IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
In Re: Estate of John F. Pancari, Sr., :
Deceased :
:
Kathleen D. Gazda, :
Appellant :
:
v. : No. 1304 C.D. 2016
: Argued: April 4, 2017
Scott Township Police Pension Fund :
BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge1
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
OPINION BY JUDGE BROBSON FILED: December 8, 2017
Kathleen Gazda (Gazda) appeals from the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Orphans’ Court Division (Orphans’ Court),
dated June 30, 2016, which refused to order the Scott Township Police Pension Fund
(Pension Fund) to pay benefits to Gazda as the widow of John F. Pancari, Sr.
(Decedent). For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the Orphans’ Court’s order.
I. BACKGROUND
Decedent, a beneficiary of the Pension Fund, died on
November 25, 2013. On May 9, 2014, Gazda filed for survivor’s pension benefits
with the Pension Fund, asserting that she was Decedent’s common-law spouse. On
May 27, 2014, the Pension Fund denied Gazda’s application for survivor’s benefits
1
This opinion was re-assigned to the authoring Judge on October 19, 2017.
because Gazda lacked sufficient documents to prove a common-law marriage.
(Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 180a-98a.)
Following the appeal procedures set forth in the Scott Township Police
Pension Plan (Plan),2 (R.R. at 141a-42a), Gazda appealed to the Board of
Commissioners of Scott Township (Board), and the Board assigned the matter to a
hearing officer.3 By decision dated September 26, 2014, the hearing officer found
that Gazda failed to prove that a common-law marriage existed between Decedent
and herself, and, therefore, she was not entitled to benefits as a surviving spouse.
(R.R. at 299a-310a.) Gazda did not appeal this decision.
On February 6, 2015, Gazda filed an estate inheritance tax return and
paid the applicable inheritance tax using the zero percent spousal rate as Decedent’s
common-law spouse. In response, the Pennsylvania Department of Revenue
(Revenue) issued a notice of assessment and applied the fifteen percent collateral
rate. On September 9, 2015, Gazda filed a petition for citation, appealing the
inheritance tax assessments with the Orphans’ Court. On November 23, 2015, the
Orphans’ Court held a hearing and converted the petition for citation into a
declaratory judgment action to determine whether a common-law marriage existed.
After receiving evidence, the Orphans’ Court issued an order deciding that a
common-law marriage existed between Gazda and Decedent as of
2
Scott Township created the plan under authority conferred by the act commonly referred
to as the Police Pension Fund Act, also known as Act 600, Act of May 29, 1956, P.L. (1955)
1804, as amended, 53 P.S. §§ 767-778.
3
By Resolution 854-14, the Board appointed James S. Conley, Esquire, to serve as the
Board’s hearing officer under Article VIII of the Plan and to issue a final decision on behalf of the
Board. (R.R. 197a-98a.)
2
September 6, 1998.4 Revenue did not appeal and thereafter revised its notice of
assessment accordingly. (R.R. at 2a-6a.)
On March 17, 2016, Gazda filed a second application for survivor’s
benefits with the Pension Fund, requesting benefits based on the November 23, 2015
Orphans’ Court order. By letter dated April 15, 2016, the Pension Fund denied
Gazda’s application, concluding that all parties were bound by the hearing officer’s
September 26, 2014 decision, which no party appealed to the court of common pleas.
(R.R. at 312a-15a.) Although the letter advised Gazda of her right under the Plan to
appeal the determination to the Board for a full hearing, Gazda did not appeal the
determination.
Instead, two months later, on June 21, 2016, Gazda filed a motion to
enforce order with the Orphans’ Court, seeking to compel the Pension Fund to
recognize her marriage to Decedent and pay her survivor’s benefits. On
June 30, 2016, following oral argument, the Orphans’ Court denied Gazda relief.
Gazda thereafter filed a timely appeal in this Court, and the Orphans’ Court directed
Gazda to file a concise statement of errors complained of on appeal. Gazda’s concise
statement raised a single issue—i.e., whether the trial court erred in refusing to
enforce its November 23, 2015 order, declaring Gazda to be Decedent’s
common-law spouse, against the Pension Fund. (R.R. at 8a-9a.) In an opinion issued
pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 1925(a), the Orphans’ Court
set forth its reasons for denying Gazda’s motion to enforce. The Orphans’ Court
explained that under the Local Agency Law, 2 Pa. C.S. §§ 105, 551-55, 751-54, the
4
The Pennsylvania General Assembly abolished common-law marriages, effective
January 1, 2005, but did so only prospectively. Accordingly, common-law marriages otherwise
lawful and contracted prior to January 1, 2005, may be enforced. Section 1103 of the Marriage
Law, 23 Pa. C.S. § 1103.
3
Board’s September 26, 2014 decision, by its designated hearing examiner, was an
adjudication, triggering a right of appeal to the court of common pleas. Section 752
of the Local Agency Law, 2 Pa. C.S. § 752. The Orphans’ Court noted that Section
8.08(f) of the Plan expressly defines the Board’s decision as “final” and reiterates
the right of a claimant for benefits to lodge an appeal under the Local Agency Law.
The Orphans’ Court observed that “Gazda simply did not follow the
proper appeal procedure,” (R.R. at 5a), and it held that the hearing officer’s
adjudication was final on the issue of whether Gazda was entitled to benefits under
the Plan. The Orphans’ Court further held that Gazda’s motion to enforce, filed
nearly 21 months after the Board’s final determination on Gazda’s first claim for
benefits and about two months after the Pension Fund denied her second claim for
benefits, was not a substitute for a timely appeal under the Local Agency Law. The
Orphans’ Court concluded that it lacked the authority to reverse the Pension Plan’s
denial of benefits. Finally, the Orphans’ Court noted that before it issued its
declaratory judgment of a common-law marriage between Gazda and Decedent,
Gazda’s counsel should have notified the Court of the Board’s final determination
and should have notified the Pension Fund of the declaratory judgment action.
In her brief on appeal, Gazda advances two questions for our review:
(1) whether the Orphans’ Court’s declaratory judgment of a common-law marriage
between Gazda and Decedent is binding on the Pension Fund; and (2) whether the
existence of a common-law marriage is subject to the Local Agency Law. (Gazda
Br. at 11.) As both of these issues are questions of law, our standard of review is de
novo and our scope of review is plenary. Med. Shoppe, Ltd. v. Wayne Mem’l Hosp.,
866 A.2d 455, 459 n.10 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005).
4
II. DISCUSSION
On appeal, Gazda argues that the authority to establish the validity of a
common-law marriage “rests solely with the court of common pleas.” (Gazda Br.
at 18.) Gazda contends that once a court establishes the validity of a marriage, the
marriage is finalized and is binding upon all persons concerned and, therefore, is
subject to neither the Local Agency Law nor attack by third parties, such as the
Pension Fund. In support, Gazda cites to Section 3306 of the Divorce Code,
23 Pa. C.S. § 3306, which provides:
When the validity of a marriage is denied or
doubted, either or both of the parties to the marriage may
bring an action for a declaratory judgment seeking a
declaration of the validity or invalidity of the marriage
and, upon proof of the validity or invalidity of the
marriage, the marriage shall be declared valid or invalid
by decree of the court and, unless reversed upon appeal,
the declaration shall be conclusive upon all persons
concerned.
Gazda also relies on this Court’s decision in Ross v. Policemen’s Relief and Pension
Fund of City of Pittsburgh, 871 A.2d 277, 280 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2005) (finding that not
every party who relies on existence of marriage between two persons must also be
party to its declaration), appeal denied, 897 A.2d 462 (Pa.), cert. denied,
549 U.S. 816 (2006).
Gazda also contends that allowing third parties to challenge the validity
of a marriage would result in the possibility of numerous hearings before various
agencies impacted by an individual’s marital status. (Gazda Br. at 15.) Further,
Gazda contends that the law does not grant a hearing officer jurisdiction over the
establishment of a marriage, and that, as such, the hearing officer for the Board never
had jurisdiction to determine whether Gazda and Decedent had a common-law
marriage. Gazda argues that after she obtained her declaration of marriage, she
5
became entitled to spousal benefits. More specifically, Gazda contends that the
Pension Fund is contractually obligated to pay surviving spouse benefits and has no
right to determine its beneficiaries’ marital status.
The Pension Fund rejects Gazda’s premise that this case is about the
question of whether the existence of a marriage is subject to the Local Agency Law.
Rather, the Pension Fund contends that what is at issue in this case is the entitlement
to benefits under a municipal police pension plan. Act 600 gives Scott Township
the authority to establish and administer police pension plans, which includes
benefits for surviving spouses. Section 1(a)(2) of Act 600, 53 P.S. §767(a)(2). The
Pension Fund argues that under the authority of Act 600, a hearing officer is
obligated to determine an applicant’s marital status in order to determine entitlement
to surviving spouse benefits under the terms of the Plan. Section 1(a)(2) of Act 600
provides:
Such fund shall be under the direction of the governing
body of the borough, town, township or regional police
department, and applied under such regulations as such
governing body, by ordinance or resolution, may prescribe
for the benefit of such members of the police force as shall
receive honorable discharge therefrom by reason of age
and service, or disability, and may prescribe for the benefit
(i) of surviving spouses . . . .
While Section 3306 of the Divorce Code provides that a “marriage shall be declared
valid or invalid by decree of the court,” Act 600 provides Scott Township with the
authority to establish and administer pension plans, which includes prescribing
benefits for surviving spouses of members of the police force and determining
eligibility for those benefits. This includes the authority to evaluate a party’s marital
status in order to determine if that party is eligible for benefits, as opposed to issuing
a decree of marriage.
6
The Pension Fund contends that under its Act 600 authority, it adopted
the Plan, which sets forth express procedures for submitting a claim for benefits and
challenging the Plan Administrator’s initial denial of that claim. Under Article VIII
of the Plan, (R.R. 141a-42a), an applicant who wishes to challenge the Plan
Administrator’s denial of a claim for benefits must appeal to the Board, the local
agency here, within sixty days. The Board’s decision “shall be final, conclusive and
binding on all parties.” (Section 8.08(c) of the Plan.) Section 8.08(e) of the Plan
expressly provides that a claimant who does not submit to the Plan Administrator a
timely claim for benefits or who does not file with the Board a timely appeal from
the Plan Administrator’s denial of a claim, “shall be deemed to have waived such
claim or right to review.” Section 8.08(f) of the Plan, however, expressly preserves
a claimant’s right to appeal an adverse Board adjudication under the Local Agency
Law.
Agreeing with the Orphans’ Court, the Pension Fund contends that
when Gazda chose not to further appeal the Board’s September 26, 2014
adjudication to the court of common pleas, under both the Local Agency Law and
the provisions of the Plan, the adjudication became final and binding on the parties.
Cunningham v. Se. Pa. Transp. Auth. (SEPTA), 914 A.2d 966, 972 n.12 (Pa.
Cmwlth.) (“A party to a local agency proceeding may not institute an independent
action that challenges the agency’s action when the party failed to file a timely
appeal from the decision of the local agency”), appeal denied, 932 A.2d 77 (Pa.
2007); Lundy v. City of Williamsport, 548 A.2d 1339, 1340 (Pa. Cmwlth. 1988)
(“We have repeatedly held that failure to appeal a local governmental agency
7
adjudication within 30 days from the date of the order complained of divests the trial
court of jurisdiction”).5
In Lundy, Richard H. Lundy, Jr. (Lundy) applied to the local taxing
authority to determine the amount of an exemption for improvements made to a
building he purchased. Lundy, 548 A.2d at 1340. His application was denied and
he appealed to the Local Economic Revitalization Tax Assistance (LERTA) appeal
board. Id. By decision dated April 26, 1985, the appeal board denied his application
as untimely. Id. Two further appeals were also denied on January 14, 1986, and
March 25, 1986. Id. On September 15, 1986, Lundy filed an equity action, seeking
to compel the city to award him benefits on the grounds of equitable estoppel. Id.
The common pleas court found it did not have subject matter jurisdiction because
Lundy did not appeal the local administrative agency’s determination. Id.
This Court held that the “failure to appeal a local governmental agency
adjudication within 30 days from the date of the order complained of divests the trial
court of jurisdiction.” Id. This Court further noted that Lundy did not argue that the
statutory remedy was inadequate. Id. Though Lundy argued he had an “independent
right to pursue a separate equity action in the same case four months after his
statutory right of appeal” had expired, this Court held that, while a petitioner could
5
In Retirement Board of Allegheny County v. Colville, 852 A.2d 445 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2004),
instead of filing a statutory appeal under the Local Agency Law following an adverse adjudication
by the Retirement Board of Allegheny County (RBAC), the claimant in that case initiated a civil
action in the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County by writ of summons, followed ten
months later by a complaint. Upon the filing of a preliminary objection to the complaint, raising
a failure to exhaust administrative remedies, the court of common pleas sustained the preliminary
objection, in part, as to the complaint for declaratory relief. It held, however, that it would consider
the writ of summons as a timely appeal from the RBAC under the Local Agency Law. Here,
Gazda did not file her motion to enforce in the Orphans’ Court until well after the thirty-day period
to appeal the Board’s final determination had expired. Accordingly, the motion to enforce could
not have been considered a timely statutory appeal under the Local Agency Law.
8
seek equitable relief at the same time he pursued an agency appeal or could request
pre-enforcement review of administrative regulations, a “court’s equity powers are
limited by the existence of an adequate statutory remedy.” Id. at 1341 (citing
Arsenal Coal Co. v. Dep’t of Envtl. Res., 477 A.2d 1333 (Pa. 1984)). Further, “[i]n
local governmental agency appeals jurisdiction and remedy is conferred by statute.
A court has no equity powers if it has no jurisdiction.” Lundy, 548 A.2d at 1341.
This Court found that Lundy could not file an equity action after his statutory remedy
to the same relief expired, because he had failed to appeal the local governmental
agency adjudication and because he could have raised an estoppel argument in an
appeal from the LERTA appeal board. Id.
Similarly, in Cunningham, this Court held that James Cunningham
(Cunningham) was bound by the 30-day statutory time limit for filing an appeal
where he waited nearly seven months to institute a civil action on breach of contract,
breach of good faith and fair dealing, fraud, misrepresentation, deceit, and civil
conspiracy. Cunningham, 914 A.2d at 972.
Gazda counters that the Pension Fund’s reliance on Lundy and
Cunningham is misplaced. More specifically, Gazda contends that Lundy and
Cunningham involved “the application of the Pennsylvania Local Agency Law to
determinations by a hearing officer interpreting provisions of the governing
document,” whereas, here, a hearing officer has neither the authority nor the
jurisdiction to decide if a common-law marriage exists. (Gazda Br. at 17.) However,
as the Pension Fund argues, the Board, through its hearing officer, issued a final
determination on Gazda’s eligibility for Plan benefits, not on the existence or
nonexistence of her marriage to Decedent. Act 600 authorizes the Pension Fund to
determine who is eligible for benefits. The Plan Administrator for the Pension Fund
9
made an initial determination that Gazda was not entitled to benefits under the Plan
as Decedent’s common-law spouse. Following the procedures set forth in the Plan,
Gazda appealed that determination to the Board. The Board, through its hearing
officer, held a hearing and ultimately issued an adjudication, finding Gazda
ineligible for benefits under the Plan. Gazda did not appeal, which means, under the
terms of the Plan, the Local Agency Law, and this Court’s precedent (e.g., Lundy
and Cunningham), Gazda thereafter lost her ability to challenge the Board’s
decision.
In Wimer v. Pennsylvania Employees Benefit Trust Fund (PEBTF),
939 A.2d 843 (Pa. 2007), a plan beneficiary brought a declaratory judgment action
in the court of common pleas, challenging PEBTF’s termination of his benefits and
seeking an order of reinstatement. PEBTF contended, inter alia, that the common
pleas court should dismiss the action because the plan beneficiary failed to exhaust
the internal administrative remedies set forth in the plan documents, which required
an appeal of the termination to PEBTF’s Board of Trustees. In granting summary
judgment in favor of Wimer and against PEBTF, the common pleas court rejected
PEBTF’s position, as did the Pennsylvania Superior Court on appeal.
On allowance of appeal, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considered
the following question: “[W]hether a recipient of healthcare benefits paid by
[PEBTF] is contractually obligated, when challenging a . . . termination of healthcare
benefits, to exhaust internal appeals to PEBTF’s Board of Trustees prior to seeking
recourse through filing an action for declaratory judgment with a court.” Wimer,
939 A.2d at 845. The Supreme Court affirmed, concluding, in part, that although
the plan documents provided for a right of appeal to the Board of Trustees, the
“language does not impose an affirmative obligation for them to pursue such
10
remedies as a prerequisite to commencing litigation.” Id. at 850. The Supreme Court
declined to “read into” the plan documents an exhaustion requirement. Id. at 850-51.
As noted above, the Plan here expressly mandates exhaustion of
contractual remedies. Section 8.08 of the Plan provides that “[a]ny person whose
application for benefits is denied . . . shall first seek a resolution of such claim under
the procedure hereinafter set forth.” (Emphasis added.) Further, Section 8.08(e)
provides that a claimant who fails to submit a timely claim for benefits or a timely
notice of appeal to the Board from an adverse determination “shall be deemed to
have waived such claim or right of review.” Section 8.08(f), however, expressly
notes that a claimant’s right to appeal an adverse Board adjudication under the Local
Agency Law is preserved. Accordingly, unlike the plan documents in Wimer, the
Plan here expressly requires exhaustion of contractual remedies prior to seeking
relief in a court.
When, on May 27, 2014, the Plan Administrator denied Gazda’s
application for survivor’s benefits because Gazda lacked sufficient documents to
prove a common-law marriage, (R.R. at 180a-98a), Gazda followed the procedures
set forth in the Plan and appealed to the Board. After the Board’s hearing officer
rendered his adverse determination, however, Gazda did not appeal that decision to
the court of common pleas, as was her right under the Local Agency Law and
Section 8.08(f) of the Plan. Under the plain terms of the Plan, that determination
then became “final, conclusive and binding” on Gazda.
Had Gazda filed a statutory appeal from that adjudication to the court
of common pleas, there is no doubt that the common pleas court could have reviewed
the issue of whether Gazda established that she was the common-law spouse of
11
Decedent and thus entitled to benefits under the Plan.6 Although Section 3306 of
the Divorce Code is a vehicle by which disputes over the existence or nonexistence
of a marriage can be resolved, it is by no means the exclusive vehicle. In Cooney v.
Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board (Patterson UTI, Inc.), 94 A.3d 425 (Pa.
Cmwlth. 2014), for example, a workers’ compensation claimant sought death
benefits as the surviving common-law spouse of a fatally-injured worker. Following
the statutory process for claim petitions, both a workers’ compensation judge and
the Workers’ Compensation Appeal Board found that the claimant failed to prove
her entitlement as a widow to death benefits under Section 307(3) of the Workers’
Compensation Act.7 On appeal, this Court affirmed, concluding that the claimant’s
alleged common-law marriage was not valid under the laws of Pennsylvania.
Cooney, 94 A.3d at 435.
In Vignola v. Vignola, 39 A.3d 390 (Pa. Super. 2012), Nancy Vignola
(Nancy) filed a complaint in divorce in the court of common pleas, claiming to be
the common-law wife of Cort Vignola (Cort). Prior to Nancy commencing her
complaint in divorce, she filed a separate action in common pleas, seeking child and
spousal support against Cort. Ultimately, the common pleas court denied Nancy’s
claim for spousal support, concluding that she failed to establish that she was Cort’s
common-law spouse. When Nancy filed her complaint for divorce, Cort countered
by filing within the divorce proceeding (i.e., he did not commence a separate civil
action) a petition under Section 3306 of the Divorce Code for a declaratory judgment
that he and Nancy were not married, pointing to the prior judicial determination in
6
In addition, even if Gazda did not prevail on her statutory appeal to the common pleas
court, she would have had a further right of appellate review by this Court. 42 Pa. C.S. § 762(a)(4).
7
Act of June 2, 1915, P.L. 736, as amended, 77 P.S. § 561.
12
the spousal support case. The common pleas court granted the petition for
declaratory judgment, holding that Nancy was collaterally estopped from asserting
that she and Cort were married. The Superior Court affirmed, concluding that Nancy
was collaterally estopped from asserting a common-law marriage in the divorce
proceeding where the common pleas court had already determined her marital status
in the prior spousal support proceeding. Vignola, 39 A.3d at 394-95.
It is true that the Board’s adjudication predated the Orphans’ Court’s
declaration that Gazda was Decedent’s common-law spouse. Even if we were to
hold that this subsequent declaration somehow revived Gazda’s right to benefits
under the Plan, the result would not change. Following the Orphans’ Court’s
decision, Gazda filed a second claim for benefits with the Pension Fund. The Plan
Administrator rejected it by letter dated April 15, 2016—not because it refused to
recognize the Orphans’ Court’s declaration of marriage, but because the Plan
Administrator concluded that the Board’s prior, unappealed adjudication,
concluding that Gazda was not entitled to Plan benefits, was binding. (R.R. at
315a.)8 As evidenced by her appeal from the Plan Administrator’s initial
determination, Gazda knew that she could appeal this second determination to the
Board for an adjudication under the procedures set forth in Article VIII of the Plan.
She had sixty days to file that appeal. (Section 8.08(c) of the Plan.) This time,
however, she chose not to even appeal the Plan Administrator’s determination to the
Board. Instead, she filed her motion to enforce under the caption of Decedent’s
estate in the Orphans’ Court, seeking a determination that she was eligible for Plan
8
The dissent claims that we are holding that Gazda “is not married for purposes of
receiving pension benefits.” (Dissent at 1.) As noted above, however, this is clearly not the case.
Our decision here does not in any way call into question Gazda’s status as Decedent’s widow. At
issue in this case is Gazda’s entitlement to surviving spouse benefits under the Plan, not the validity
of her marriage to Decedent.
13
benefits. There is, however, no question that Gazda had an available and adequate
remedy under the terms of the Plan and the Local Agency Law to address her second
claim for benefits. She chose not to pursue them. As a result, even if we assume
Gazda could file a new claim for benefits following the Orphans’ Court’s
declaration, the Plan Administrator’s decision on that new claim is also final and
binding because Gazda failed to follow the contractual procedures set forth in the
Plan and exercise her right of appeal under the Local Agency Law.
Nevertheless, Gazda argues that our prior decision in Ross controls. In
Ross, Audrey Ross (Ross) and Gregory Adams (Adams) cohabited for
approximately 11 years prior to Adams’s death on June 19, 2001. Following
Adams’s death, Ross applied to the Policemen’s Relief and Pension Fund of the City
of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh Fund) for surviving spouse benefits. The Pittsburgh Fund,
however, informed Ross that she would have to prove that she and Adams were
married in order to receive surviving spouse benefits. Thereafter, and following a
contested proceeding involving Adams’s daughters from a prior marriage, the
Orphans’ Court Division of the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas issued
an order declaring Ross Adams’s common-law spouse as of August 23, 2002. When
Ross presented the order to the Pittsburgh Fund, the Pittsburgh Fund “refused to
recognize the marriage on the ground that it had not been a party to the Orphans’
Court proceeding” and rejected Ross’s claim for benefits. Ross, 871 A.2d at 278-79.
Ross then filed a declaratory judgment action against the Pittsburgh
Fund on November 15, 2002, seeking a decree to require the Pittsburgh Fund to
recognize the marriage and provide retroactive surviving spouse benefits. The
common pleas court held in Ross’s favor. The Pittsburgh Fund appealed to this
Court, arguing that it was not bound by the declaratory judgment of a common-law
14
marriage because it was not a party to that proceeding and that Section 3306 of the
Divorce Code was unconstitutional “where it permits a person neither joined in a
proceeding nor notified of it to be bound by the result.” Id.
This Court held that the Pittsburgh Fund was bound by the order that
declared Ross and Adams married at common law, reasoning that the court issued
the order after an “evidentiary hearing and adjudication.” Id. at 280. This Court
further found that a declaration of a common-law marriage is enforceable “against
an individual or entity not a party to the proceeding in which the decree was issued.”
Id. We reasoned that the General Assembly did not intend that “every person or
entity who must rely on the fact of the marriage of two persons must be a party to
the creation or declaration of that marriage.” Id. Further, this Court stated that the
Pittsburgh Fund could not treat Ross any differently than if she was married to
Adams in a formal ceremony after securing a valid license. Id. Accordingly, we
affirmed the common pleas court and directed the Pittsburgh Fund to pay retroactive
benefits to Ross. Id. at 281.
Ross is distinguishable from the present case. When Ross, the putative
common-law spouse, applied for benefits from the Pittsburgh Fund, the Pittsburgh
Fund informed her that she would be required to prove that she and Adams were
married. Instead of going forward to present evidence to the Pittsburgh Fund, Ross
sought and obtained a court order, declaring the validity of her common-law
marriage. Importantly, in Ross, no party raised any issue with respect to exhaustion
of plan/contractual remedies or the Local Agency Law. More specifically, the
Pittsburgh Fund did not contend that its plan document imposed mandatory and
binding claim procedures or that the common pleas court lacked the authority or
jurisdiction to decide the dispute.
15
Here, by contrast, Gazda initiated and prosecuted her claim for pension
benefits before the Plan Administrator and then the Board to conclusion, before
securing a court order recognizing her common-law marriage more than a year later.
She then went back to the Plan Administrator a second time, but the Plan
Administrator rejected her second claim for benefits in light of the finality of the
Board’s earlier determination on her first claim for benefits. When Gazda thereafter
sought the aid of the Orphans’ Court, the Orphans’ Court denied her relief,
concluding properly that the unappealed decision by the Board’s hearing officer was
final and binding on Gazda because she did not exercise her appeal rights under the
Plan and the Local Agency Law. For the reasons explained above, we cannot say
that the Orphans’ Court erred in reaching its decision under the facts and
circumstances in this case.
III. CONCLUSION
Gazda failed to exhaust her contractual remedies under the Plan not
once, but twice. The clear language of the Plan makes exhaustion mandatory before
a claimant may seek relief from a court. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above,
the Orphans’ Court appropriately denied Gazda’s motion to enforce.
________________________________
P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
16
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
In Re: Estate of John F. Pancari, Sr., :
Deceased :
:
Kathleen D. Gazda, :
Appellant :
:
v. : No. 1304 C.D. 2016
:
Scott Township Police Pension Fund :
ORDER
AND NOW, this 8th day of December, 2017, the order of the Court of
Common Pleas of Allegheny County, Orphans’ Court Division, dated June 30, 2016,
is hereby AFFIRMED.
________________________________
P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
In Re: Estate of John F. Pancari, Sr., :
Deceased :
:
Kathleen D. Gazda, :
Appellant :
: No. 1304 C.D. 2016
v. :
: Argued: April 4, 2017
Scott Township Police Pension Fund :
BEFORE: HONORABLE P. KEVIN BROBSON, Judge
HONORABLE PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
HONORABLE MICHAEL H. WOJCIK, Judge
DISSENTING OPINION
BY JUDGE McCULLOUGH FILED: December 8, 2017
Kathleen Gazda (Gazda) is either married or she is not. The Majority
recognizes that Claimant is married pursuant to a decree from the Court of Common
Pleas of Allegheny County, Orphans’ Court Division (Orphans’ Court), but
concludes that she is not married for purposes of receiving pension benefits. Such a
result ignores settled law that orphans’ court’s determinations are “binding upon the
whole world irrespective of whether the persons affected were parties or were
entitled to be made parties to the litigation in which the decree was entered.”
Wesner’s Estate, 11 A.2d 521, 523 (Pa. Super. 1940); see also Ross v. Policemen’s
Relief and Pension Fund of City of Pittsburgh, 871 A.2d 277, 280 (Pa. Cmwlth.
2005), appeal denied, 897 A.2d 462 (Pa. 2006), cert. denied, 549 U.S. 816 (2006)
(order from orphans’ court division declaring parties married at common law is
binding on a police pension fund). As a judicially-recognized common law spouse
of John F. Pancari, Sr. (Decedent), Gazda is entitled to survivor’s pension benefits
from the Scott Township Police Pension Fund (Pension Fund). Therefore, I must
dissent.
Act 600, also known as the Police Pension Fund Act, Act of May 29,
1956, P.L. (1955) 1804, as amended, 53 P.S. §§767-778, provides Scott Township
with the authority to establish and administer pension plans, which includes
prescribing benefits for surviving spouses of members of the police force. In
addressing police pension funds, section 1(a)(2) of Act 600 states:
Such fund shall be under the direction of the governing
body of the borough, town, township or regional police
department, and applied under such regulations as such
governing body, by ordinance or resolution, may prescribe
for the benefit of such members of the police force as shall
receive honorable discharge therefrom by reason of age
and service, or disability, and may prescribe for the benefit
(i) of surviving spouses ….
53 P.S. §767(a)(2). While prescribing benefits for surviving spouses gives the
Pension Fund the authority to evaluate a party’s marital status in order to determine
if that party is indeed a surviving spouse and therefore eligible for benefits, Act 600
does not offer guidance on how to proceed when the validity of a party’s marital
status is in doubt, particularly as it relates to common law marriages.
Indeed, Pennsylvania recognizes two types of marriages: ceremonial
and common law. In re Estate of Manfredi, 159 A.2d 697 (Pa. 1960). A ceremonial
marriage is “performed by a religious or civil authority” whereas a common law
marriage is “an express agreement of the parties without ceremony.” Id. at 700.
Although the Pennsylvania Legislature abolished common law marriages, effective
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January 1, 2005, common law marriages contracted prior to January 1, 2005, shall
be legally recognized under section 1103 of the Divorce Code, 23 Pa.C.S. §1103.
Section 3306 of the Divorce Code addresses how to proceed when the
validity of a party’s marriage is denied or in doubt, providing:
When the validity of a marriage is denied or doubted,
either or both of the parties to the marriage may bring an
action for a declaratory judgment seeking a declaration of
the validity or invalidity of the marriage and, upon proof
of the validity or invalidity of the marriage, the marriage
shall be declared valid or invalid by decree of the court the
declaration shall be conclusive upon all persons
concerned.
23 Pa.C.S. §3306 (emphasis added). Further, the Superior Court has held that “the
proper procedure for obtaining legal recognition of a common law marriage is the
filing of a declaratory judgment action.” In re Estate of Carter, 159 A.3d 970, 974
(Pa. 2017); Vignola v. Vignola, 39 A.3d 390, 392-93 (Pa. Super. 2012).
In this case, Gazda filed an action with the Orphans’ Court on
September 9, 2015, which was converted by the Orphans’ Court into a declaratory
judgment action. While this action was filed subsequent to the initial proceedings
before the Pension Fund and its Board of Commissioners, Gazda did obtain her
decree of common law marriage prior to her filing of a second application with the
Pension Fund. However, the Pension Fund refused to consider this application and
decree on the basis of Gazda’s failure to appeal the determination of the hearing
officer appointed by the Board of Commissioners, which the Majority now affirms.
By doing so, the Majority essentially allows the Pension Fund to avoid
its obligations under its own pension plan and ignore an order of the Orphans’ Court
declaring Gazda to be Decedent’s spouse. As the Majority notes, Gazda relies on
this Court’s prior decision in Ross for support, wherein we held that the Policemen’s
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Relief and Pension Fund of City of Pittsburgh (Pittsburgh Fund) was bound by an
Orphans’ Court order declaring Audrey Ross (Ross) and Gregory Adams (Adams)
to be married at common law.
In that case, Ross and Adams cohabited for approximately 11 years
prior to Adams’ death on June 19, 2001. Following Adams’ death, Ross applied to
the Pittsburgh Fund for surviving spouse benefits, which then requested proof that
she and Adams were married. Ross subsequently obtained an order from the
Orphans’ Court on August 23, 2002, declaring that a common law marriage existed
between Adams and herself. However, the Pittsburgh Fund “refused to recognize
the marriage on the ground that it had not been a party to the Orphans’ Court
proceeding.” Id. at 278-79.
Ross then filed a declaratory judgment action on November 15, 2002,
seeking a decree to require the Pittsburgh Fund to recognize the marriage and
provide retroactive surviving spouse benefits. The trial court held in Ross’ favor
and the Pittsburgh Fund appealed to this Court, arguing that it was not bound by the
declaratory judgment of a common law marriage where it was not a party to the
proceeding and that section 3306 of the Divorce Code was unconstitutional “where
it permits a person neither joined in a proceeding nor notified of it to be bound by
the result.” Id.
This Court held that the order declaring Ross and Adams were married
at common law was binding upon the Pittsburgh Fund, reasoning that it was issued
after an “evidentiary hearing and adjudication” and, further, that a declaration on a
common law marriage is enforceable “against an individual or entity not a party to
the proceeding in which the decree was issued.” Id. at 280. We reasoned that “Our
General Assembly does not intend an absurd result, 1 Pa.C.S. §1922(1), and the
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Fund’s interpretation of Section 3306 leads to the absurd conclusion that every
person or entity who must rely on the fact of the marriage of two persons must be a
party to the creation or declaration of that marriage.” Id. Further, we held that the
Pittsburgh Fund may not treat Ross any differently than if she was married to Adams
in a formal ceremony after securing a valid license. Id.
We emphasized in Ross that “Nowhere in its brief does the Fund
explain the crucial distinction between the declaration of marriage that Ross
produced and the marriage certificates that evidence the marriages of the many
widows and widowers to whom the Fund is paying benefits today. It is a distinction
without a difference.” Id. The Majority’s decision in this case also creates a
distinction without a difference and effectively allows the Pension Fund to forever
avoid paying benefits to Decedent’s common law spouse.
Here, as in Ross, Gazda applied for spousal benefits and was rejected
because the Pension Fund found that she was not married. Unlike in Ross, Gazda
appealed this decision to the Board of Commissioners and was denied again on the
same grounds. Gazda subsequently went to the Orphans’ Court and, in a declaratory
judgment action, as in Ross, obtained a decree of marriage and returned to the
Pension Fund to re-apply for benefits. Nevertheless, the Pension Fund rejected this
application on the basis that she failed to appeal the Board of Commissioners’
decision in accordance with the Pennsylvania Local Agency Law,1 thereby rendering
the decision of the hearing officer for the Board of Commissioners as final and
binding. The Orphans’ Court agreed, as does the current Majority.
Despite being recognized as Decedent’s common law spouse by the
Orphans’ Court, Gazda will not be recognized as such by the Pension Fund for the
1
2 Pa.C.S. §§551-555, 751-754.
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purpose of obtaining survivor’s pension benefits. Since Decedent and Gazda were
legally married, she is entitled to these benefits. Moreover, it bears repeating that
orphans’ court determinations are “binding upon the whole world irrespective of
whether the persons affected were parties or were entitled to be made parties to the
litigation in which the decree was entered.” Wesner’s Estate, 11 A.2d at 523; Ross.
While the Majority attempts to distinguish Ross on the basis of the differing
procedural histories between that case and the present case, the fact remains that the
Pension Fund is bound by the Orphans’ Court’s order declaring Decedent and Gazda
to be married at common law. The Pension Fund should have recognized the same
when Gazda reapplied for benefits in March of 2016.
In holding that Gazda was required to appeal the determination of the
Board of Commissioner to the common pleas court in accordance with the Local
Agency Law, the Majority cites to the plan documents and distinguishes an opinion
from our Supreme Court in Wimer v. Pennsylvania Employees Benefit Trust Fund
(PEBTF), 939 A.2d 843 (Pa. 2007). As the Majority notes, in Wimer, a plan
beneficiary brought a declaratory judgment action in the court of common pleas,
challenging PEBTF’s termination of his benefits and seeking an order of
reinstatement. PEBTF contended, inter alia, that the common pleas court should
dismiss the action because the plan beneficiary failed to exhaust the internal
administrative remedies set forth in the plan documents, which required an appeal
of the termination to PEBTF’s Board of Trustees. In granting summary judgment in
favor of the plan beneficiary and against PEBTF, the common pleas court rejected
PEBTF’s position, as did the Pennsylvania Superior Court on appeal.
On allowance of appeal, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court considered:
“[W]hether a recipient of healthcare benefits paid by [PEBTF] is contractually
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obligated, when challenging a . . . termination of healthcare benefits, to exhaust
internal appeals to PEBTF’s Board of Trustees prior to seeking recourse through
filing an action for declaratory judgement with a court.” Wimer, 939 A.2d at 845.
The Supreme Court affirmed, concluding, in part, that although the plan documents
provided for a right of appeal to the Board of Trustees, the “language does not
impose an affirmative obligation for them to pursue such remedies as a prerequisite
to commencing litigation.” Id. at 850. The Supreme Court declined to “read into”
the plan documents an exhaustion requirement. Id. at 850-51.
Nonetheless, the Majority here essentially “reads into” the plan
documents and proceeds to distinguish Wimer from the present case on the basis that
the Pension Fund’s plan documents state that an applicant who is denied “shall first
seek a resolution of such claim under the procedure hereinafter set forth,” which
includes a timely appeal to the Board of Commissioners, and cautions that the failure
to file the same will be deemed a waiver of the claim and any right to review. See
Section 8.08 of the Scott Township Police Pension Plan.
However, the Majority neglects that Gazda followed this very
procedure. Following the initial denial, she appealed to the Board of
Commissioners, who appointed a hearing examiner to proceed with the case.
Following hearings, the hearing examiner upheld the denial on the basis of a lack of
sufficient evidence of a common law marriage between Decedent and Gazda.
Realizing that any further appeal would be futile without such proof, Gazda took the
necessary and required step of obtaining a decree of common law marriage from the
Orphans’ Court, which the Pension Fund refused to recognize upon her re-
application for benefits. Contrary to the Majority, Gazda exhausted her contractual
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remedies herein and, as such, Gazda’s judicially-recognized common law marriage
should entitle her to survivor’s pension benefits.
For these reasons, I would reverse the order of the Orphans’ Court
denying Gazda’s motion to enforce its previous decree which recognized her
common law marriage to Decedent.2
________________________________
PATRICIA A. McCULLOUGH, Judge
2
The Orphans’ Court, in denying Gazda’s motion to enforce, also held that it did not have
the authority to order the Pension Fund to reverse its denial via a motion because this authority
belonged with the court of common pleas in the civil division. (R.R. at 5a-6a.) However, this
holding ignores section 952 of the Judicial Code, which states, in pertinent part, that “In a court of
common pleas having two or more divisions each division of the court is vested with the full
jurisdiction of the whole court. . . .” 42 Pa.C.S. §952.
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