J. CURTIS JOYNER, District Judge.
Before the Court are ITOCHU INTERNATIONAL INC. and Medsurg Specialty Devices, Inc.'s Motion for Order Determining Ownership of Dr. John A. Bennett's Eight Vehicles (Case No. 9-4123, Doc. No. 251), Dr. John Bennett's Response in Opposition Thereto (Doc. No. 254), and ITOCHU INTERNATIONAL INC. and Medsurg Specialty Devices, Inc.'s Reply in Further Support Thereof (Doc. No. 255). For the following reasons, it is hereby ORDERED that the Motion is GRANTED in part.
The facts of this case are known to the Court and the parties, and the Court will recount only those facts pertinent to this motion. The Court entered final judgment in favor of ITOCHU INTERNATIONAL INC. ("Itochu") and Medsurg Specialty Devices, Inc. ("Medsurg") on October 4, 2013, in the total amount of $14,357,631.04. (Case No. 9-4123, Doc. No. 104). Since that time, judgment debtors Dr. John Bennett and his two companies, Devon Robotics and Devon Health Services ("judgment debtors"), have not paid any amount of the judgment. The present motion, then, represents a part of ITOCHU's continued efforts to enforce its judgment.
In October 2013, ITOCHU filed praecipes for writs of execution against, in relevant part, Dr. Bennett's estate in Villanova, Pennsylvania, and writs of garnishment against 37 companies ITOCHU believed to be owned by Dr. Bennett. (Doc. Nos. 107, 108). The Court issued the writs. The Court later ordered judgment debtors to provide an inventory of their assets to aid ITOCHU in executing its judgment (Doc. No. 193, modified by Doc. No. 198) and required Dr. Bennett to arrange for ITOCHU's counsel and representatives to inspect his home at 1835 County Line Road in Villanova to identify personal property subject to levy. (Doc. No. 198).
The inventory was conducted on January 16, 2014. ITOCHU submitted the inventory to the marshal, who levied on all the personal property listed. ITOCHU's counsel then informed Dr. Bennett's counsel that ITOCHU intended to direct the marshal to take possession of seven vehicles listed on the inventory. In response, Dr. Bennett filed an emergency motion to stay execution, asserting that the seven vehicles were owned jointly by him and his wife as tenants by the entirety, and thus not subject to execution. (Doc. No. 227). After a telephone conference with counsel for the parties, the parties agreed that Dr. Bennett would execute a bond for the vehicles. Subsequently, Dr. Bennett executed a bond for six of the seven vehicles. (ITOCHU's Motion, Ex. H). ITOCHU accepted this bond.
ITOCHU now seeks a ruling determining the ownership of eight vehicles owned by Dr. Bennett. The eight vehicles include the six for which Dr. Bennett has posted a bond, an eighth car in the possession of a Mr. Alphonso ("Al") Perna in Florida,
• 2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee — bond posted
• 2005 Ford F150 — bond posted
• 2007 Ford F150 — bond posted
• 2007 Mercedes Benz SL 550 — bond posted
• 2007 BMW 750Li — bond posted
• 2007 Cadillac Escalade — bond posted
• 2012 Audi A8 — no bond posted
• 2006 Cadillac Escalade — in possession of Al Perna in Florida
ITOCHU argues that the titles to the vehicles at issue certify that they are owned exclusively by Dr. Bennett. Because the titles to the cars name only Dr. Bennett, ITOCHU asserts, they are his sole property and are subject to execution. Dr. Bennett counters that other factors, not the title of the vehicles, should guide the Court's analysis. Dr. Bennett points to the fact that the vehicles were acquired during the marriage of Nance DiRocco and Dr. Bennett, were purchased with funds from two joint bank accounts owned by the couple, and are insured jointly. Moreover, the vehicles were intended to be and are used jointly by Ms. DiRocco, Dr. Bennett, and their children. Dr. Bennett asserts that the vehicles are not subject to execution because they are owned by Ms. DiRocco and Dr. Bennett as tenants by the entirety.
Under Pennsylvania law, marital property that is held by spouses as tenants by the entirety is not subject to the debtor-spouse's creditors.
Tenancy by the entirety is a form of ownership under Pennsylvania law in which each spouse has an undivided interest in the possession and enjoyment of the whole property and all of the rights arising from the possession.
"[U]nity of title exists when the married couple obtain title by and through the same instrument."
In the case at hand, ITOCHU has provided the Court with the title instruments to seven of the eight vehicles at issue.
Because Dr. Bennett took sole title of the vehicles when acquiring them, he and Ms. DiRocco did not have unity of title. Without unity of title at the time of acquisition, the vehicles were not acquired and are not held by Ms. DiRocco and Dr. Bennett as tenants by the entirety. The Court finds that ITOCHU has sustained its burden of rebutting the presumption that the vehicles at issue are entireties property. The vehicles are subject to execution by ITOCHU and Medsurg in satisfaction of their judgment against Dr. Bennett.
Dr. Bennett has posted a bond for six of the vehicles at issue. ITOCHU may now collect on the bond posted for them.
Dr. Bennett did not post a bond for the 2012 Audi AS. ITOCHU explains that Dr. Bennett relayed to ITOCHU that the Audi is subject to a financing lien that may take precedence over ITOCHU's judgment lien. (ITOCHU's Motion at 8);
As to the 2006 Cadillac Escalade currently in the possession of Alphonso Perna in Florida, Dr. Bennett maintains that it was purchased by Mr. Perna in 2012 and has been in his control since that time. (Dr. Bennett's Response at 4). Dr. Bennett has submitted emails and an Accounts Payable Invoice History Report from Devon Office Furniture detailing the structure of the payments made regarding the vehicle.
Mr. Lutz explains that, after receiving the second $1,500 deduction from Mr. Perna's paycheck each month, Devon Office Furniture will make a loan payment of $3,000 to Dr. John A. Bennett.
Dr. Bennett and Mr. Perna agreed that title to the vehicle would be transferred after all payments had been made.
ITOCHU points out that Dr. Bennett has not provided documentation of transfer of title from himself to Mr. Perna. Indeed, although it appears to the Court that by September 2012 Dr. Bennett had received five $3,000 monthly checks for a total of $15,000 from Devon Offices Furniture,
The Court declines to determine the ownership of the 2006 Cadillac Escalade at the present time. Because the parties focused only a minority of their briefing of this Motion on the ownership of the Escalade, the Court will give the parties time to supplement their arguments and evidence as to this vehicle.
For the foregoing reasons, ITOCHU and Medsurg's Motion to Determine Ownership of Dr. John A. Bennett's Eight Vehicles is GRANTED in part. An Order follows.