[J-25A-2019 and J-25B-2019] [MO: Donohue, J.]
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
WESTERN DISTRICT
IN RE: ESTATE OF SOPHIA M. : No. 40 WAP 2018
KRASINSKI, A/K/A SOPHIA KRASINSKI :
A/K/A SOFIA KRASINSKY, LATE OF : Appeal from the Order of the Superior
MORRISDALE, (COOPER TOWNSHIP) : Court entered May 15, 2018 at No.
CLEARFIELD COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA : 1289 WDA 2015, affirming in part,
DECEASED ON 11/04/2006 : reversing in part and vacating in part
: the Order of the Court of Common
: Pleas of Clearfield County entered
APPEAL OF: PATRICIA KRASINSKI- : July 16, 2015 at No. 1707-0003, and
DUNZIK : remanding.
:
: ARGUED: April 9, 2019
IN RE: ESTATE OF SOPHIA M. : No. 41 WAP 2018
KRASINSKI A/K/A SOPHIA KRASINSKI :
A/K/A SOPHIA KRASINSKY LATE OF : Appeal from the Order of the Superior
MORRISDALE (COOPER TOWNSHIP), : Court entered May 15, 2018 at No.
CLEARFIELD COUNTY, PENNSYLVANIA : 1265 WDA 2015, affirming in part,
DECEASED NOVEMBER 4, 2006 : reversing in part and vacating in part
: the Order of the Court of Common
: Pleas of Clearfield County entered
APPEAL OF: PATRICIA KRASINSKI- : July 16, 2015 at No. 1707-0003, and
DUNZIK : remanding.
:
: ARGUED: April 9, 2019
CONCURRING OPINION
JUSTICE DOUGHERTY DECIDED: OCTOBER 31, 2019
I concur in the result. I write separately to acknowledge what is, in my view, an
ongoing procedural dilemma posed by the majority’s decision to disapprove In re Estate
of Stricker, 977 A.2d 1115 (Pa. 2009), In re Estate of Ash, 73 A.3d 1287 (Pa. Super.
2013), and Estate of Cherry, 111 A.3d 1204 (Pa. Super. 2015). See Majority Opinion, slip
op. at 20 & n.11.
In Stricker, Ash, and Cherry, as the majority aptly describes, the orders
unsuccessfully sought to be appealed each involved the authorization (or lack thereof) of
a future sale of property by an estate. In Stricker and Ash, the orphans’ court compelled
the estate to proceed with the sale of property to specifically identified buyers; in Cherry,
the court refused to authorize any future sale. See Stricker, 977 A.2d at 1117; Ash, 73
A.3d at 1289; Cherry, 111 A.3d at 1206. Notwithstanding the post-Stricker amendments
to Pa.R.A.P. 342, Cherry additionally relied on over 100 years of jurisprudence to deduce
that such prospective orders regarding future sales, which do not resolve a dispute over
who has a property interest, do not actually “determin[e] an interest in real or personal
property” as anticipated by Rule 342(a)(6), and are thus not immediately appealable
unless certified by the orphans’ court. See Cherry, 111 A.3d at 1208, citing T.C.R. Realty,
Inc. v. Cox, 372 A.2d 721, 724 (Pa. 1977) (fundamental law that only final orders may be
appealed “unless otherwise expressly permitted by statute”); In re Maslowski’s Estate,
104 A. 675, 675 (Pa. 1918) (appeal from order directing estate administrator to sell real
estate belonging to decedent is interlocutory and must be quashed); In re Estate of
Habazin, 679 A.2d 1293, 1295 (Pa. Super. 1996) (citing Maslowski’s Estate); Appeal of
Snodgrass, 96 Pa. 420, 421 (Pa. 1880) (order directing sale of real estate for payment of
decedent’s debts is not definitive and thus not appealable).
Here, in contrast, appellant Dunzik seeks to appeal an order which relates to a
sale of property which has already occurred, and incorporates the proposed deeds
containing the particular details of each parcel and its new owner. I thoroughly agree with
the majority that this April 30, 2013 order determined an interest in property and was
immediately appealable pursuant to Rule 342(a)(6), therefore Dunzik’s failure to appeal
it within thirty days waived her challenges to the sale. However, by overruling Stricker,
Ash, and Cherry, and further invalidating predecessor cases regarding the unappealable
[J-25A-2019 and J-25B-2019] [MO: Donohue, J.] - 2
quality of orders authorizing future sales of property by an estate, the majority’s reasoning
would also appear to extend to the orphans’ court order dated March 22, 2011, which
granted the Executor’s petition to permit a private sale of the property. Consequently,
Dunzik would have waived all of her claims to the property by not raising them in an
appeal of that order, and her attempts to challenge the property sale could, plausibly,
have been quashed on such a basis despite the existence of any intervening facts (e.g.,
alleged misrepresentation by the Executor regarding the logistics of the sale) which might
have impacted the success of her challenge at a later time.
Thus, in my view, the majority’s analysis does not clearly explicate at what point
an order regarding an estate’s sale of property determines an interest in property, and
leaves open to question whether an orphans’ court’s general directive authorizing an
estate to sell property at some point in the future — for example, the March 2011 orphans’
court order in this case — does definitively determine an interest in the property such that
any subsequent claims to the property are waived if not appealed within thirty days. I
anticipate this point of uncertainty will serve to undermine the “orderly administration of
estates” envisioned by the rules committee in drafting the Rule 342 amendments.
Pa.R.A.P. 342, Note.
Accordingly, while I do not endorse the majority’s decision to disapprove, rather
than to distinguish, Stricker, Ash, and Cherry, I nevertheless agree with the majority’s
application of Rule 342(a)(6) to the specific facts of this case, as well as its conclusion
the April 30, 2013 order, which placed the orphans’ court’s seal of approval on a sale of
property that had already taken place, determined an interest in property and any claims
against it were therefore waived as not raised within the applicable time period.
Justice Baer joins this concurring opinion.
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