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CourtListener opinion 4243938

Date unknown · US

Extracted case name
JACQUELINE EDWARDS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA v. ROBERT EDWARDS
Extracted reporter citation
719 A.2d 306
Docket / number
1956 MDA 2016
QDRO relevance 5/5Retirement relevance 2/5Family-law relevance 5/5gold label pending
Research-use warning: This page contains machine-draft public annotations generated from public opinion text. The headnote is not Willie-approved gold-label work product and is not legal advice. Verify the full opinion and current law before relying on it.

Machine-draft headnote

Machine-draft public headnote: CourtListener opinion 4243938 is included in the LexyCorpus QDRO sample set as a public CourtListener opinion with relevance to QDRO procedure / domestic relations order issues. The current annotation is conservative: it identifies source provenance, relevance signals, and evidence quotes for attorney/agent retrieval. It is not a Willie-approved legal headnote yet.

Retrieval annotation

Draft retrieval summary: this opinion has QDRO relevance score 5/5, retirement-division score 2/5, and family-law score 5/5. Use the quoted text and full opinion below before relying on the case.

Category: QDRO procedure / domestic relations order issues

Evidence quotes

QDRO

mstances of this case, Appellant satisfied the spirit of Rule 1925(b), and therefore, we should not find waiver of that basis. Herein, Appellant timely appealed the trial court's November 14, 2016 order denying his petitions challenging the September 2016 QDRO order and the February 11, 2016 equitable distribution order. The trial court directed Appellant to file a Rule 1925(b) statement. Appellant failed to file or serve a Rule 1925(b) statement with the trial court. Instead, Appellant filed a letter with this Court, setting forth his claimed errors. The trial court considered this letter and authored a res

valuation/division

fied the spirit of Rule 1925(b), and therefore, we should not find waiver of that basis. Herein, Appellant timely appealed the trial court's November 14, 2016 order denying his petitions challenging the September 2016 QDRO order and the February 11, 2016 equitable distribution order. The trial court directed Appellant to file a Rule 1925(b) statement. Appellant failed to file or serve a Rule 1925(b) statement with the trial court. Instead, Appellant filed a letter with this Court, setting forth his claimed errors. The trial court considered this letter and authored a responsive Rule 1925(a) opinion. Thus, appellate review of

Source and provenance

Source type
courtlistener_qdro_opinion_full_text
Permissions posture
public
Generated status
machine draft public v0
Review status
gold label pending
Jurisdiction metadata
US
Deterministic extraction
reporter: 719 A.2d 306 · docket: 1956 MDA 2016
Generated at
May 14, 2026

Related public corpus pages

Deterministic links based on shared title/citation terms and QDRO / retirement / family-law retrieval scores.

Clean opinion text

J-A26043-17

NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

JACQUELINE EDWARDS IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
 OF
 PENNSYLVANIA

 v.

ROBERT EDWARDS

 Appellant No. 1956 MDA 2016

 Appeal from the Order Entered November 14, 2016
 In the Court of Common Pleas of Centre County
 Civil Division at No(s): 14-0012

BEFORE: BOWES, J., OLSON, J., and RANSOM, J.

CONCURRING STATEMENT BY BOWES, J.: FILED FEBRUARY 09, 2018

 Although I concur with the learned Majority's conclusion that Appellant's

attempt to appeal the trial court's February 11, 2016 decision was untimely, I

write separately to voice my disagreement with its determination that

Appellant waived all his issues by failing to file a Rule 1925(b) concise

statement of errors complained of on appeal.

 I acknowledge that the Supreme Court established a bright-line rule in

Commonwealth v. Lord, 719 A.2d 306 (Pa. 1998), re-affirmed in

Commonwealth v. Castillo, 888 A.2d 775 (Pa. 2005), which mandates a

finding of waiver when an appellant fails to file a court-ordered Rule 1925(b)

statement. Further, I recognize that our case law dictates that a failure to

serve a copy of the Rule 1925(b) statement on the trial court, when directed

to do so, is also fatal to an appeal. Forest Highlands Community Ass'n v.
 J-A26043-17

Hammer, 879 A.2d 223 (Pa.Super. 2005). Nevertheless, I believe that, under

the circumstances of this case, Appellant satisfied the spirit of Rule 1925(b),

and therefore, we should not find waiver of that basis.

 Herein, Appellant timely appealed the trial court's November 14, 2016

order denying his petitions challenging the September 2016 QDRO order and

the February 11, 2016 equitable distribution order. The trial court directed

Appellant to file a Rule 1925(b) statement. Appellant failed to file or serve a

Rule 1925(b) statement with the trial court. Instead, Appellant filed a letter

with this Court, setting forth his claimed errors. The trial court considered

this letter and authored a responsive Rule 1925(a) opinion. Thus, appellate

review of Appellant's issues was not hampered by his procedural miscue. As

such, I believe this Court, in the spirit of judicial economy and fairness, ought

to reach the merits of this appeal.

 Although the Appellant herein failed to comply with the language of Rule

1925, or the trial court's express directive, he nevertheless satisfied its

purpose. As such, I would find that Appellant's letter to this Court constituted

his Rule 1925(b) statement. Since the trial court filed a responsive opinion to

the claimed errors raised in that letter, we can conduct meaningful appellate

review. Accordingly, I would not find his issues waived on that ground.

Nevertheless, I agree with the Majority's holding that his issues were waived

for failing to timely appeal the February 11, 2016 equitable distribution order.

Hence, this concurring statement.

 Judge Olson joins this concurring statement.

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