as
administratrix of the estate of a decedent to be
amended, more than two years after the right of
action had accrued, so as to bring the defendant
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upon the record in her individual capacity. And in
Barrett v. First Mechanics National Bank, 133
Pa. Super. 366, 370, 3 A.2d 36, 38, where an
attachment was brought against the executors of a
decedent’s estate as defendants, it was said that
“While the plaintiff may have a cause of action
against the defendants personally * * * he did not
bring his action in that form. * * * [and] a change
of the defendant from a representative to an
individual capacity, or vice versa, cannot be
made after the statute of limitations has run,
for it involves a change of parties.”
Id. (emphasis added).
Therefore, appellants’ argument that merely listing Mary Kirkaldie as a
defendant was sufficient to satisfy 20 Pa.C.S.A. § 3373 misses the mark. A
party cannot be sued in a different capacity after the running of the statute
of limitations. As the trial court observed,
By the time [appellants] finally filed a complaint in
October, 2014, with an amended caption, by
agreement, to reflect that Mary Kirkaldie was the
personal representative of Louis Kirkaldie, as
Executrix of the Estate of Louis Kirkaldie, the statute
of limitations had already run. This was the first
time, three years after the accident, that
[appellants] properly asserted a claim against the
Estate.
Order, 5/12/15 at 3 n.1. We are constrained to agree. Therefore, the trial
court did not err in granting summary judgment for appellees.
Orders affirmed.
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Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 9/23/2016
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