This Court granted applications seeking an exercise of its extraordinary jurisdiction relative to an appeal challenging orphans’ court approval of the restructuring of a charitable institution known as the Barnes Foundation. The dispositive legal issue centers on the timeliness of the appeal.
The Barnes Foundation is a Pennsylvania non-profit corporation charged with implementation of a charitable trust focused on the advancement of art education and appreciation, and is presently located in Lower Merion Township, Pennsylvania. The Foundation recently obtained orphans’ court approval to amend its charter and bylaws, as well as the trust indenture, most prominently to accomplish an expansion of the Foundation’s Board of Trustees from five to fifteen members and to authorize the relocation of its art gallery to Philadelphia. The decision of the orphans’ court reflects that the restructuring is necessary in light of a financial crisis experienced by the Foundation and is a prerequisite to the realization of essential financial assistance from other philanthropic institutions and organizations (asserted to be in excess of $100 million), as well as to the contribution by the City of Philadelphia of land to support the construction of the new gallery. The Office of Attorney General participated in the proceedings as parens patriae, and a group of students enrolled in Foundation programs sought and obtained leave to participate as amici curiae, but without the right to appeal.
On October 10, 2002, Jay Raymond and two other students enrolled in Foundation programs had sought to intervene in the orphans’ court proceedings; however, intervention was denied by order dated February 12, 2003. Mr. Raymond did not seek to appeal the denial of intervention and did not otherwise participate in the orphans’ court proceedings. He nevertheless lodged an appeal relative to the orphans’ court’s final decree dated December 13, 2004 (as modified by a December 22, 2004, supplement), approving the structural changes to the Foundation. No actual party to the orphans’ court proceedings sought to appeal, however.
In the Superior Court, the Foundation moved to dismiss Mr. Raymond’s appeal,
inter alia,
for want of jurisdiction, on the ground that, as a non-party, Mr. Raymond had no standing to appeal. Furthermore, according to the Foundation, any asserted
As the Foundation and the Attorney General argue, the general rule is that only parties may appeal a decision. See Pa.R.A.P. 501 (authorizing appeals by “any party who is aggrieved by an appealable order” (emphasis added)); accord G. Ronald Darlington, Kevin J. McKeon, Daniel R. Schuckers & Kristen W. Brown, Pennsylvania Appellate Practice 2d § 501:5 (2d ed. 1998 & Supp. Nov. 2004) (“Rule 501 specifically requires an appellant to have party status or to be a fiduciary of an estate or trust in order to appeal.” (footnote omitted)). Since Mr. Raymond was unsuccessful in his effort to intervene in the orphans’ court proceedings, he had no greater rights than would be available to any other non-party, and therefore, Mr. Raymond lacked the ability to implicate the appellate process with respect to the court’s final decree.
Pennsylvania law does allow for an appeal as of right from an order denying intervention in circumstances that meet the requirements of the collateral order doctrine as embodied in Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure 313.
See
Pa.R.A.P. 341 (note) (identifying an order denying the right to intervene as a type of order that is not appealable as a final order but which may fall under Rule 313 (Collateral Orders) or 312 (Interlocutory Appeals by Permission));
see, e.g., Township of Radnor v. Radnor Recreational, LLC,
It is desirable to insist that timely appeal be taken from the denial, rather than permitting appeal from the denial upon entry of a final judgment disposing of the claims among the parties. To permit appeal after the final judgment would risk interference with trial court proceedings taken after the denial of intervention, a prospect far costlier than insisting that the applicant appeal the denial without waiting to see whether the outcome of the proceedings leaves intervention still desirable.
Charles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller & Edward H. Cooper, 15A Fed. Prac. & Prog. Juris.2d § 3902.1 (2005).
We hold that Mr. Raymond’s failure to attain intervenor status before the orphans’ court foreclosed his ability to file a cognizable appeal relative to the court’s final decree.
The appeal docketed in the Superior Court at No. 112 EDA 2005 is quashed, and jurisdiction is relinquished.
