Brosky, W. v. MJC Industries, Inc.
Brosky, W. v. MJC Industries, Inc. No. 2138 EDA 2016
Pa. Super. Ct.May 24, 2017Background
- In October 2010, the day before his guilty plea on sexual-offense charges, Michael Mesko transferred two parcels (1515 Woodcock Rd. and 3268 Route 212) to MJC Industries, Inc. for $1 each; Mesko also transferred stock in Mesko Landscaping to Glenn Jackson. Mesko thereafter was incarcerated.
- William Brosky (victim) had causes of action against Mesko and obtained a $500,000 stipulated judgment (filed April 2011; indexed December 2012). Brosky sued MJC in May 2013 to reach the transferred real estate under Pennsylvania’s Uniform Fraudulent Transfer Act (UFTA).
- Brosky moved for summary judgment on Counts II and III (UFTA claims). The trial court granted partial summary judgment (Feb. 2014), awarding judgment for the equity value of the properties ($315,000). Superior Court initially quashed an appeal and remanded to decide whether indispensable parties were absent.
- On remand the trial court concluded Mesko, Jackson, and Mesko Landscaping were not indispensable parties and denied MJC’s motions; Brosky withdrew the remaining counts and the trial court’s June 21, 2016 order permitting withdrawal was appealed.
- The Superior Court affirmed: it held (1) no indispensable parties had been omitted, (2) summary judgment on Counts II & III was proper because Brosky proved lack of reasonably equivalent value and Mesko’s insolvency/intent elements under 12 Pa.C.S. §§ 5104(a)(2)(ii) and 5105, and (3) defenses (Nanty‑Glo, laches) failed or were waived.
Issues
| Issue | Brosky (Plaintiff) Argument | MJC (Defendant) Argument | Held |
|---|---|---|---|
| Were Mesko, Jackson, Mesko Landscaping indispensable parties? | Not directly addressed by Brosky; he proceeded against transferee seeking remedies under UFTA. | These three must be joined because their rights/interests (transferor, shareholder/operator, business with inventory on land) are implicated. | Not indispensable: court found no legal interest preventing entry of relief without joining them; UFTA permits remedies against transferee/asset. |
| Was summary judgment on UFTA claims proper (§5104(a)(2)(ii) & §5105)? | Transfers were constructively fraudulent: Brosky showed (1) claim arose before transfers; (2) Mesko received no reasonably equivalent value; (3) Mesko reasonably should have believed he would incur debts beyond ability to pay; (4) Mesko became insolvent as a result. | Genuine issues of fact (consideration, credibility, depositions) required jury resolution; Nanty‑Glo prohibits relying solely on witness testimony; laches defense. | Affirmed summary judgment: record (deeds, appraisals, depositions, conservation easement proceeds, timing of transfers day before plea) established no reasonably equivalent value and insolvency elements; no genuine material fact remained. |
| Did the trial court violate Nanty‑Glo rule by relying on testimony of Mesko/Jackson? | Brosky relied on documentary evidence and adverse-party testimony; not sole reliance on movant’s affidavits. | MJC: plaintiff relied on testimonial evidence of Mesko/Jackson (their depositions) and thus Nanty‑Glo should bar summary judgment. | MJC waived the argument by failing to raise it timely; on the merits, the court did not rely solely on testimonial evidence and Mesko/Jackson were adverse parties, so Nanty‑Glo did not bar judgment. |
| Is laches a bar to relief? | Brosky acted promptly after indexing of judgment; suit timely under UFTA. | MJC argued Brosky slept on rights and prejudice resulted. | Laches not established: Brosky filed within UFTA’s timeframe; MJC did not prove delay or prejudice. |
Key Cases Cited
- Sprague v. Casey, 550 A.2d 184 (Pa. 1988) (definition of indispensable party standard)
- Mechanicsburg Area Sch. Dist. v. Kline, 431 A.2d 953 (Pa. 1981) (factors to evaluate indispensable parties)
- Borough of Nanty–Glo v. American Surety Co. of New York, 163 A. 523 (Pa. 1932) (rule limiting summary judgment reliance on testimonial evidence)
- Baker v. Geist, 321 A.2d 634 (Pa. 1974) (when a claim arises for UFTA purposes)
- First Nat. Bank of Marietta v. Hoffines, 239 A.2d 458 (Pa. 1968) (past services generally not "fair consideration" for transfers)
- Kraisinger v. Kraisinger, 34 A.3d 168 (Pa. Super. 2011) (UFTA remedies and equitable adjustments)
