Cole v. Boyd
| Decision Date | 19 August 1998 |
| Citation | Cole v. Boyd, 719 A.2d 311 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1998) |
| Parties | Richard A. COLE, M.D., FACP, Richard A. Cole, M.D., Inc. v. Chris BOYD, Fred Lessinger, B & L Medical Inc., Pie Medical, Inc. Appeal of Richard A. COLE, M.D. |
| Court | Pennsylvania Superior Court |
Richard A. Cole, M.D., in propria persona, appellant.
Robert A. Sambroak, Jr., Erie, for Boyd, Lessinger and B & L Medical, appellees.
Thomas Smolinski, Pittsburgh, for PIE Medical, appellee.
Before POPOVICH, SCHILLER and BECK, JJ.
The plaintiffs, Richard A. Cole, MD and Richard A. Cole, MD, Inc.,1 appeal the order granting a Motion to Dismiss by the defendants, Chris Boyd, Fred Lessinger, B & L Medical, Inc., Pie Medical, Inc. on the basis that "PlaintiffRichard A. Cole, MD is the real party in interest in this litigation ... [and a]party cannot be dismissed with prejudice for failing to follow ... [Pa.R.Civ.P. 2002—Prosecution of Actions by Real Parties in Interest]."We reverse.
The record reveals that the plaintiffs instituted suit against the defendants on December 11, 1995, seeking rescission of a contract and damages.Thereafter, various pleadings were filed and culminated in a Motion to Dismiss by the defendants on January 20, 1998, asserting that:
Defendants' Motion to Dismiss, 1/20/98, Paragraphs 4-8.
The PlaintiffRichard A. Cole, MD admitted "assign[ing] whatever benefits ar[o]se from this litigation ... to Steven P. Cole...."See Appellants' Opposition To Motion To Dismiss, etc., at Paragraph 2.As a result, the trial court concluded, in light of the assignment of "any claim" in the present litigation to Steven P. Cole, the plaintiffRichard A. Cole, MD, individually and as CEO of Richard A. Cole, MD, Inc., "gave up any right he had to ... this chose in action."In support thereof, the trial court incorporated its rationale appearing in a related case Cole v. Carlson(No. 14990 of 1995, filed February 9, 1998) involving Richard A. Cole, MD; to-wit:
The next exception reads:
Id. at 3-5.We disagree.In doing so, we see no need to decide whether the plaintiffRichard A. Cole, MD is the "real party in interest" pursuant to Pa.R.Civ.P.2002.
To explicate, since the assignment was made after the suit was instituted, Pa. R.Civ.P.2004 and not Rule 2002() is controlling as to the party-plaintiff.The McKenzie Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md., etal., 54DauphinCty. Rptrs. 294, 298(1943).Rule 2004 reads:
If a plaintiff has commenced an action in his own name and thereafter transfers his interest therein, in whole or in part, the action may continue in the name of the original plaintiff, or upon petition of the original plaintiff or of the transferee or of any other party in interest in the action, the court may direct the transferee to be substituted as plaintiff or joined with the original plaintiff.
The language of Rule 2004 is clear in not requiring that, once a transfer of an interest occurs by a plaintiff after an action has commenced, a transferee be named as a co-plaintiff or...
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