J-A23033-18

                            2019 PA Super 249

ESTATE OF ALBERT MIKESKA,                       IN THE SUPERIOR COURT
DECEASED                                           OF PENNSYLVANIA




APPEAL OF:     KAZIMIRA MIKESKAITE
DILKEVICIENE (ESTATE) AND TEOFILE
MIKESKAITE STRIGUNIENE, PATERNAL
COUSINS; KAZIMIERA ANGLICKIENE
(HEIR-     REGINA      SAMOSKIENE),
MATERNAL AUNT; AND PETRAS PUKELIS
(HEIRS   -   REMIGIJA    URBIETIENE,
GINTAUTAS PUKELIS, PETRAS PUKELIS,
& TOMAS PUKELIS), ALEKSANDRA
STUMBRIENE, ZIGMUNTAS MATUTIS,
MARIJA GANDRAMAVICIENE, FELIKSAS
PUKELIS, JUOZAPAS PUKELIS, STASE
PUKELYTE    GRISKEVICIENE,    JONAS
PUKELIS, STEPONAS PUKELIS, ANTANAS
PUKELIS       (ESTATE),      JUZEFA
ANTANAITYTE JAKUBAUSKIENE, JANINA
VAITKEVICIENE (HEIRS - JADVYGA
VAITKEVICIENE    AND     BENEDIKTAS
VAITKEVICIUS),             EUGENIJA
ALISAUSKIENE,    VYTAUTAS     BAURA
(HEIRS - IRENA BAURIENE & EVALDAS
BAURA), ALGINA ALIUTE POTRIENE,
DANUTE MARIJA PALIOKIENE, IRMA
VALAITIENE,   ALDONA    TIMOFEJEVA,
PETRAS PUKELIS, MATERNAL COUSINS,
THE LITHUANIAN HEIRS

                                                  No. 1768 WDA 2017


               Appeal from the Order Entered November 1, 2017
              In the Court of Common Pleas of Allegheny County
                     Orphans’ Court at No.: 02-15-01826

BEFORE: BOWES, SHOGAN, and STABILE, JJ.

OPINION BY STABILE, J.:                          FILED AUGUST 20, 2019
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      Appellants, twenty-two alleged heirs of the estate of Albert R. Mikeska,

deceased, appeal from an order denying their exceptions to the first and final

account of the co-administrators of Mikeska’s estate (“estate”). Appellants,

who all reside in Lithuania, contend they have an interest in Mikeska’s estate.

We affirm.

      Jonas Mikeska and his brother, Juozapas Mikeska, moved from Lithuania

to America when they were young.           Jonas married another Lithuanian

immigrant, and Albert Mikeska, born in America, was their only son. Juozapas

had two children in America, and he died in 1974.

      On January 8, 2015, Albert died intestate.     On March 23, 2015, the

Allegheny County Register of Wills granted letters of administration to

Juozapas’s two children (and Albert’s first cousins), Delores Mikeska Morante

and Stanley Mikeska, to serve as co-administrators of Albert’s estate. The

estate filed a certification that the co-administrators were the only persons

entitled to share in the estate.

      Around this time, the estate became the target of heir hunters,

individuals or entities who attempt to locate heirs of estates in return for

compensation. A reporter retained by Kemp & Associates (“Kemp”), a Utah

firm that identifies and locates missing heirs, notified Kemp about Albert’s

estate.   Kemp contacted Hoerner Bank, a German bank that locates heirs

internationally, and the bank retained Rolandas Brazauskas, a Lithuanian

attorney and genealogist, to identify any Mikeska heirs in Lithuania.

Brazauskas graduated from Vilnius University in 1981 and has worked

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extensively in the genealogical field. He reads, writes and speaks English and

has testified as a genealogy expert in four United States cases. Brazauskas

provided his research to Hoerner Bank, which provided it to Kemp. Kemp

hired Jeffrey McCamic, Esquire, an attorney licensed to practice law in

Pennsylvania, to represent Appellants in Allegheny County Orphans’ Court.

        Brazauskas’s     partner,    Lithuanian   attorney   Danute   Morkuniene,

contracted with Appellants to represent them in documenting and proving

their relationship to Albert Mikeska.          Each Appellant entered into a fee

agreement with “Danute Morkuniere, Attorney at Law of D. Morkuniene and

R. Brazauskas Law Office.” Each fee agreement provided: “The client shall

pay overall fee of [Kemp firm employees] Brian O. Kraus and Barbara S.

Williams,1 Hoerner Bank AG and the Attorney [Morkuniere] of 25%, which is

calculated from the total share to which the Client is entitled in the above

captioned estate.” Further, each agreement provided:

        1. The fee fixed in accordance to this agreement shall be paid
        after the estate is concluded. The fee is calculated [out] of [the]
        total share that the Client is entitled to.

        2. Once it would appear that it is not possible to claim the estate
        in favor of the Client or it would appear that the Client is not,
        entitled to the estate, the Client shall not bear responsibility for
        paying fee fixed in accordance to this agreement . . .

        It bears emphasis that McCamic was not a signatory to any agreement

with Brazauskas.        Instead, Kemp retained Hoerner Bank, which in turn

retained Brazauskas. Neither was McCamic a signatory to any agreement with
____________________________________________


1   Neither Kraus nor Williams is an attorney.

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Appellants.   Instead, Kemp hired McCamic to represent Appellants, and

Appellants entered into fee agreements with Brazauskas’s law partner.

      On July 14, 2015, McCamic entered his appearance for Appellants,

listing each Appellant “c/o” (in care of) Kraus and Williams of the Kemp firm.

      On June 8, 2016, the estate filed a motion for distribution asserting that

the co-administrators were Albert’s sole and rightful heirs under a family

settlement agreement. Appellants filed an objection to this motion and their

own petition to acknowledge themselves as heirs. The estate subsequently

filed a first and final account. In response, Appellants withdrew their petition

to acknowledge themselves as heirs, withdrew their objection to the estate’s

motion for distribution, and filed an objection to the first and final account.

      The case proceeded to a hearing in Orphans’ Court. On February 8,

2017, McCamic called Brazauskas to testify as an expert relating to the

acquisition of the genealogical records necessary to document Appellants’

relationship to Albert Mikeska. The court declined to recognize Brazauskas as

an expert but permitted him to testify about how he obtained the documents

submitted as exhibits at the hearing. Brazauskas testified that he established

Appellants’ relationship to Albert by obtaining 136 genealogical documents

from Lithuania’s central historical archives. According to Brazauskas, most of

these documents were “certified copies” bearing apostilles, i.e., confirmation

by Lithuania’s Historical Archives that the documents were authentic. N.T.,

2/8/17, at 33-34. McCamic presented these documents to the court during

Brazauskas’s testimony.

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      On cross-examination, counsel for the estate asked Brazauskas who was

paying his fee. Brazauskas answered, “The fees, after I’m able to prove the

kinship of my client to here, we are receiving the funds from the estate

administrator, and then they are paying my fee.” Id. at 37. The court asked,

“Out of the estate, or at least your client’s share of the estate?”        Id.

Brazauskas answered, “If the estate administrator releases the funds for my

clients.” Id. at 38. Counsel for the estate asked, “So if the 22 purported

Lithuanian heirs don’t recover anything, you don’t get paid, is that correct?”

Brazauskas answered, “Yes.”     Id.   Thus, Brazauskas agreed that he was

testifying on a contingent fee basis. The record does not indicate whether

McCamic was aware of Brazauskas’s contingent fee agreement prior to this

testimony.

      The estate moved to strike Brazauskas’s testimony on the ground that

he was testifying on a contingency fee basis in violation of Rule 3.4 of the

Pennsylvania Rules of Professional Conduct. The court held this motion under

advisement.

      On June 21 and 22, 2017, Appellants testified about their family history,

their relationship with Albert, and their correspondence with Albert’s mother.

On July 13, 2017, Kemp employee Williams testified about, inter alia, the

nature of Kemp’s business, its dealings with Hoerner Bank, and its retention

of McCamic in these proceedings.

      At the close of evidence, the court granted the estate’s motion to strike

Brazauskas’s testimony in its entirety and dismissed Appellants’ objections to

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the first and final account.     Appellants filed a timely appeal, and both

Appellants and the court complied with Pa.R.A.P. 1925.

      Appellants raise the following issues in this appeal:

      1. Did the trial court err as a matter of law in granting the Estate’s
         Motion to Strike the Testimony of Rolandas Brazauskas?

      2. Did the trial court err as a matter of law in dismissing the
         Lithuanian Heirs’ objection to First and Final Accounting
         through:

      a) The Court’s failure to recognize the testimony of the Lithuanian
         Heirs presented in support of their claim;

      b) The Court’s failure to recognize the documentary evidence the
         Lithuanian Heirs presented in support of their claim;

      c) The Court’s acceptance of the Estate’s First and Final
         Accounting despite the Estate having notice that the decedent
         may have heirs in Lithuania and its failure to investigate;

      d) The Court’s acceptance of the Estate’s objections to the
         Lithuanian Heirs’ claim due to the genealogical record
         supporting their claim having been submitted after a one-year
         statute of limitation; and

      e) The Court’s acceptance of the Estate’s argument of champerty.

Appellants’ Brief at 3.

      Although we agree with Argument 2(b) of Appellants’ brief that their

documentary evidence was admissible, we affirm for two reasons. First, the

Orphans’ Court properly struck Brazauskas’s testimony in its entirety because

his agreement to testify in return for a contingency fee violated Pennsylvania

common law. Second, the Orphans’ Court, sitting as factfinder, acted within

its discretion by concluding that Appellants’ testimony had little or no

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J-A23033-18


probative value. Collectively, the Orphans’ Court’s exclusion of Brazauskas’s

testimony and decision to give virtually no weight to Appellants’ testimony

caused Appellants’ case to fail due to lack of sufficient evidence of their

interest in Albert’s estate.

       At the outset, we note our disagreement with the trial court’s decision

not to admit Appellants’ documentary evidence into evidence.2 Each Appellant

submitted a Certificate of Archives, signed and sealed by officials from the

State Archives of History of Lithuania, which certified the date and location of

his or her birth. Each certificate was submitted in Lithuanian and translated

into English.

       Pa.R.E. 902 provides in relevant part:

       The following items of evidence are self-authenticating; they
       require no extrinsic evidence of authenticity in order to be
       admitted: . . .

       (3) A document that purports to be signed or attested by a person
       who is authorized by a foreign country’s law to do so. The
       document must be accompanied by a final certification that
       certifies the genuineness of the signature and official position of
       the signer or attester--or of any foreign official whose certificate
       of genuineness relates to the signature or attestation or is in a
       chain of certificates of genuineness relating to the signature or
       attestation . . . If all parties have been given a reasonable
       opportunity to investigate the document’s authenticity and
       accuracy, the court may for good cause, either:
____________________________________________


2 We review the trial court’s decisions on admissibility of evidence for abuse
of discretion. U.S. Bank, N.A. v. Pautenis, 118 A.3d 386, 391–92 (Pa.
Super. 2015) (“decisions on admissibility are within the sound discretion of
the trial court and will not be overturned absent an abuse of discretion or
misapplication of law”).


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J-A23033-18



              (A) order that it be treated as presumptively authentic
              without final certification; or

              (B) allow it to be evidenced by an attested summary with or
              without final certification.

Id. In our view, Appellants’ certificates satisfy Rule 902(3),3 and the trial

court should have admitted them as self-authenticating.



____________________________________________


3 Appellants’ certificates also satisfy 42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328, entitled “Proof of
official records,” a statute similar in content to Rule 902(3), which provides in
relevant part:

       (b) Foreign record.—A foreign official record, or an entry therein,
       when admissible for any purpose, may be evidenced by an official
       publication or copy thereof, attested by a person authorized to
       make the attestation, and accompanied by a final certification as
       to the genuineness of the signature and official position:

       (1) of the attesting person; or

       (2) of any foreign official whose certificate of genuineness of
       signature and official position either:

          (i) relates to the attestation; or

          (ii) is in a chain of certificates of genuineness of signature and
          official position relating to the attestation.

       . . . If reasonable opportunity has been given to all parties to
       investigate the authenticity and accuracy of the documents, the
       tribunal may, for good cause shown, admit an attested copy
       without final certification or permit the foreign official record to be
       evidenced by an attested summary with or without a final
       certification.

42 Pa.C.S.A. § 5328(b).



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J-A23033-18


       We now turn to the Orphans’ Court’s ruling that Brazauskas’s testimony

was inadmissible. The Orphans’ Court excluded Brazauskas’s testimony based

on its conclusion that McCamic violated Pennsylvania Rule of Professional

Conduct 3.4 by paying Brazauskas a contingent fee for his testimony.4 Trial

Ct. Op., 2/8/18, at 3. We affirm this ruling but for a different reason.

       In   McCarthy      v.   Southeastern      Pennsylvania   Transportation

Authority, 772 A.2d 987 (Pa. Super. 2001), this Court held that a trial court

may sanction counsel by disqualification based upon a violation of the Rules

of Professional Conduct only when a court has determined disqualification is

needed to ensure the parties receive the fair trial that due process requires.

Id. at 987. Both trial and appellate courts, however, may not sanction counsel

for violations of the Rules of Professional Conduct to impose punishment for

attorney misconduct. McCarthy, citing Reilly by Reilly v. SEPTA, 489 A.2d

1291, 1299 (Pa. 1985). Our Supreme Court has not abdicated or delegated

any of its administrative or supervisory authority over the judiciary to lower

courts. Id. Nonetheless, where disqualification is required to ensure parties

receive the fair trial which due process requires, a court may sanction counsel

for violation of the Rules of Professional Conduct. There must, however, be




____________________________________________


4 Pennsylvania Rule of Professional Conduct 3.4 prohibits attorneys from
“pay[ing], offer[ing] to pay or acquiesc[ing] in” the payment of fees to
witnesses that are contingent on the outcome of the case. Pa.R.P.C. 3.4(b).


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J-A23033-18


evidence in the record to support a conclusion that the attorney did in fact

violate a particular rule.

       Here, the evidence of any Rule 3.4 violation is less than clear. Although

McCamic was Appellants’ counsel and was presenting Brazauskas’s testimony

in support of their claims, the record does not reflect that there was any

contingent fee agreement directly between Brazauskas and McCamic.                  Nor

does the record demonstrate that McCamic knew before counsel for Appellants

cross-examined Brazauskas during the February 8, 2017 hearing that

Brazauskas had a contingency agreement with Appellants.                     It appears

Brazauskas’s firm had a contingent fee agreement with Appellants, but that

agreement was silent as to counsel also acting as an expert witness. Given

this lack of a developed record on McCamic’s conduct vis-à-vis the Rules of

Professional Conduct, the Orphans’ Court did not have discretion to exclude

Brazauskas’s testimony for violation of our Rules of Professional Conduct. On

the other hand, in our view, resort to the Rules of Professional Conduct as a

basis for excluding this testimony was not necessary, because Pennsylvania

common      law   furnishes     a   sufficient   basis   for   excluding   Brazauskas’s

testimony.5




____________________________________________


5 We may affirm the Orphans’ Court’s ruling on any basis, even one the
Orphans’ Court itself did not provide. Blumenstock v. Gibson, 811 A.2d
1029, 1033 (Pa. Super. 2002).

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J-A23033-18


     In Belfonte v. Miller, 243 A.2d 150 (Pa. Super. 1968), a landowner

hired a realtor to appraise her real estate for the purpose of obtaining

damages in eminent domain proceedings. The realtor also agreed to testify

should it prove necessary. The payment stipulated in the agreement was a

designated percentage of any amount the landowner received from the

eminent domain proceedings.       This Court held that the contingent fee

agreement between the landowner and realtor was unenforceable, reasoning:

     Section 552 of the Restatement of Contracts states: ‘A bargain to
     pay one who is subject to legal process, a sum for his attendance
     as a witness in addition to that fixed by law, is illegal, except as
     stated in Subsection (2) (which provides:) ‘A bargain to pay an
     expert witness for testifying to his opinion a larger sum than the
     legal fees provided for other witnesses is illegal only if the agreed
     compensation is contingent on the outcome of the controversy.’ .
     . . Similar support can be found in Professor Corbin’s work. ‘It is
     not illegal to compensate a witness who is out of the jurisdiction
     and not subject to subpoena, if payment is not contingent on
     success in the litigation or on his testifying in a specified manner.
     * * * A bargain to pay an expert witness compensation for services
     such as these (special investigations by expert witnesses or
     otherwise for the purpose of learning or determining the facts or
     of accumulating evidence or forming an opinion) is not illegal;
     always provided that payment is not contingent on success in
     litigation affected by the evidence or on condition that the opinions
     expressed or facts testified to shall be of a specified character.’
     6A Corbin, Contracts § 1430. Cf., In re Certain Lands in the
     City of New York, 144 App. Div. 107, 128 N.Y.S. 999 (1911);
     Van Norden v. Metson, 75 Cal.App.2d 595, 171 P.2d 485 (2d
     Div. 1946) . . .

     The rule applied to such contracts is not to be affected by proof
     that the behavior of the parties was in fact exemplary, for it is the
     tendency of such contracts which serves to generate their
     undesirability. Improper conduct or bias can be predicted easily
     when the compensation of the witness is directly related to the
     absolute amount of an award which may in turn be dependent to
     a great degree on the testimony of that same witness.

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J-A23033-18



Id. at 153.

       While Belfonte invalidated a contingent fee agreement with an expert

witness, it does not appear that Pennsylvania appellate courts have addressed

whether contingent fee agreements with fact witnesses are illegal or what the

remedy should be in the event of such an agreement. Even so, it is obvious

that Belfonte’s reasoning extends to contingent fee agreements with fact

witnesses. Such agreements jeopardize the integrity of the judicial process

by encouraging fact witnesses to depart from the truth to generate a higher

award and thus a higher witness fee. It makes no difference whether the

witness enters the agreement with an attorney, a plaintiff, or some third

person, because the danger to the integrity of the judicial process remains the

same. We also conclude that when such an agreement with a fact witness

comes to light, the trial court has the authority to preclude the witness’s

testimony to safeguard the judicial process. This measure is consistent with

decisions from other jurisdictions that have stricken testimony or reports from

both expert and fact witnesses for agreeing to testify under contingency fee

agreements.6 See Straughter v. Raymond, 2011 WL 1789987, *3 (C.D.

Cal. 2011) (expert’s opinions “were rendered when she had a direct financial



____________________________________________


6 Although we are not bound by decisions from other jurisdictions, “we may
use [them] for guidance to the degree we find them useful and not
incompatible with Pennsylvania law.” Newell v. Mont. W., Inc., 154 A.3d
819, 823 & n.6 (Pa. Super. 2017).

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J-A23033-18


interest in the outcome of this action” even though she subsequently revoked

her contingency fee arrangement; testimony excluded)); Followwill v. Merit

Energy Co., 2005 WL 5988695, *1 (D. Wyo. 2005) (excluding plaintiffs’

expert witness and striking his report because he was paid on contingency

basis); Farmer v. Ramsay, 159 F.Supp.2d 873, 883 (D. Md. 2001)

(“improper to pay an expert witness a contingent fee” under Maryland law;

report stricken); Cosgrove v. Sears Roebuck & Co., 1987 WL 33595, *1-2

(S.D.N.Y. 1987) (proceedings tainted by contingency fee agreement; expert

precluded from testifying); State of New York v. Solvent Chemical Co.,

Inc., 166 F.R.D. 284, 289 (W.D.N.Y. 1996) (citing In re Robinson, 151 A.D.

589, 600, 136 N.Y.S. 548 (1st Dpt. 1912)) (agreement with fact witness for

“payment of a sum of money to a witness to testify in a particular way” or

“payment of money to a witness to make him ‘sympathetic’ with the party

expecting to call him” was “absolutely indefensible”; “[t]he payment of a sum

of money to a witness to ‘tell the truth’ is as clearly subversive of the proper

administration of justice as to pay him to testify to what is not true”).

      In this case, two fee arrangements relate directly or indirectly to

Brazauskas. Brazauskas had an agreement with Hoerner Bank to identify any

Mikeska heirs in Lithuania, and Brazauskas’s law partner, Morkuniene, had

contingent fee agreements with each Appellant.           Critically, Brazauskas

testified that his fee was contingent, because it depended on whether the

Orphans’ Court held that Appellants had an interest in Albert’s estate, and the


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J-A23033-18


amount of his fee depended on the percentage of Appellants’ decreed interest

in the estate. The clear import of this testimony is that if Appellants did not

recover anything, Brazauskas did not get paid under either fee arrangement.

N.T., 2/8/17, at 38.    In view of Belfonte and the persuasive authorities

gathered above, the Orphans’ Court acted within its discretion by excluding

Brazauskas’s testimony in its entirety.

      We also agree that the Orphans’ Court properly exercised its discretion

in ruling that Appellants’ testimony deserved little or no weight.

      In a non-jury proceeding such as this, “the factfinder is free to believe

all, part, or none of the evidence.” L.B. Foster Co. v. Charles Caracciolo

Steel & Metal Yard, 777 A.2d 1090, 1093 (Pa. Super. 2001). “Credibility

determinations and consideration of conflicts in the evidence are within the

purview of the trial court.” John B. Conomos, Inc. v. Sun Company, Inc.,

831 A.2d 696, 703 (Pa. Super. 2003).

      The Orphans’ Court opined as follows with regard to Appellants’

testimony:

      While each of the twenty (20) persons that testified identified
      personal documents, none of these persons had firsthand
      knowledge of, or had ever met, the Decedent and they only
      became aware of his death from Mr. Brazauskas. The most that
      any of the witnesses could testify to was that they were aware
      through discussions with other family members that some family
      members had moved to America. No one was able to give any
      specific date or location of the move to America. Accordingly, the
      Court gave minimal if any weight to their testimony.




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Pa.R.A.P. 1925(a) Opinion, 2/9/18, at 3-4. This determination was well within

the Orphans’ Court’s purview as the fact-finder in this case.

      Having determined that (1) Appellants’ documentary evidence was

admissible as self-authenticating, (2) the Orphans’ Court correctly excluded

Brazauskas’s testimony, and (3) the Orphans’ Court correctly found

Appellants’ testimony to have little or no weight, we conclude that Appellants’

case fails due to lack of sufficient evidence linking them to Albert Mikeska.

Absent Brazauskas’s testimony, there is no genealogical evidence establishing

that they are Albert’s rightful heirs.         Standing alone, the documentary

evidence merely establishes when and where Appellants were born, not

whether they are relatives of Albert. Appellants’ own testimony does not make

up for this shortfall due to the Orphans’ Court’s finding that it has little or no

weight.

      Because we hold that Appellants’ action fails for lack of sufficient

evidence, we need not address Appellants’ statute of limitation or champerty

arguments (issues 2(d) and (e)) or their argument that the estate failed to

conduct a proper investigation (issue 2(c)). We affirm the Orphans’ Court’s

order denying Appellants’ exceptions to the estate’s first and final account.

      Order affirmed.




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Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 8/20/2019




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