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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37
APEX BANK : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
JOHN R. KNOX AND MONA Y. KNOX :
:
Appellants : No. 465 WDA 2022
Appeal from the Order Entered March 28, 2022
In the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County Civil Division at
No(s): No. 480 Civil 2018
APEX BANK : IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
: PENNSYLVANIA
:
v. :
:
:
JOHN R. KNOX AND MONA Y. KNOX :
:
Appellants : No. 466 WDA 2022
Appeal from the Order Entered March 28, 2022
In the Court of Common Pleas of Somerset County Civil Division at
No(s): 653 Civil 2018
BEFORE: BENDER, P.J.E., LAZARUS, J., and McLAUGHLIN, J.
MEMORANDUM BY BENDER, P.J.E.: FILED: MAY 11, 2023
Appellants, John R. Knox and Mona Y. Knox, appeal at 465 WDA 2022
from the trial court’s March 28, 2022 order entered at trial court docket 480
Civil 2018 (“480”), dismissing with prejudice Appellants’ Petition for Rule to
Show Cause Why Settlement Agreement Should Not Be Enforced. In addition,
Appellants appeal at 466 WDA 2022 from the trial court’s March 28, 2022
order entered at trial court docket 653 Civil 2018 (“653”), which likewise
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dismissed with prejudice Appellants’ Petition for Rule to Show Cause Why
Settlement Agreement Should Not Be Enforced.1 After review, we affirm.
At trial court docket 480, Appellee — Apex Bank (“Apex”) — initiated a
mortgage foreclosure against Appellants as to real property situated at 130
Large Street, Meyersdale, Somerset County, Pennsylvania. See Trial Court
Opinion at No. 480 (“TCO I”), 8/2/22, at 1. At trial court docket 653, Apex
initiated a mortgage foreclosure against Appellants as to real property situated
at 2 Center Street, Meyersdale, Somerset County, Pennsylvania. See Trial
Court Opinion at No. 653 (“TCO II”), 8/2/22, at 1. On December 7, 2020,
judgments in mortgage foreclosure were entered for both properties. When
judgment was entered, the amount due to Apex with respect to the real
property at 130 Large Street was (i) $15,670.55 in principal; (ii) $3,359.81 in
accrued and unpaid interest; (iii) escrow advances in the sum of $3,349.49;
(iv) late charges in the sum of $509.88; (v) attorneys’ fees, costs, and
expenses; and (vi) all other sums provided for under the loan documents.
With respect to the real property at 2 Center Street, the amount due was: (i)
$32,052.60 in principal; (ii) $3,505.70 in accrued and unpaid interest; (iii)
escrow advances in the sum of $3,033.40; (iv) late charges in the sum of
$444.78; (v) attorneys’ fees, costs, and expenses; and (vi) all other sums
provided for under the loan documents.
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1 On August 23, 2022, this Court consolidated these appeals sua sponte.
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On June 7, 2021, writs of execution were issued against each property.
Sheriff’s sales on the properties were scheduled to take place on November
19, 2021.
About a week before the sheriff’s sales were to take place, Appellants’
counsel emailed Apex’s counsel on November 11, 2021, stating, in relevant
part:
[Appellants] have been back in touch with me concerning the
properties which are the subject of the Somerset County
foreclosure case Nos. 480 of 2018 (130 Large Street) and 653 of
2018 (2 Center Street).
[Appellants] were inquiring about the amounts necessary to bring
current or payoff the above properties, and whether Apex would
negotiate the final payoff amounts. [Appellants] have received
statements from Apex; however, when they brought current [a
third property not at issue in this appeal], the statements that
they had been receiving from Apex were incorrect. Would you be
able to get me the “bring current” amounts and the payoffs for
those two properties?
See Appellants’ Exhibit A (“Email Exchange”) at 1.2
Later that day, Apex’s counsel responded to the email, asserting that
she would be happy to reach out to Apex about whether it would be possible
to reach a resolution with Appellants. A few days later, on November 16, 2021
at 9:21 A.M., Apex’s counsel sent the following reply to Appellants’ counsel:
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2This exhibit showing the email exchanges between counsel was entered into
evidence at the March 22, 2022 hearing on Appellants’ petitions. The pages
of the exhibit are not numbered.
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I have been in touch with [Apex] about the payoff figures. For
loan file no. [redacted], the total payoff is $15,846.58,[3] and …
for file no. [redacted], the total payoff is $18,684.86.[4]
Please let us know if your clients are interested/able to payoff
these amounts.
Id. at 2.
A little over two hours later, Appellants’ counsel sent a response:
Thank you for the information. My clients are agreeable to the
payoff amounts. I believe they have been in touch with Apex to
arrange for the wiring of the funds to Apex. Hopefully, that will
be accomplished later today.
I appreciate your help with bringing these matters to a resolution.
If you need anything further from [sic], please let me know.
Id.
A minute after Appellants’ counsel sent his email, Apex’s counsel
responded, stating that she “inadvertently omitted our legal fees from October
from the amounts…. Both payoff amounts should include an additional
$285.00.” Id. at 3. She then immediately sent another email to Appellants’
counsel, thanking Appellants’ counsel for his assistance and conveying that
she will let Apex know to be on the lookout for Appellants’ wire. A moment
later, Appellants’ counsel asked if the $285 in legal fees were payable to Apex
or to counsel directly. Apex’s counsel represented that they should be paid to
Apex. Appellants wired these legal fees, along with the payoff figures Apex’s
counsel provided to them, to Apex that day. See TCO I at 2; TCO II at 2.
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3 This loan file related to the property at 130 Large Street.
4 This loan file related to the property at 2 Center Street.
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The next morning, on November 17, 2021 at 9:11 a.m., Apex’s counsel
emailed Appellants’ counsel, saying that “the payoff numbers that I gave
you[,] and that your clients wired[,] were incorrect.” Email Exchange at 4.
She went on to outline the correct payoff amounts: instead of $15,846.58 for
the loan pertaining to 130 Large Street, the payoff amount was $40,998.34;
and for the loan relating to 2 Center Street, the payoff amount was
$60,321.62, not $18,684.86. She asked Appellants’ counsel to advise how he
would like to handle the situation, and if his clients are still in a position to pay
off the loans.
That afternoon, Appellants’ counsel replied, relaying that he was trying
to contact his clients. He said he would call Apex’s counsel once he was able
to discuss the matter with them. Appellants’ counsel also requested that the
sheriff’s sales scheduled for November 19, 2021, be postponed until he finds
out how Appellants wanted to proceed. Apex’s counsel answered that she
would reach out to Apex about postponing the sheriff’s sales.
The following morning, on November 18, 2021, Apex’s counsel advised
Appellants’ counsel via email that the sheriff’s sales were postponed until
December 17, 2021, and that Apex was holding the wires from Appellants.
Later that morning, Appellants’ counsel replied, indicating that Appellants
were in Florida, that one of them was having health issues requiring a trip to
the hospital, and that he was still waiting to hear from them on how they
wanted to proceed. Apex’s counsel responded that Apex “is uncomfortable
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with holding the wires and would like to resolve how to post those funds
quickly.” Id. at 10.
Around the close of business that day, after not hearing more from
Appellants’ counsel, Apex’s counsel sent another email to Appellants’ counsel,
stating that Apex is not accepting Appellants’ payments as the full payoff
amounts or as the full reinstatement amounts. She further relayed that, in
order to cancel the foreclosure sales scheduled for December 17, 2021,
Appellants would either have to reinstate or pay in full. Apex’s counsel also
advised that, unless she received other instruction on how Appellants wished
to proceed by the end of the next day (i.e., November 19, 2021), Apex would
post the funds to Appellants’ accounts.
According to Apex, Appellants never responded to this email. See
Apex’s Brief at 5. Instead, on December 2, 2021, Appellants filed a Petition
for Rule to Show Cause Why Settlement Agreement Should Not Be Enforced
at both trial court dockets.
A hearing on the petitions took place on March 22, 2022. There, both
Appellants testified. When Mr. Knox was asked if he had any reason to believe
that the payoff amounts given by Apex’s counsel were in error, he answered
“[n]ot in the slightest.” N.T., 3/22/22, at 12. In offering the $15,846.58 and
$18,684.86 payoff amounts, Mr. Knox explained that he thought Apex would
“rather have something to settle up and take the amount of money and
consider it a payoff. It’s not that we haven’t done that with other[ loan
servicing companies].” Id. at 15. On cross-examination, Mr. Knox conceded
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that he never signed any sort of written agreement with Apex relating to the
emails exchanged in November of 2021. Id. at 21-22. He also acknowledged
that the November 2021 payment he made for both properties is less than the
amount owed for both mortgages. Id. at 24. On re-direct examination, he
conveyed that, “if you take a look at what was owed of princi[pal], interest,
and everything else, it sounded to me like they were willing to settle for 65
cents on the dollar, and that’s what they presented.” Id. at 25.5
Mrs. Knox testified that, when her attorney reached out to her about the
$15,846.58 and $18,684.85 payoff amounts, she “thought it was a little high.
But neither here nor there, I just wanted closure; and that was [Apex’s] offer,
and we complied. I thought it was the end of the story.” Id. at 30. She
represented that she and Mr. Knox had negotiated with other loan servicing
companies regarding loans on other properties they owned, and that those
companies accepted lower offers. Id. at 31. On cross-examination, Mrs. Knox
confirmed that she had not signed any written agreement with Apex in
November of 2021. Id. at 33.
At the conclusion of the hearing, the trial court dismissed Appellants’
petitions with prejudice. In doing so, it opined:
There was no settlement here. There was no agreement here.
There certainly was no settlement agreement. … What this email
exchange tells me is that there wasn’t a meeting of the minds
here. At most, this was a negotiation. The flimsy argument that
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5 Despite Mr. Knox’s testimony, we note that Apex would be settling for much
less than 65 cents on the dollar in accepting Appellants’ November 2021
payments as payoffs for both properties.
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[Appellants] are putting forth today, in this [c]ourt’s opinion, was
made possible only by virtue of the fact that there was a bit of a
blunder on the part of [Apex’s] counsel, which young lawyers
sometimes do. And there’s a complete lack of integrity on the
part of [Appellants’] counsel, a much more experienced lawyer,
who no doubt knew better, that tried to take advantage of the
mistake. That’s a fact. Those are my [f]indings of [f]act.
As a matter of law, this had to be in writing to be enforceable. It’s
not in writing. … It doesn’t satisfy the Statute of Frauds. It
doesn’t satisfy in writing the formal written settlement agreement
[sic].
Id. at 42-43.
On March 28, 2022, the trial court entered orders at both trial court
dockets dismissing Appellants’ petitions with prejudice. On April 21, 2022,
Appellants filed timely, separate notices of appeal at each docket.6, 7 The trial
court directed Appellants to file Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) concise statements of errors
complained of on appeal. Appellants timely complied. Thereafter, the trial
court issued opinions pursuant to Rule 1925(a).
Presently, Appellants raise the following issues for our review:
I. Did the [t]rial court err[] as a matter of law in denying …
Appellant[s’] Petition for Rule to Show Cause Why Settlement
Agreement Should Not Be Enforced?
A. Is there competent evidence that the unilateral mistake
on the part of Apex [was] within the knowledge of
[Appellants?]
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6In the caption of each notice of appeal, Appellants listed only the trial court
docket number at which the appeal was filed.
7 See Kramer v. Schaeffer, 751 A.2d 241, 244-45 (Pa. Super. 2000)
(ascertaining that an order denying a motion to enforce settlement is
appealable as a final order if settlement occurred after trial).
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B. Does the … agreement between the parties satisfy the
elements of a valid and enforceable contract?
C. Is the [t]rial [c]ourt’s opinion supported by the law or by
the facts adduced at the March 22, 2022 hearing on
Appellants’ Petition to Enforce?
Appellants’ Brief at 4-5 (emphasis omitted).8
At the outset of our review, we keep in mind the following:
When reviewing a trial court’s decision to enforce a settlement
agreement, our scope of review is plenary as to questions of law,
and we are free to draw our own inferences and reach our own
conclusions from the facts as found by the court. However, we
are only bound by the trial court’s findings of fact which are
supported by competent evidence. The prevailing party is entitled
to have the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to its
position. Thus, we will only overturn the trial court’s decision
when the factual findings of the court are against the weight of
the evidence or its legal conclusions are erroneous.
Bennett v. Juzelenos, 791 A.2d 403, 406 (Pa. Super. 2002) (cleaned up).
In addition, we observe that “[t]he enforceability of settlement agreements is
determined according to principles of contract law.” Kramer, 751 A.2d at 245
(citation omitted).
In Appellants’ first sub-issue, they contest the trial court’s determination
that Appellants knew that the initial payoff figures given by Apex’s counsel
were erroneous, and that they tried to take advantage of the mistake. No
relief is due.
This Court has previously explained:
Generally[,] if a mistake is not mutual, but unilateral, and is
not due to the fault of the party not mistaken, but to the
negligence of the one who acted under the mistake, it
affords no basis for relief. On the other hand, when there
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8 We have re-ordered Appellants’ sub-issues for ease of disposition.
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is mistake on one side and fraud on the other, relief is
available. Likewise, irrespective of active fraud, if the other
party knows or has good reason to know of the unilateral
mistake, relief will be granted to the same extent as a
mutual mistake.
A corollary to the aforementioned principles is the rule that the
mistake under scrutiny, as well as the actual intent of the parties,
must be clearly proven.
Id. at 246 (cleaned up).
Thus, we examine if (1) Apex made a mistake; and (2) if Appellants, or
their counsel, knew or had good reason to know of Apex’s mistake. As for the
former, Appellants argue that Apex did not present any evidence of a mistake
in proffering the payoff to them. See Appellants’ Brief at 23. They say that
Apex did not present evidence as to how or why the alleged mistake occurred,
or who made the purported mistake (i.e., Apex’s counsel or Apex). Id.
Based on our review of the record, the trial court’s finding that Apex
made a mistake is supported by competent evidence. See Bennett, supra.
The email exchange between counsel demonstrates that Apex did not intend
to compromise the full payoff amounts. To begin, Appellants’ counsel
reached out to Apex, just about a week before the sheriff’s sales were to
occur, asking if Apex’s counsel could provide the ‘bring current’ amounts and
payoffs for the two properties. When Apex’s counsel responded to Appellants’
request with the at-issue payoff figures, she did not acknowledge — let alone
give an explanation for why — the figures were substantially lower than what
Appellants actually owed. She made no indication that Apex would accept less
than the full amount due in order to settle. Further, as Apex points out, its
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counsel “referred to the figures provided as the ‘payoff’ amounts, which was
meant to indicate that these figures are the full amounts owed to make full
payment on the [m]ortgages and [n]otes; thus satisfying the judgments
entered against … Appellants.” Apex’s Brief at 14-15 (citations omitted).
Moreover, the very next morning after Apex’s counsel gave the at-issue
payoff amounts and Apex received Appellants’ wire, Apex’s counsel notified
Appellants’ counsel that the payoff numbers she had given were incorrect.
This circumstantial evidence supports that the at-issue payoff figures given by
Apex’s counsel were a mistake.
With respect to whether Appellants — or their counsel — knew or had
good reason to know of Apex’s mistake, we again determine that the trial
court’s finding is supported by competent evidence. Appellants claim that
“Apex did not present any evidence of why [Appellants] or [their] counsel
should have known that the proffered payoff was a mistake as opposed to an
offer in compromise or a negotiated settlement offer to clear four years of
litigation off the books before a [s]heriff’s [s]ale occurred.” Appellants’ Brief
at 23-24. We disagree. Though Appellants testified at the hearing that they
thought Apex offered lower figures because it wanted to settle, their counsel
— at the very least —had good reason to know of Apex’s mistake. The payoff
figures Apex’s counsel provided in the email were significantly lower than
what the full payoff figures actually were, and Apex’s counsel did not make
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any mention that Apex was discounting the amount due for any reason.9
Given that the figures were substantially lower than what they should have
been (by nearly $70,000), and because there were no compelling reasons for
Apex to offer such a major discount to Appellants at this juncture after years
of litigation, Appellants’ counsel had good reason to know that Apex’s counsel
had made a mistake.10 Therefore, we affirm the trial court’s orders dismissing
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9 We also reiterate that Appellants’ counsel contacted Apex about negotiating
the final payoff amounts. Apex did not reach out to Appellants about settling,
which weakens Appellants’ theory that Apex wanted to avoid the hassle of the
sheriff’s sales. If Apex really wanted to avoid the hassle of the sheriff’s sales,
it could have reached out to Appellants earlier.
10 The facts in Kramer are distinguishable. In that case, the plaintiffs were
injured in a car accident caused by the defendant, and sued the defendant for
injuries they sustained. The parties proceeded to arbitration, and the plaintiffs
received a $10,000 award. The defendant appealed to the court of common
pleas. Prior to trial, the defendant’s insurance company offered the plaintiffs
$3,500 to settle the case, but the plaintiffs rejected the offer. The case went
to trial and, although the jury found the defendant liable for the plaintiffs’
injuries, it awarded the plaintiffs zero damages.
After trial, a new adjuster from the defendant’s insurance company
became involved in the case. Not aware that the case had already been to
trial, the new adjuster contacted the plaintiffs’ attorney and offered to settle
the case for $3,500. The plaintiffs’ attorney accepted. Four days later, the
new adjuster learned that the case had been tried, and advised the plaintiffs’
attorney that the insurance company would not be making payment to the
plaintiffs. The plaintiffs subsequently filed a petition to enforce the settlement
agreement, which the trial court denied.
The plaintiffs appealed. This Court reversed the trial court’s decision to
deny plaintiffs’ petition to enforce the settlement agreement. In doing so, we
discerned that the plaintiffs’ attorney did not know, or have good reason to
know, of the unilateral mistake. We observed that nothing in the record
disclosed that the plaintiffs’ attorney “was aware that the second settlement
offer was premised upon the fact that the adjuster wanted to settle the case
(Footnote Continued Next Page)
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with prejudice Appellants’ Petition for Rule to Show Cause Why Settlement
Agreement Should Not Be Enforced.11
Orders affirmed.
Judgment Entered.
Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary
Date: 5/11/2023
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and avoid trial.” Kramer, 751 A.2d at 246. We also noted that “it is common
practice for a party to offer to settle a case after a jury verdict in order to
prevent a successful appeal. Such seems all the more likely in this case where
a panel of arbitrators initially awarded the [plaintiffs] $10,000.” Id. at 247
(footnote omitted).
Here, in contrast to Kramer, Appellants’ counsel had good reason to
know that the figures provided by Apex’s counsel were a mistake. Unlike the
circumstances in Kramer, Appellants’ counsel reached out to Apex’s counsel
about negotiating the final payoff amounts. Prior to that, Appellants point to
nothing in the record indicating that Apex wanted to settle the matter to avoid
the sheriff’s sales. Moreover, the settlement amount offered in Kramer was
for a lot less than the nearly $70,000 discount Appellants received here.
Finally, while the insurance company in Kramer had reason to want to prevent
a successful appeal, especially in light of the plaintiffs’ prior favorable
arbitration award, it is less sensical for Apex to accept so much less than the
full amounts due at this juncture simply to avoid proceeding with the sales.
11 In light of our disposition, we need not address Appellants’ remaining
arguments.
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