Court Opinion

ID: 9965108
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2024-05-01 17:13:03.934101+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:24:42.843234
License: Public Domain

J-A06022-24

                               2024 PA Super 89

 PRESTON HOOPES, TRADING AND             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
 DOING BUSINESS AS HOOPES                :        PENNSYLVANIA
 EQUIPMENT RENTAL & TURF                 :
 FARMING                                 :
                                         :
                                         :
              v.                         :
                                         :
                                         :   No. 912 WDA 2023
 STEPHEN HADLEY, INDIVIDUALLY            :
 AND TRADING AND DOING                   :
 BUSINESS AS HADLEY                      :
 LANDSCAPING                             :
                                         :
                   Appellant

                 Appeal from the Order Entered June 3, 2020
              In the Court of Common Pleas of Venango County
                     Civil Division at No(s): 2019-01046

 BEFORE: LAZARUS, P.J., PANELLA, P.J.E., and BECK, J.

 OPINION BY PANELLA, P.J.E.:                 FILED: May 1, 2024

      Stephen Hadley appeals from the Venango County Court of Common

 Pleas’ order granting the motion for judgment on the pleadings filed by

 Preston Hoopes, trading and doing business as Hoopes Equipment Rental

 and Turf Farming (“Hoopes”). Hadley essentially argues the trial court

 erred by finding that Hoopes’ writ of revival of a judgment lien filed in

 2019 related to a judgment entered against Hadley in 2007 was not time

 barred by Section 5526(1) of the Judicial Code. That section provides that

 an action for revival of a judgment lien on real property must be

 commenced within five years. See 42 Pa. C.S.A. § 5526(1). Hadley also
J-A06022-24

 argues the trial court erred by precluding him from raising the affirmative

 defenses of laches and estoppel against the writ of revival. We affirm.

       The relevant facts underlying this action are undisputed. Hoopes

 filed a civil complaint against Hadley in 2005 in Potter County. The parties

 ultimately reached an agreement on the matter and on July 26, 2007, the

 Potter County Court of Common Pleas directed the Prothonotary to enter

 judgment against Hadley in the amount of $55, 372.76. On November 30

 of the same year, the Potter County order was transferred to, and the

 judgment entered in, Venango County. There is no dispute that the entry

 of this judgment resulted in a judgment lien against real property owned

 by Hadley.

       The next activity in the case occurred on August 27, 2019, when

 Hoopes filed a praecipe for writ of revival of the judgment lien related to

 the judgment it had obtained against Hadley. The writ averred that the

 judgment entered against Hadley remained unpaid and it requested the

 Prothonotary to issue a writ to revive and continue the lien of judgment

 and file the lien in the judgment index against Hadley.

       Hadley filed an answer and new matter. In the answer, Hadley

 asserted Hoopes had no legal right to any amount of the judgment. The

 new matter argued that the judgment expired on November 30, 2012, five

 years after it had been entered, and Hoopes’ writ of revival was barred by

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 the statute of limitations. Specifically, Hadley argued the writ of revival

 was barred by Section 5526(1) of the Judicial Code, which provides:

       §5526. Five Year limitation

       The following actions and proceedings must be commenced
       within five years:

       (1) An action for revival of a judgment lien on real property.

 42 Pa. C.S.A. § 5526(1). Hadley also raised the defenses of estoppel and

 laches as new matter.

       Both Hoopes and Hadley filed a motion for judgment on the

 pleadings. In his motion, Hadley renewed his claim that the writ of revival

 was time barred by Section 5526(1). He further asserted in his supporting

 memorandum that even if Section 5526(1) was not applicable, Hoopes’

 motion for judgment on the pleadings should be denied as disputed facts

 remained on Hadley’s affirmative defenses of laches and estoppel. Hoopes

 maintained, meanwhile, that the defenses raised by Hadley were not

 cognizable defenses in a proceeding to revive a judgment lien.

       Relying on our Supreme Court’s opinion in Shearer v. Naftzinger,

 747 A.2d 859 (Pa. 2000), the trial court rejected Hadley’s argument that

 the writ of revival was time barred by Section 5526. In doing so, the court

 noted Shearer held that the statute of limitations at issue in that case

 was not a defense to the entry of a writ of revival of a judgment lien given

 that a writ of revival of a judgment lien is nothing more than a mechanism

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 for judgment creditors to preserve their lien priority.      See Trial Court

 Opinion, 5/12/2020, at 3-4. The court therefore denied Hadley’s motion

 for judgment on the pleadings and partially granted Hoopes’ motion for

 judgment on the pleadings to “the limited extent that this Court finds

 [Hoopes’] writ of revival is not barred by the statute of limitations.” Order,

 5/12/2020 (single page).

       Hoopes filed a motion for reconsideration. In that motion, Hoopes

 requested that the court grant its motion for judgment on the pleadings in

 its entirety. Hoopes asserted that, even if the facts pleaded in Hadley’s

 answer and new matter were taken as true, Hadley would not be entitled

 to relief as none of the defenses raised by Hadley were cognizable in a

 proceeding to revive a judgment lien. To the contrary, Hoopes argued, the

 only cognizable defenses in a proceeding to revive a judgment lien are

 that the judgment does not exist, the judgment has been satisfied, or the

 judgment     has   been   discharged.   See   Motion   for   Reconsideration,

 5/21/2020, at 2 (citing PNC Bank, Nat. Ass’n v. Balsamo, 634 A.2d

 645, 649 (Pa. Super. 1993)).

       The trial court granted the motion. The court reiterated it had

 already partially granted Hoopes’ motion for judgment on the pleadings

 based on its finding that the writ of revival was not barred by the statute

 of limitations. It added that, in considering the remaining issues in Hoopes’

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 motion, the court found it was clear that none of the remaining defenses

 raised by Hadley were cognizable in a proceeding for revival of a judgment

 lien. Accordingly, the court entered an order on June 3, 2020, granting

 Hoopes’ motion for judgment on the pleadings in its totality and ordering

 the Prothonotary to enter a judgment on the writ of revival.

       Hoopes filed a motion for summary judgment on July 14, 2023.

 During oral argument on the summary judgment motion, it was discovered

 that the court’s June 3, 2020, order had not been served on either party

 pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 236. Given these circumstances, the trial court

 found the matter had been resolved and the summary judgment motion

 was moot. However, because of the clear breakdown in the court’s

 operations, the court reinstated the parties’ appellate rights nunc pro tunc

 and gave each party 30 days to file a notice of appeal from the date of the

 entry of the order. Hadley filed a timely notice of appeal. Both Hadley and

 the trial court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925. Hadley now raises these two

 issues for our consideration:

       I.     Now that the Judgment Lien Law of 1947 has been
              repealed and fully replaced by the 2003 Amendments to
              our Rules of Civil Procedure[,] is the five-year statute of
              limitations, found [in] 42 Pa. C.S.A. § 5526, now valid
              and enforceable against a praecipe for writ of revival?

       II.    Independent of the statute of limitations, do the 2003
              Amendments to our Rules of Civil Procedure allow other
              affirmative defenses to be raised against a praecipe for
              writ of revival?

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 Appellant’s Brief at 2 (unnecessary capitalization and trial court’s answers

 omitted).

       At the core of both of Hadley’s claims is his contention that the trial

 court erred by granting Hoopes’ motion for judgment on the pleadings and

 entering the judgment pursuant to Hoopes’ writ of revival.

       When reviewing whether a trial court properly granted a motion for

 judgment on the pleadings, this Court’s standard of review is plenary and

 we apply the same standard used by the trial court. See Commonwealth

 v. All that Certain Lot or Parcel of Land Located at 4714 Morann

 Avenue, 261 A.3d 554, 559 (Pa. Super. 2021). The trial court must

 confine its consideration to the pleadings and relevant documents and

 must accept as true all well-pleaded statements of fact. See id. A motion

 for judgment on the pleadings will only be granted where, based upon the

 pleadings and properly attached documents, there exists no material

 issues of fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of

 law. See id. at 559-560.

       In his first claim, Hadley specifically avers that Section 5526(1), as

 opposed to the now-repealed Judgment Lien Law of 1947, applies to the

 writ of revival filed by Hoopes and effectively bars the writ under its statute

 of limitations. In support of this claim, Hadley provides a fairly detailed

 history of judgment liens in this Commonwealth. However, we need not

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  recount that history in full given that there is no apparent dispute that

  Section 5526(1) is the current and controlling law on writs of revival of

  judgment liens.1 Rather, the parties’ central dispute centers on what effect

  Section 5526(1) has on a writ of revival of a judgment lien filed after the

  judgment lien has lapsed, as was the case here.

         Before addressing the parties’ arguments, we begin by noting the

  difference between a judgment and a judgment lien and the relevant

  general law pertaining to them. A judgment is defined by the Rules of Civil

  Procedure in relevant part as “a judgment, order or decree requiring the

  payment of money entered in any court which is subject to these rules.”

  Pa.R.C.P. 3020. Meanwhile, a judgment lien is born when the Prothonotary

  enters the judgment in the judgment index, which “create[s] a lien on real

  property located in the county, title to which at the time of entry is

____________________________________________

1 In brief, the Judgment Lien Law of 1947 primarily governed judgment liens

until the Judicial Code was enacted in 1976 by the Judiciary Act of 1976. The
Judiciary Act Repealer Act (“JARA”), meanwhile, was enacted to repeal those
statutes that had been supplanted by the Judicial Code, including the
Judgment Lien Law. See Chartiers Valley Sch. Dist. v. Twp. of Ross, 462
A.2d 673, 675 (Pa. 1983). However, no successor provisions on the general
practice and procedures applicable to judgment liens were enacted as part of
the Judicial Code or otherwise. See Explanatory Comment-2003 preceding
Pa.R.C.P. 3020, Section I (explaining history of judgment lien law). Therefore,
“the Judgment Lien Law continued as part of the common law … under the
fail-safe provision of the JARA “until such general rules are promulgated.” Id.;
see 42 P.S. § 20003(b). The Supreme Court eventually promulgated the 2003
amendments to the Rules of Civil Procedure governing the general practice of
judgments and judgment liens, which served to fully repeal the Judgment Lien
Law. See Explanatory Comment-2003 preceding Pa.R.C.P. 3020, Section I.

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 recorded in the name of the person against whom the judgment is

 entered.” Pa.R.C.P. 3023(a).

       Our Supreme Court has described the effect of a judgment lien as

 follows:

       A judgment lien … merely prevents a debtor from encumbering
       or conveying any real property he might own in such a way as
       to divest the effect of the judgment, and also prevents later
       lienholders from satisfying their debt without first paying the
       earlier lien.

 Shearer, 747 A.2d at 860-861 (quoting Mid-State Bank & Tr. Co. v.

 Globalnet Int’l, Inc. 710 A.2d 1187, 1192 (Pa. Super. 1998), affirmed,

 735 A.2d 79 (Pa. 1999)) (brackets omitted).

       A judgment continues as a lien against real property for five years

 and the lien expires at that time unless the judgment has been discharged

 or the lien is revived. See Mid-State Bank & Tr. Co., 710 A.2d at 1190;

 Pa.R.C.P. 3023(c). A judgment lien may be revived by, inter alia, filing a

 writ of revival. See Pa.R.C.P. 3025.

       Here, it is not contested that Hoopes did not file the writ of revival

 until 2019, clearly more than five years after the 2007 judgment and the

 establishment of the 2007 judgment lien. Hadley essentially argues that

 Hoopes’ failure to file the writ of revival within the five-year period

 provided by Section 5526(1) results in the abandonment of any right to

 the judgment itself. Hoopes argues, meanwhile, that a writ of revival may

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 be filed after Section 5526’s five-year period but when that occurs, the

 creditor loses any lien priority it may have.

       This Court has addressed this very argument, albeit it in a non-

 precedential memorandum, and concluded that Section 5526 did not bar

 the entry of a writ of revival filed after the five-year statute of limitations.

 See Valley Community Bank v. O’Malley, 2014 WL 10917595, 850

 MDA 2013 (Pa. Super. 2014) (unpublished memorandum). Hoopes argues

 Valley Community Bank resolved the issue correctly and urges us to

 adopt the rationale used by that decision to reach the same resolution

 here. Although Valley Community Bank was filed before May 1, 2019,

 we evaluate that decision through the lens of Hoopes’ argument

 incorporating the decision’s reasoning in full as well as Hoopes’ contention

 that this reasoning is equally applicable here. See Pa.R.A.P. 126(b)

 (providing that unpublished decisions of the Superior Court filed after May

 1, 2019 may be used as persuasive authority).

       The appellant in Valley Community Bank argued, just as Hadley

 does here, that the plain language of Section 5526 unambiguously

 requires a creditor to file a writ of revival of a judgment lien within five

 years of a judgment or the creditor loses its right to the judgment itself.

 The appellee in Valley Community Bank maintained, again just as

 Hoopes does here, that the failure to revive a judgment lien within five

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  years results, not in a forfeit of the underlying judgment, but only in the

  creditor losing any lien priority.2

         Valley Community Bank concluded that Section 5526(1) was

  ambiguous as it was subject to other reasonable interpretations, including

  the interpretation that a failure to file a writ of revival within five years

  merely results in the creditor losing its lien priority. Given this ambiguity,

  the Court looked to, inter alia, the object of the statute and the

  consequences of adopting the appellant’s interpretation of the statute and

  found neither supported that interpretation. See Valley Community

  Bank, 2014 WL 10917595, at *5 (citing 1 Pa. C.S.A. § 1921(c)). It

  explained:

         [T]he purpose of a judgment lien is to prevent a judgment
         debtor from selling encumbered property without first
         satisfying the judgment. The lien is recorded in the judgment
         index to give notice to potential purchasers that a lien exists
         against the property. A judgment lien only lasts for five years
         because thereafter it would become difficult for a purchaser to
         ascertain whether an unsatisfied judgment lien still exists
         against the property. Thus, the purpose of the statute of
         limitations is to protect the judgment lien holder and potential
         purchasers. The purpose is not to protect the judgment
         debtor. If we were to adopt the interpretation advanced by

____________________________________________

2 We note that Hoopes also makes a threshold argument that Hadley cannot

raise a statute of limitations defense to the writ of revival because “the only
cognizable defenses in a proceeding to revive a judgment lien are that the
judgment does not exist, has been paid or has been discharged.” PNC Bank,
634 A.2d at 649. We disagree. In effect, Hadley’s statute of limitations defense
is tantamount to a claim that the judgment no longer exists because Hoopes
did not file the writ of revival within the period prescribed by Section 5526(1).
We therefore address the merits of Hadley’s Section 5526(1) claim.

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       [the a]ppellant, that is a judgment becomes unenforceable if
       the judgment lien is not revived with[in] five years, we would
       be protecting the judgment debtor at the detriment of the
       judgment lien holder.

                                      ***

       … Invalidating judgments because the judgment debtor failed
       to pay within five years would incentivize nonpayment of
       judgments. The judgment debtor would rationally delay
       paying the judgment for at least five years in an attempt to
       free his or her property from the judgment lien. This would be
       antithetical for a statute whose purpose is to protect judgment
       lien holders and purchasers.

 Id. at *5, *7.

       We fully agree that the legislature did not intend for the judgment

 itself to become unenforceable if the creditor does not file a writ of revival

 of the judgment lien within five years of the entry of the judgment still

 owed to it because of the debtor’s failure to pay. Instead, as Hoopes

 argues, we agree the effect of Section 5506(1) is that if a creditor does

 not file a writ of revival of the judgment lien within five years, the creditor

 loses his lien priority against any intervening liens. This conclusion is, as

 the trial court found, wholly supported by our Supreme Court’s decision in

 Shearer.

       There, the Court considered whether the statute of limitations in

 Section 5529 of the Judicial Code, which provides that an execution

 against personal property must be issued within 20 years after the entry

 of judgment, serves as a defense in a proceeding to revive the lien of a

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 judgment. See Shearer, 747 A.2d at 860. In holding that it does not, this

 Court stated that Section 5529 spoke only to writs of execution and not to

 writs of revival. See id. This Court explained that writs of revival do

 “nothing more than preserve the judgment creditor’s existing right and

 priorities.” Id. at 861. And, although the writ of revival in Shearer was

 filed more than five years after the preceding writ of revival and therefore

 after the judgment lien had lapsed, the Shearer Court stated that a

 “judgment lien may nonetheless be revived after the five-year statute of

 limitations period for revival, however its priority against intervening liens,

 if any, is lost.” Id. at 860 n.1.

       The concurring opinion added:

       A money judgment acts as a lien against real property, but
       only for five years. The lien must be continued (or revived) to
       maintain (or obtain a new) place of priority. However, properly
       speaking, it is the lien that is revived, not the judgment. There
       is no outer time limit to executing against real property to
       satisfy a judgment, but the proceeds of such a sale must be
       distributed according to the priority of liens. Thus[, the
       appellees] can revive the judgment lien as often as they wish
       and execute against any real property the [appellants] might
       come to own in the future.

 Shearer, 747 A.2d at 861-862 (Zappala, J., concurring) (footnote and

 emphasis omitted).

       It is clear that, pursuant to Shearer, the trial court properly

 determined that a writ of revival of a judgment lien filed after the five-

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  year period in Section 5526(1) results, not in the forfeit of the underlying

  judgment, but the loss of any lien priority the creditor may have had.3

         Hadley argues, however, that Shearer has “absolutely nothing” to

  do with Section 5526(1) and any statement involving Section 5526(1) in

  Shearer is nothing more than dicta. Appellant’s Brief at 16. We do not

  agree. The Shearer Court recognized that the writ of revival was filed

  after Section 5526’s five-year statute of limitations, but it nonetheless

  found it remained legally effective because a writ of revival can be filed

  after the statute of limitations period has run. This conclusion was

  necessary to the Court’s ultimate holding that the appellants could not use

  the statute of limitations in Section 5529 as a defense against the

  appellees’ legally valid writ of revival, and we therefore do not view it as

  mere dicta. See BouSamra v. Excela Health, 210 A.3d 967, 976 n.5

  (Pa. 2019) (stating that a statement is dicta if it is not necessary for a

  court’s holding); Valley Community Bank, 2014 WL 10917595, at *8.

         Hadley also argues Shearer is inapposite because it was decided

  before the Supreme Court adopted the amended Rules of Civil Procedure

  governing judgment liens and the revival of judgment liens, Pa.R.C.P.

____________________________________________

3 Other unpublished memoranda from this Court have likewise concluded that

pursuant to Shearer, a writ of revival may be filed beyond Section 5526(1)’s
five-year statute of limitations but this results in the loss of lien priority for
the creditor. See, e.g., Berdomas v. Moyer, 2019 WL 3064874, 1017 WDA
2018 (Pa. Super. filed July 12, 2019) (unpublished memorandum).

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  3021 et seq., in 2003. This argument fails to account for the fact that the

  “Explanatory Comment-2003” immediately preceding Pa.R.C.P. 3020

  (“Explanatory Comment–2003”) cites Shearer three times as support for

  its explanation of the amendments.4

         It is true, as Hadley points out, that the note to Pa.R.C.P. 3025,

  which pertains to the commencement of proceedings in a revival of a

  judgment lien, points out that Section 5526 requires that an action for

  revival of a judgment lien on real property be commenced within five

  years. However, the note to Pa.R.C.P. 3027, which pertains to the entry

  of the lien upon issuance of a writ of revival, clarifies that:

         The lien attaches whether or not … the lien of the judgment
         had been lost as to the property.

         The priority of the lien is preserved only if the praecipe or the
         agreement is filed within the five-year period prescribed by
         these rules.

  Pa.R.C.P. 3027, Note. Moreover, the Explanatory Comment-2003 states in

  no uncertain terms:

         Though a proceeding to revive a judgment may be
         commenced after the expiration of the five-year period, the

____________________________________________

4 We recognize explanatory comments are nonbinding. However, they serve

as guidelines for understanding the rule at issue and this Court has previously
found the explanatory comments accompanying rules of civil procedure to be
both persuasive and instructive. See Carlino East Brandywine, L.P. v.
Brandywine Village Associates, 260 A.3d 179, 206 n.17 (Pa. Super. 2021);
Pa.R.C.P. 129(e) (providing that commentary may be used in construing the
rule text). Given the dearth of precedent on the specific issue at hand, we find
the Explanatory Comment-2003 to be particularly instructive and persuasive.

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       importance of commencing a proceeding within the five-year
       period cannot be ignored. If a lien is lost, its priority is lost and
       the new lien will date from the entry of the writ of revival or
       agreement to revive it in the judgment index.

 Explanatory Comment-2003 Preceding Pa.R.C.P. 3020, Section IV (citing

 Shearer, 747 A.2d at 861 (Zappala, J., concurring)).

       Moreover, the Rules themselves clearly contemplate that a writ of

 revival may be filed after Section 5526’s five-year period has elapsed. Rule

 3025 states, in relevant part, that a proceeding to revive “which continues

 or creates the lien of a judgment may be commenced by filing” a praecipe

 for a writ of revival. The Explanatory Comment-2003 explains the import

 of this language:

       The proceeding to revive will, first, continue the lien as to real
       property which is subject to an existing lien and, second,
       create a lien with respect to property which is not subject to
       an existing lien because either the lien has been lost or the
       lien had not attached to the property (after-acquired
       property).

                                          ***

              … The creation of a lien presupposes that there is no
       existing lien. There may be no existing lien because either the
       lien has been lost or because the lien did not attach.

             If a proceeding to revive a judgment is not brought
       within the five-year period after entry of the judgment in the
       judgment index as required by Rule 3023, the lien is lost as to
       property which had been subject to it and there exists no lien
       to continue. However, the proceedings will create a new lien
       on property as to which a lien has been lost.

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 Explanatory   Comment-2003       Preceding Pa.R.C.P. 3020, Section IV

 (explaining Rule 3025).

       As such, the Rules of Civil Procedure and their explanatory

 comments clearly support Hoopes’ argument that Section 5526 did not bar

 the trial court from ordering the revival of the judgment lien based on a

 writ of revival filed after Section 5526’s five-year period. Instead, as

 Shearer and our Rules of Civil Procedure establish, Hoopes’ failure to file

 a writ of revival of the judgment lien within the five years prescribed by

 Section 5526(1) results in Hoopes’ loss of any lien priority he secured

 when the judgment was first indexed as a judgment lien. It does not result

 in the forfeiture of the judgment itself. No relief on this claim is due.

       In his second claim, Hadley argues the trial court should have denied

 Hoopes’ motion for judgment on the pleadings as premature and should

 also have allowed Hadley to raise the affirmative defenses of laches and

 estoppel. The first argument is waived, and the second argument is

 meritless.

       Hadley first essentially argues that Hoopes’ motion for judgment on

 the pleadings was premature because there were disputed facts in the

 pleadings which made discovery necessary. According to Hadley, his

 answer and new matter disputed the fact that Hoopes had any legal right

 to the amount asserted or to any amount of the judgment and also

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 disputed the fact that Hadley’s actions were lawful. See Appellant’s Brief

 at 18-19.

           As Hoopes points out, Hadley has waived this issue as it was not

 fairly comprised in his Rule 1925(b) statement. See Commonwealth v.

 Lord, 719 A.2d 306, 308 (Pa. 1998). Even if not waived, Hadley fails to

 cogently explain how his position that Hoopes had filed an unlawful writ of

 revival raised issues of material fact or prevented the trial court from

 resolving the issues in the motion for judgment on the pleadings as a

 matter of law. As such, he fails to establish that this argument, even if

 properly preserved for our review, would provide him with a basis for

 relief.

           In his Rule 1925(b) statement, Hadley did argue the trial court erred

 by prohibiting him from asserting affirmative defenses, which is the second

 part of his second claim raised here. This claim also offers no basis for

 relief.

           Here, relying on PNC Bank, Nat. Ass’n, 634 A.2d at 649, the trial

 court found that Hadley was prohibited from raising the defenses of laches

 and estoppel as the only defenses to a writ of revival is that the judgment

 does not exist, has been paid or has been discharged. Hadley claims the

 trial court erroneously relied on PNC Bank, Nat. Ass’n because it was

 decided before the 2003 amendments to the Rules of Civil Procedure, and

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 those Rules do not explicitly preclude affirmative defenses to a writ of

 revival from being raised. As Hoopes points out, this argument ignores the

 fact that this principal from PNC Bank, Nat. Ass’n limiting the defenses

 in a writ of revival proceeding has been cited in “post-2003” Superior Court

 decisions. See, e.g., Shipley Fuels Marketing, LLC v. Medrow, 37 A.3d

 1215, 1218 (Pa. Super. 2012) (“the only cognizable defenses in a

 proceeding to revive a judgment lien are that the judgment does not exist,

 has been paid or has been discharged”) (quoting PNC Bank, Nat. Ass’n,

 634 A.2d at 649). Hadley points to no caselaw that supports his contention

 that, despite PNC Bank, Nat. Ass’n’s clear directive to the contrary, the

 trial court erred by precluding him from raising the defenses of laches and

 estoppel to Hoopes’ writ of revival.

       In sum, we conclude the trial court did not err in determining that

 Hoopes’ writ of revival of the judgment lien was not time barred by Section

 5526(1) and further, that it did not err in granting Hoopes’ motion for

 judgment on the pleadings.

       Order affirmed.

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 FILED: 5/1/2024

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