J-S15002-18
2018 PA Super 357
LORI A. DUMAS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
OF PENNSYLVANIA
Appellee
v.
TRACY M. BROOKS
Appellant No. 2007 EDA 2016
Appeal from the Order Entered May 26, 2016
In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
Family Court at No: 09-07534, PACSES No. 188110826
BEFORE: STABILE, J., DUBOW, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.
OPINION BY STABILE, J.: FILED DECEMBER 31, 2018
Appellant, Tracy M. Brooks (“Father”), appeals from an order entered
May 26, 2016 in the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County, Family
Court, modifying the amount of child support owed by Father after the trial
court granted a motion for reconsideration filed by Appellee, Lori A. Dumas
(“Mother”), of its previous support order of September 17, 2015. We vacate
the May 26, 2016 order and reinstate the prior support order entered on
September 17, 2015.
Mother and Father were married, but divorced in 2012. In 2015, Mother
filed a complaint seeking child support. Mother was the primary custodian of
the parties’ only child, while Father had custody every other weekend and for
dinner visits.
On September 17, 2015, following an evidentiary hearing, the trial court
entered an order directing Father to pay child support to Mother. On October
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2, 2015, Mother filed a motion for reconsideration to increase the amount of
support. On October 15, 2015, the trial court signed an order granting
Mother’s motion for reconsideration. The prothonotary received the signed
order the same day, a fact demonstrated by the time-stamp on the order. The
next day, October 16, 2015, Mother appealed the September 17, 2015 order
to this Court at No. 3360 EDA 2015. On October 28, 2015, the prothonotary
entered the October 15, 2015 order granting reconsideration on the docket.
On April 8, 2016, more than 120 days after the prothonotary received
the order granting reconsideration, the trial court, seeking to clarify the status
of Mother’s motion for reconsideration, sent a letter to this Court advising that
it had granted Mother’s motion for reconsideration and requested that we
remand the matter to the trial court for further proceedings. In an order filed
on April 18, 2016, this Court dismissed Mother’s appeal at No. 3360 EDA 2015,
on the basis that the grant of reconsideration rendered Mother’s appeal from
the September 17, 2015 support order inoperative. This Court further
directed the trial court to schedule a hearing on the motion for reconsideration
within the next thirty days.1
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1 At the time this Court entered its April 18, 2016 order dismissing Mother's
appeal and directed that a hearing on reconsideration be conducted within 30
days, we did not appreciate, and the trial court did not so advise us, that more
than 120 days already had passed from the grant of reconsideration. As
discussed in more detail, infra, this lapse of time precluded the trial court from
proceeding further. Mother further did not timely appeal from the deemed
denial of her motion for reconsideration. This Court may not enlarge the time
for the filing of a notice of appeal. Pa.R.A.P. 105(b).
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On May 4, 2016 and May 23, 2016, the trial court held hearings relating
to Mother’s motion for reconsideration. On May 26, 2016, the trial court
issued an order increasing Father’s support obligations. Father filed a timely
appeal, and both Father and the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.
Father raises three issues in this appeal:2
1. Did the lower court have jurisdiction to enter a reconsidered
decision under Pa.R.C.P 1930.2 when the lower court neither
requested additional testimony nor entered a reconsidered
decision, within 120 days from the date reconsideration was
granted[?]
2. Did the trial court err and commit an abuse of discretion when,
after initially granting Father credit for all his business deductions
in a [f]inal [o]rder, the trial court then entered a reconsidered
decision that granted him none, when no new evidence, no new
arguments, and no new testimony was provided on the issue of
deductions, and where no evidence exists that Father took the
deductions to shelter disposable income available for child
support[?]
3. Did the trial court err and commit an abuse of discretion when,
after initially entering an [o]rder that gave neither party a credit
for health insurance coverage, the trial court entered a
reconsidered decision that granted Mother a credit for health
coverage, even though evidence had been ruled to be credible by
the [j]udge in two separate hearings that Father provided health
coverage for the child, and the trial court gave no reason for why
it granted the credit to mother in the reconsidered decision[?]
Father’s Brief at 4.
In his first argument, which we find dispositive of this appeal, Father
contends that the trial court lacked authority to modify the September 17,
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2 Mother did not file a brief in this Court.
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2015 support order by failing to enter a new decision within 120 days after
granting Mother’s motion for reconsideration. This issue implicates several of
our procedural rules.
Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1930.2 provides in relevant part:
(a) There shall be no motions for post-trial relief in any domestic
relations matter, including Protection of Victims of Sexual Violence
or Intimidation matters.
(b) A party aggrieved by the decision of the court may file a
motion for reconsideration in accordance with Pa.R.A.P
1701(b)(3). If the court does not grant the motion for
reconsideration within the time permitted, the time for filing a
notice of appeal will run as if the motion for reconsideration had
never been presented to the court.
(c) The court shall render its reconsidered decision within 120
days of the date the motion for reconsideration is granted, except
as set forth in subdivision (e). If the court’s decision is not
rendered within 120 days, the motion shall be deemed denied.
(d) If the court does not enter a reconsidered decision within 120
days, the time for filing a notice of appeal will begin to run anew
from the date of entry of the reconsidered decision or from the
121st day after the motion for reconsideration was granted.
(e) If the court grants the motion for reconsideration and files its
order within the 30-day appeal period, the court may issue an
order during the applicable 120-day period directing that
additional testimony be taken. If the court issues an order for
additional testimony, the reconsidered decision need not be
rendered within 120 days, and the time for filing a notice of appeal
will run from the date the reconsidered decision is rendered.
Pa.R.C.P. 1930.2 (emphasis added).
Rule 1930.2(b) incorporates the timeliness requirements within
Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(3). Rule 1701(b)(3) provides that after an appeal is filed,
the trial court may:
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[g]rant reconsideration of the order which is the subject of the
appeal . . . if:
(i) an application for reconsideration of the order is
filed in the trial court . . . within the time provided or
prescribed by law; and
(ii) an order expressly granting reconsideration of
such prior order is filed in the trial court . . . within
the time prescribed by these rules for the filing of a
notice of appeal3 . . . or within any shorter time
provided or prescribed by law for the granting of
reconsideration.
A timely order granting reconsideration under this paragraph shall
render inoperative any such notice of appeal . . . theretofore or
thereafter filed or docketed with respect to the prior order. The
petitioning party shall and any party may file a praecipe with the
prothonotary of any court in which such an inoperative notice or
petition is filed or docketed and the prothonotary shall note on the
docket that such notice or petition has been stricken under this
rule. Where a timely order of reconsideration is entered under
this paragraph, the time for filing a notice of appeal or petition for
review begins to run anew after the entry of the decision on
reconsideration, whether or not that decision amounts to a
reaffirmation of the prior determination of the trial court[.]
Id. (emphasis added).
Read together, Pa.R.C.P. 1930.2 and Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(3) provide that
a notice of appeal becomes inoperative when, during the thirty-day appeal
period, a party “files” a motion for reconsideration and the trial court “files”
an order expressly granting reconsideration of the order that is the subject of
the appeal. If both “filing” conditions are satisfied, the trial court must either
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3 A notice of appeal “shall be filed within 30 days after the entry of the order
from which the appeal is taken.” Pa.R.A.P. 903(a).
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render a reconsidered decision or issue an order for additional testimony
within 120 days after filing the order granting reconsideration. Pa.R.C.P.
1930.2 (c), (e). If 120 days elapse without a reconsidered decision or order
for additional testimony, the motion for reconsideration is deemed denied, and
the appeal period begins to run from the 121st day. Pa.R.C.P. 1930.2(d).
The question we first must decide is when the trial court’s “filing” of its
reconsideration order took place under Rule 1930.2(e), as that date
determines here whether the trial court had jurisdiction to reconsider its
September 17, 2015 support order. The prothonotary received the
reconsideration order on October 15, 2015, but did not docket it until October
28, 2015. The last day to file an appeal from the September 17, 2015 order
was October 17, 2015, thereby placing the “filing” of the reconsideration order
within and the docketing of the reconsideration order outside of the 30-day
appeal period.
We find guidance from other procedural cases and conclude that an
order is “filed” for purposes of Rule 1930.2(e) when the prothonotary receives
it from the trial court, regardless of when the prothonotary dockets the trial
court’s order.4
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4 We note the trial court docket as well does not indicate that the prothonotary
sent Pa.R.C.P. 236 notice of the instant reconsideration order to the parties.
In some actions, the failure to send Rule 236 notice prevents the appeal period
from running. See Frazier v. City of Philadelphia, 735 A.2d 113, 115 (Pa.
1999) (order is not appealable until it is entered on docket with Rule 236
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In Griffin v. Central Sprinkler Corp., 823 A.2d 191, 197 (Pa. Super.
2003), we addressed whether, under Pa.R.C.P. 205.1, the appellant’s praecipe
for writ of summons to the Montgomery County prothonotary’s office dated
April 13, 1999, but not time-stamped until April 20, 1999—the day after the
statute of limitations expired—properly permitted the granting of summary
judgment on the basis the action was time-barred. Rule 205.1 provides in
relevant part that any legal paper sent by mail shall not be deemed filed until
received by the appropriate officer. In Griffin, the prothonotary’s first deputy
testified that the office had been backed up, and that the time-stamp on the
praecipe did not necessarily indicate that the praecipe had arrived on that
date. Based on a survey of case law, we held that the trial court erred in
concluding the statute of limitations expired because the appellant’s praecipe
was not filed until it was time-stamped. We cited with approval
Commonwealth v. Castro, 766 A.2d 1283, 1287 (Pa. Super. 2001), where
we held the act of “filing” focuses as much upon the act of a litigant placing
the document in the hands of the appropriate ministerial office as the act of
docketing receipt of the document. We further endorsed the rationale that
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notice that appropriate notice has been given; fact that parties may have
received notice of order does not alter the formal date of its entry and
associated commencement of period allowed for appeal). In support actions,
however, “the entry of a support order need not contain a Rule 236 docket
entry that notice has been sent.” Murphy v. Murphy, 988 A.2d 703, 709
(Pa. Super. 2010). Therefore, the lack of Rule 236 notice did not prevent the
120-day reconsideration period from running in the present case. Id.
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receipt constitutes filing in the ordinary civil case, because an appellant has
no control over delays between a court clerk’s receipt and formal filing of a
notice. Id. (citing Houston v. Lack, 487 U.S. 266, 273-74 (1988)); see also
Bonawits v. Bonawits, 907 A.2d 611 (Pa. Super. 2006) (under section
3323(g)(2) of Divorce Code, both parties have “filed” affidavits of consent
when accepted by the divorce master and not the prothonotary). Since both
Rule 1930.2(e) and Rule 205.1 focus upon when a document is “filed,” we
perceive no reason why our holding in Griffin should not also be applicable
here. Had our Supreme Court intended Rule 1930.2(e) to mean that orders
granting reconsideration are effective only if docketed within the 30-day
appeal period, it would have provided as much, as it purposely refers to
docketing when that is what it intends. See, e.g., Pa.R.C.P. 236 (prothonotary
shall note in the docket the giving of notice); Pa.R.C.P. 1307(c) (if no appeal
is taken within 30 days after entry of the award on the docket,
prothonotary upon praecipe shall enter judgment on award).
Our interpretation of “filed” under Rule 1930.2(e) is also consonant with
our Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure that deem a notice of appeal
filed upon receipt by the lower court clerk. Commonwealth v. Williams,
106 A.3d 583, 589-90 (Pa. 2014) (notice of appeal timely filed under Pa.R.A.P.
905(a)(3) on date received by clerk of court, even though clerk refused to
accept or time-stamp notice due to alleged formal defects).
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With these precepts in mind, we return to the present case. The trial
court entered its original order on September 17, 2015 and entered its
reconsideration order on October 15, 2015. On October 15, 2015, the
prothonotary received the trial court’s reconsideration order, the same day it
was signed by the trial court, a fact shown by the prothonotary’s time-stamp
of October 15, 2015 on the reconsideration order. The deadline for entering
a reconsidered decision or ordering additional testimony became February 12,
2016, the 120th day after the date of filing.5 The trial court, however, did not
enter any order by this date, so the motion for reconsideration was deemed
denied, and the appeal period began to run again on the following weekday,
Monday, February 15, 2016. Pa.R.C.P. 1930.2(d). The trial court lost
jurisdiction as of February 15, 2016, when the appeal period began running
again.6 Id. Consequently, the trial court’s May 26, 2016 order increasing
Father’s support obligations was a nullity.
In reaching this decision, we find support in Weinzetl v. Weinzetl, 681
A.2d 813 (Pa. Super. 1996). In Weinzetl, (1) the trial court entered an
equitable distribution order on April 22, 1994 that “was docketed April 25,
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5 Mother’s appeal to this Court on October 16, 2015 did not toll the 120-day
reconsideration period, because the filing of the reconsideration order on
October 15, 2015 rendered the appeal “inoperative.” Pa.R.A.P. 1701(b)(3).
6The appeal period expired on March 16, 2016, without any new appeal by
Mother.
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1994,” and (2) the trial court granted Wife’s timely petition for reconsideration
on May 18, 1994 and “docketed” this order on May 24, 1994. Id. at 813-14.
No further action took place until Wife’s attorney contacted the court one year
later. On May 25, 1995, the court issued a reconsidered order, and Wife
subsequently appealed to this Court. This Court vacated the May 25, 1995
order and reinstated the April 25, 1994 order, reasoning that
since the court granted reconsideration on May 24, 1994, it had
120 days in which to act and either direct that additional testimony
be taken or issue a new reconsidered order. Neither action was
taken within 120 days and on the 121st day, or September 22,
1994, the motion was deemed denied . . . Th[e] 1995 order, which
was rendered well beyond the 120 day time period in which the
court is to act, is a nullity[.]
Id., 681 A.2d at 814 (emphasis added). The trial court in Weinzetl argued
that it was inequitable for Rule 1930.2 to apply because the delay was the
product of error by judicial staff. This Court disagreed:
Whether because of clerical error, as in this case, or
inattentiveness by the court, Rule 1930.2 applies and directs that
where a reconsidered decision is not rendered within 120 days,
the reconsideration motion is deemed denied. Wife, if she so
desired, should have appealed that “denial” within 30 days. It
was not appropriate for Wife to wait beyond the 120 day period
and then contact the court regarding a decision. When no decision
was rendered by the 121st day, the proper course was for Wife to
file an appeal. As stated in the explanatory comment: “If the court
grants the motion for reconsideration, it has 120 days in which to
enter a reconsidered decision. The appeal period begins to run
anew upon the entry of the reconsidered decision, or on the 121st
day if the decision is not entered within the 120 day period.” . . .
Wife’s inaction in failing to take an appeal following the 121st day
cannot be excused regardless of the reason why a new
reconsidered order was not entered on the docket before that day.
Wife had the ability to view the docket to see if an order had been
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entered. When none was filed, a direct appeal should have been
taken.
Id. at 815.
This Court correctly reasoned in Weinzetl that the trial court lacked
jurisdiction under Rule 1930.2 to enter a reconsidered decision subsequent to
the 120-day reconsideration period. To that extent, Weinzetl provides
support for our decision today that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to enter
the May 26, 2016 support order.7
Accordingly, we agree with Father that the trial court lacked authority
to enter a reconsidered order after February 12, 2016. The May 26, 2016
order is a nullity. Thus, we vacate the May 26, 2016 order and reinstate the
September 17, 2015 support order.8
May 26, 2015 order vacated. September 17, 2015 order reinstated.
Jurisdiction relinquished.
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7 We note in passing that the trial court in Weinzetl issued its reconsideration
order on May 18, 1994, but it was not docketed until May 24, 1994. The
opinion does not indicate when the order was received by the prothonotary’s
office. The Weinzetl court held that since the trial court granted
reconsideration on May 24, 1994, it had 120 days to act. It made no
distinction between the date the order was issued and when it was docketed,
presumably because those facts did not form the basis of the issue for
disposition by this Court. Even so, the result in Weinzetl clearly was correct,
because regardless of the actual date of issuance or docketing, the 120-day
period expired before the trial court filed its reconsidered decision.
8 Because Father’s first argument is dispositive, we need not address his
second and third arguments.
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Judge Dubow did not participate in the consideration or decision of this
case.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 12/31/18
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