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NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

 BLUE RIBBON PACKAGING CORP             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
 D/B/A WEST READING STRAPPING,          :        PENNSYLVANIA
 KEVIN LENEGHAN, STEPHEN                :
 LENEGHAN AND DAVID LENEGHAN            :
                                        :
                   Appellants           :
                                        :
                                        :
              v.                        :   No. 1550 MDA 2017
                                        :
                                        :
 KEVIN HUGHES, NARROW                   :
 HOLDINGS, LLC, LONGVIEW                :
 CONSTRUCTION, LLC, GEORGEADIS          :
 SETLEY RAUCH AND PLANK AND             :
 NICOLE PLANK                           :

            Appeal from the Order Entered September 6, 2017
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County Civil Division at No(s):
                               17-16460


 BLUE RIBBON PACKAGING CORP             :   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
 D/B/A WEST READING STRAPPING,          :        PENNSYLVANIA
 KEVIN LENEGHAN, STEPHEN                :
 LENEGHAN AND DAVID LENEGHAN            :
                                        :
                   Appellants           :
                                        :
                                        :
              v.                        :   No. 1581 MDA 2017
                                        :
                                        :
 KEVIN HUGHES, NARROW                   :
 HOLDINGS, LLC, LONGVIEW                :
 CONSTRUCTION, LLC, GEORGEADIS          :
 SETLEY RAUCH & PLANK, LLC, AND         :
 NICOLE PLANK                           :

              Appeal from the Order Entered October 6, 2017
   In the Court of Common Pleas of Berks County Civil Division at No(s):
                                17-16460
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BEFORE: GANTMAN, P.J., NICHOLS, J., and FORD ELLIOTT, P.J.E.

MEMORANDUM BY NICHOLS, J.:                         FILED JANUARY 16, 2019

        Appellants Kevin Leneghan, Stephen Leneghan, and David Leneghan,

Esq. (collectively, Leneghans), and Blue Ribbon Packaging Corp., doing

business as West Reading Strapping (Blue Ribbon) (collectively, Appellants),

appeal from the September 6, 2017 order granting intervenor status to

Charles Miller (Miller), and the October 6, 2017 order holding Blue Ribbon in

contempt. Also involved in this appeal are Appellees Kevin Hughes, Narrow

Holdings, LLC, Longview Construction, LLC, Georgeadis Setley Rauch & Plank,

LLC, and Nicole Plank, Esq. (collectively, Appellees).1 We quash in part and

affirm in part.

        Because we write for the parties, who are familiar with the record, we

need not provide a detailed recitation of the underlying dispute giving rise to

this appeal.2 Of relevance to this appeal, the Leneghans are shareholders,

officers, and directors of Blue Ribbon. Blue Ribbon filed a motion for injunctive

relief, which the court conducted hearings for on August 29 and 30, 2017.3



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1   Attorney Plank represents Appellees.
2 We note, however, the trial court erred to the extent it appears to have
concluded that Miller moved for preliminary injunctive relief. As we discuss
below, the record does not support that conclusion.
3The court initially granted relief to Blue Ribbon on August 29th, and then
amended the order on August 31st, as discussed below. No party has



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        At the August 30th hearing, the parties discussed the proposed language

of the August 31st order as follows:

        [Appellees’ counsel]: Your Honor, we would ask that paragraph 3
        [of the August 29, 2017 order] be revised to state plaintiffs are
        hereby enjoined from removing any and all fixtures, equipment,
        tools and any other assets held at the premises, except for
        inventory shipped to customers in the ordinary course.

        The court: Mr. Leneghan.[4]

        [Appellants’ counsel]: I think the [c]ourt is well aware of any issue
        on that, Your Honor. They turned this into a minority shareholder
        distress case and trying to lock us into staying there and can’t
        remove the assets. We just want to be able to do everything that
        we did before.

        The court: I don’t know about them. But this [c]ourt is not going
        to get into doing more than simply having you reinstated. And
        then if your intent is to remove everything, I think that we ought
        to have a period of time when somebody could have filed, if it’s
        going to be filed, to extend the stay. I think there should be a
        stay of some period of time - - -

        [Appellants’ counsel]: We won’t object to that, Judge. It would
        be fine if, if Charlie [Miller,5] wants 72 hours or some period of
        time to file something so he can abate that and make a
        determination that this is a dispute over the ownership of the
        assets or something, that’s fine. We literally said that yesterday.
        That’s fine. But I think it should be a short period of time. We
        should get back to the doing the business at hand.


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addressed whether the August 29th order was supplanted by the August 31st
order. In any event, as discussed below, Appellants appealed neither order.
4David Leneghan, Esq., was counsel for Appellants and was initially granted
pro hac vice status by the trial court. Attorney Leneghan is pro se on appeal
and Blue Ribbon is represented by counsel.
5   Miller later filed a petition to intervene, which we discuss below.


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     The court: You can get back to the doing the business at hand
     yesterday.

                                 *    *    *

     The court: I’m going to put it back to status quo. And I’m going
     to stay. And that’s what I asked you guys to do.

R.R. at 406a-08a (emphases added and all-capitalization omitted).

     The trial court ultimately issued the following order on August 31, 2017:

     1. Defendants Kevin Hughes and Narrow Holdings LLC
     (hereinafter, “Defendants”), are hereby enjoined from interfering
     with Plaintiff’s, Blue Ribbon Packaging Corp., doing business as
     West Reading Strapping (hereinafter “Plaintiff”) possession of the
     premises: Basement level of [the property in question], along with
     the right to use common area and loading docks, as well as
     parking and truck traffic on the driveway and parking lot attendant
     thereto (collectively, the “Premises”). Except that Defendants
     shall be permitted to enforce all lawful eviction and/or ejectment
     actions for the Premises through a court of law.

     2. Defendants are enjoined from interfering with Plaintiff’s
     employees, owners, representatives, customers, vendors, invitees
     and guests, each or all brought to the Premises by the Plaintiff.

     3. Defendants are hereby enjoined from interfering with each and
     every truck and trailer brought to or at the Leased Premises by or
     at the invitation of Plaintiff.

     4. Defendants are hereby enjoined from interfering with Plaintiff’s
     possession and use of the Leased Premises pending further Order
     of Court.

     5. Plaintiff’s [sic] are hereby enjoined from removing any and all
     fixtures, equipment, tools and all other assets held at the Premises
     except for inventory shipped to customers of Plaintiff in the
     ordinary course, until noon on September 5, 2017, at which time
     this paragraph 5 will be of no further force and effect, unless
     further order of Court in Berks County[,] Pennsylvania preventing
     such removal.




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        6. Bond is set at $1,000.00 which has been deposited with the
        Berks County Prothonotary and shall remain so until further Order
        of Court.

Order, 8/31/17, at 1-2 (underlining in original). Paragraph five of the order

enjoined Blue Ribbon from removing any assets—a condition that Attorney

Leneghan agreed to the previous day.6 See R.R. at 406a-08a.

        On September 1, 2017, Miller filed a petition to intervene. In pertinent

part, Miller set forth reasons why the court should grant him the right to

intervene. Id. at 73a. Miller did not move for injunctive relief or otherwise

present grounds for injunctive relief, but did request the following:

        A. An Order allowing petitioner to intervene in the limited
        Preliminary, Temporary and Permanent Injunction as a party
        pursuant to Pa.R.C.P. 2327(3) and 2329, and that this Court stay
        all proceedings pending entry of this Order;

        B. An Order extending the Order dated 8/3[1]/17, specifically
        paragraph 5,[7] until a hearing on the merits of this Petition may
        be heard by [the trial court]; and

        C. In the alternative, Order paragraph 5 be stricken of the
        8/3[1]/17 Order and Plaintiffs provide a Bond or payment in the
        amount of $72,162.16 USD to be held by the Berks County
        Prothonotary’s Office, Miller and Althouse being the beneficiaries
        thereof.

Id. at 74a.



____________________________________________


6 Regardless, even if Attorney Leneghan did not agree to that condition, the
order explicitly provided that Appellants could not remove anything from the
property until after noon on September 5, 2017. Order, 8/31/17.
7   We quoted paragraph 5, supra.


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        On September 5, 2017, Appellants filed a response to Miller’s petition to

intervene, the trial court held a limited hearing, and the court entered the

following order, which was served the next day:

        AND NOW, this 5th day of September, 2017, based on the
        intervention petition of Charles Miller filed by Zachary A. Morey,
        Esquire, his counsel of Hoffert & Klonis, P.C., it is hereby ordered
        that this Court’s injunction dated August 30th, 2017,[8] shall
        remain in full force and effect until further order of this court.

        It is further ordered, based on the response filed by Blue Ribbon
        Packaging Corporation, doing business as West Reading
        strapping, and others, that Miller shall comply with the objections
        raised in Paragraph 1, 2, 3, and 4[9] at the end of the said
        objections after Paragraphs 1 through 6; that is, that Miller shall
        comply fully and completely with the Rules of Civil Procedure,
        specifically 2328. Said compliance shall be done by M. Miller by
        the close of court on Friday, September 8th, 2017.

        A bond for Charles W. Miller, the averred shareholder who is
        asking for intervention as filed by his limited petition to intervene
        this date, is set at $1,000.[10]




____________________________________________


8   The order was docketed on August 31, 2017.
9 Blue Ribbon had listed four objections to the manner in which Miller filed his
petition to intervene, including a purported failure to comply with Pa.R.C.P.
2328, which requires, among other items, that the petitioner attach “a copy
of any pleading which the petitioner will file in the action if permitted to
intervene.” Pa.R.C.P. 2328. The court’s order was intended to compel Miller
to correct the alleged deficiencies raised in Blue Ribbon’s objections.
10 Presumably, this was some form of a counterbond, given the allegations
that Miller had an interest in the subject property and Blue Ribbon improperly
removed items from the property.           See generally Pa.R.C.P. 1076(a)
(addressing counterbonds filed by an intervenor).




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        It is further ordered that at this time, until further order of this
        court, the said petitioner, Charles W. Miller, shall be granted the
        approval to intervene, in this case.

Order, 9/6/17, at 2-3.11 Thus, the order permitted Miller to file an amended

petition to intervene and reiterated that the injunction previously granted on

August 31, 2017 in Blue Ribbon’s favor was still in effect. The order did not

grant, deny, modify, continue, or dissolve any injunction. Id. (ordering that

the trial court’s injunction “shall remain in full force and effect until further

order of this court”).

        On October 3, 2017, Appellees filed an emergency petition for contempt

of court and to revoke Attorney Leneghan’s pro hac vice status. Appellees

alleged that Appellants, in violation of the September 6, 2017 order, had

“removed all fixtures, equipment, tools and all other assets” from the property

in question, which also caused damage to the property and to Appellees. R.R.

at 123a-24a.      The trial court, after holding a hearing, granted Appellees’

petition and ordered as follows:

        A. Plaintiffs [i.e., Appellants] are sanctioned in the amount of One
        Thousand Dollars ($1,000.00) for their willful violation of the
        Orders, and shall pay the same to the Defendant, [i.e., one of the
        Appellees,] Narrow Holdings, LLC, within thirty (30) days from the
        date of this Order, and must post a bond with the Berks County
        Prothonotary in the amount of Forty Thousand ($40,000.00)
        Dollars, within seven (7) days from the date of this Order, for
        protection of the Defendants; and



____________________________________________


11   Notice of the order was sent on September 6, 2017.


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      B. Plaintiffs shall post an additional bond with the Berks County
      Prothonotary in the amount of Seventy-Two Thousand One
      Hundred Sixty-Two and 16/100 ($72,162.16) Dollars, within
      seven (7) days from the date of this Order, for the protection of
      the Intervenors; and

      C. Further, David Leneghan’s pro hac vice admission is hereby
      immediately REVOKED, as he willfully violated this Court’s Orders
      and has not complied with Pennsylvania Rules of Civil Procedure,
      Pennsylvania law or the Pennsylvania Rules of Professional
      Conduct, in order to maintain his pro hac vice admission.

Order, 10/6/17, at 1.

      Appellants filed a notice of appeal from the September 6th order and a

timely notice of appeal from the October 6th order, and they filed timely court-

ordered Pa.R.A.P. 1925(b) statements. We note that Appellants alleged in

their Rule 1925(b) statements that the court erred by granting Miller’s petition

for a preliminary injunction.

      Appellants raise the following questions:

      1. Did the [trial c]ourt commit an abuse of discretion or error of
      law granting a preliminary injunction to Intervenor without a
      hearing when Intervenor stated it had an adequate monetary
      remedy at law in the amount of $72,162.16 and Intervenor lacked
      standing and did not comply with mandatory Civil Rules?

      2. Did the [trial c]ourt lack jurisdiction and commit an abuse of
      discretion or error of law when it enforced a preliminary injunction
      and issued a $1,000 sanction when the party did not post his bond
      for the injunction to become an enforceable order of the [c]ourt?

      3. Did the [trial c]ourt lack jurisdiction commit an abuse of
      discretion and error of law when it modified an injunction after it
      was appealed and more than 30 days had passed, (or issued a
      sanction), requiring a party previously required to post a $1,000
      to post two additional bonds in the amounts of $40,000.00 and
      $72,162.16?


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       4. Did the [trial c]ourt commit an abuse of discretion or error of
       law when it revoked a pro hac vice admission without the [c]ourt
       sending notice of the hearing and for a misapplication of law that
       an unenforceable order was violated and where there was no
       willful violation and no other Code or Rule violation?

Appellants’ Brief at 8.12

       In support of their first issue, Appellants begin with the premise that the

trial court’s September 6, 2017 order formally granted injunctive relief in favor

of Miller. Id. at 39. Appellants argue that because Miller failed to timely post

an injunction bond, the September 6, 2017 order was a nullity. Id. at 41.

Even if the order was not a nullity, Appellants assert that because Miller did

not fulfill the requirements for a preliminary injunction, the court erred by

issuing the injunction.13 Id. at 42. Appellants identify what they perceive to

be numerous deficiencies with Miller’s “petition for injunctive relief,” such

that the court erred by granting the petition. Id. at 42-49.

       Appellants also contend that the court erred by granting Miller’s petition

to intervene despite his alleged non-compliance with Pa.R.C.P. 2338.14 Id. at

____________________________________________


12Appellants filed identical briefs for these consolidated appeals. We note that
Appellants’ briefs do not comply with Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a), which requires that
the argument section of the brief “be divided into as many parts as there are
questions to be argued.” Pa.R.A.P. 2119(a). Although Appellants raised four
questions, the argument section of their brief contains just three parts. See
id.
13 As noted above, Blue Ribbon, not Miller, filed a motion for a preliminary
injunction. Miller had filed a petition to intervene.
14 Appellants apparently meant to reference Pa.R.C.P. 2328, which addresses
intervention petitions.


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49-50. Appellants argue that Miller’s purported non-compliance meant that

the court should not have issued an order for injunctive relief. Id. at 50.

       Initially, we must address whether this Court can exercise appellate

jurisdiction on our own accord. Knopick v. Boyle, 189 A.3d 432, 436 (Pa.

Super. 2018).      An order granting intervention in an ongoing dispute is an

interlocutory order and cannot be immediately appealed without permission.

See Step Plan Servs., Inc. v. Koresko, 12 A.3d 401, 417 n.4 (Pa. Super.

2010) (citations omitted); 20 West’s Pa. Practice, Appellate Practice § 312:30

(2017); see also Beltan v. Piersody, 748 A.2d 715, 718-19 (Pa. Super.

2000) (holding that an order granting intervenor status in an ongoing child

custody case was interlocutory and unappealable); In re Manley, 451 A.2d

557, 559 (Pa. Super. 1982) (concluding that an order granting intervention in

an ongoing dispute was not a final appealable order).

       Here, we ascertain whether we can exercise appellate jurisdiction. See

Knopick, 189 A.3d at 436. Appellants appealed from the September 6, 2017

order, which we quoted in its entirety above, granting Miller’s petition to

intervene. See Order, 9/6/17, at 2-3. Contrary to Appellants’ argument, the

record does not establish that Miller moved for a preliminary injunction or that

the trial court granted any such request by Miller.15 See id. Miller’s own



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15 Blue Ribbon’s characterization of Miller’s petition as a request for injunctive
relief strains credulity.


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petition to intervene, as reproduced above, merely requested permission to

intervene.    R.R. at 74a.       Because the September 6, 2017 order granted

intervenor status to Miller, such an order, in this ongoing matter, is

interlocutory in nature and the record does not establish Blue Ribbon

requested permission to appeal. See, e.g., Koresko, 12 A.3d at 417 n.4.

       Moreover, the unambiguous language of the trial court’s September 6,

2017 order did not grant an injunction. It simply reiterated the trial court’s

previously issued August 31, 2017 order granting injunctive relief in favor of

Blue Ribbon based on Blue Ribbon’s own motion for a preliminary injunction.

Order, 8/31/17, at 1. Appellants cannot credibly allege that they are somehow

aggrieved by an order that simply incorporated a prior trial court order.16 See

generally Pa.R.A.P. 501. The order appealed from did not—and could not,

given it granted Miller’s petition to intervene—grant, modify, continue, or

dissolve injunctive relief. See Pa.R.A.P. 311(a)(4); see also Appellant’s Brief

at 8 (stating that the issue before this Court was whether trial court erred by

“granting a preliminary injunction” based on Miller’s petition to intervene).

Because Appellants are appealing an interlocutory order not as of right and



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16As Appellees point out, Appellants’ strained interpretation of the record was
because it wanted to “bootstrap an appeal of the paragraphs that they disliked
about the August 3[1] order into the instant appeal of the September [6],
2017 Order . . . .” Appellees’ Brief at 11. Appellees accurately note Appellants
should have either timely appealed from the August 31, 2017 order or moved
to dissolve the injunction under Pa.R.C.P. 1531(c).


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failed to request permission to appeal, we quash the appeal from the trial

court’s September 6, 2017 order, at docket 1550 MDA 2017.             Appellants’

second issue similarly assumes that the September 6, 2017 order granted

Miller’s request for injunctive relief and therefore we need not address their

arguments. Appellants’ Brief at 8 (claiming that the trial court erred “when it

enforced a preliminary injunction” when Miller “did not post his bond for the

injunction”).

      In support of their third issue, Appellants argue that the trial court erred

by sanctioning them $1,000 for contempt.         Id. at 57.    They reason that

because Miller did not post a $1,000 injunction bond, as required by the trial

court’s September 6, 2017 order, that order was a legal nullity. Id. Similarly,

Appellants argue that the trial court erred by requiring them to post additional

bonds totaling $112,172.16 to protect Appellees in its October 6, 2017 order.

Id. Appellants reason that because (1) they had filed an appeal and (2) more

than thirty days had lapsed after the injunction was issued, the trial court

lacked jurisdiction to modify the injunctions by imposing additional bonds on

Hughes and Miller. Id. at 58.

      Initially, Appellants have misperceived the September 6, 2017 order,

which, as we quoted above, granted Miller’s petition to intervene and set a

counterbond for $1,000. Miller never moved for an injunction and his petition

to intervene did not request injunctive relief, let alone raise grounds for

injunctive relief. Because the trial court’s September 6, 2017 order was never


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an order that granted any form of injunctive relief, Appellants’ argument that

the order was a legal nullity absent timely posting of an injunction bond lacks

merit.17

       With respect to Appellants’ argument regarding the additional bonds,

we set forth the applicable law.         Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure

1701 provides as follows, in pertinent part:

       (a) General rule. Except as otherwise prescribed by these rules,
       after an appeal is taken or review of a quasijudicial order is
       sought, the trial court or other government unit may no longer
       proceed further in the matter.

       (b) Authority of a trial court or agency after appeal. After an
       appeal is taken or review of a quasijudicial order is sought, the
       trial court or other government unit may:

           (1) Take such action as may be necessary to preserve the
           status quo, correct formal errors in papers relating to the
           matter, cause the record to be transcribed, approved, filed and
           transmitted, grant leave to appeal in forma pauperis, grant
           supersedeas, and take other action permitted or required by
           these rules or otherwise ancillary to the appeal or petition for
           review proceeding.

           (2) Enforce any order entered in the matter, unless the
           effect of the order has been superseded as prescribed in this
           chapter.

Pa.R.A.P. 1701 (emphases added).

       For example, in Rosenberg v. Holy Redeemer Hosp., 506 A.2d 408

(Pa. Super. 1986), the appellant filed a timely notice of appeal from an order


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 Miller was not required to post any injunction bond, since he never filed any
17

motion for injunctive relief.


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granting summary judgment. Id. at 410. Over three weeks later, the trial

court granted the appellant’s petition to hold the appellee in contempt or for

supplemental injunctive relief.    Id.   On appeal, the Rosenberg Court

addressed, among other issues, whether the trial court had jurisdiction to rule

on appellant’s petition given the outstanding notice of appeal. Id. at 413-14.

Citing Rule 1701, the Rosenberg Court held the trial court properly could rule

on the appellant’s petition to hold appellee in contempt because the court was

“clearing up matters ancillary to the appeal.” Id. at 414.

      Instantly, a similar situation exists: Appellants appealed from the trial

court’s September 6, 2017 order granting Miller’s petition to intervene before

the trial court resolved Appellees’ emergency petition for contempt of court

and petition for revocation of Attorney Leneghan’s pro hac vice admission.

Similar to the posture in Rosenberg, the trial court was not divested of any

jurisdiction in resolving Appellees’ contempt petition because it was in the

nature of taking such action as necessary to enforce the previously entered

August 31, 2017 injunction order. See Pa.R.A.P. 1701; Rosenberg, 506 A.2d

at 414.    Specifically, because Blue Ribbon violated the injunction—by

removing fixtures and other assets in violation of paragraph five of the August

31, 2017 order—the court ordered Appellants to post bonds to protect

Appellees’ interests.   See Order, 10/6/17 (granting Appellees’ petition for

contempt). Blue Ribbon’s egregious violations thus compelled the trial court

to take such action to maintain the status quo and enforce the injunction. See


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Pa.R.A.P. 1701; Rosenberg, 506 A.2d at 414. Further, under Rule 1701, a

petition to revoke pro hac vice admission in a civil case is ancillary to the

merits of the parties’ claims. Cf. Miller Elec. Co. v. DeWeese, 907 A.2d

1051, 1057 (Pa. 2006) (holding that a motion for counsel fees was ancillary

to the underlying lawsuit).

      Lastly, Appellants argue that the court erred in revoking Attorney

Leneghan’s pro hac vice status. Appellants’ Brief at 59. Appellants contend

that because the trial court erred in concluding they violated the court’s

September 6, 2017 order, the court had no basis to revoke Attorney

Leneghan’s pro hac vice admission. Id. at 60. Specifically, Appellants assert

that the September 6th order was a legal nullity because intervenor’s counsel

never posted an injunction bond. Id.

      The standard of review for an order revoking pro hac vice admission is

an abuse of discretion. ACE Am. Ins. Co. v. Underwriters at Lloyds &

Cos., 939 A.2d 935, 948 (Pa. Super. 2007). As discussed above, because the

underlying premise of Appellants’ argument—the trial court’s September 6,

2017 order was a legal nullity due to the alleged failure of Miller, the

intervenor, to post a bond—is flawed, Appellants’ argument fails. As resolved

above, the September 6, 2017 order did not grant any petition for injunctive

relief, which would have required a bond. Order, 9/6/17. Miller simply never

filed a motion for injunctive relief. The only motion before the trial court was

Miller’s petition to intervene. Thus, Appellants have not established an abuse


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of discretion. See ACE Am. Ins., 939 A.2d at 948. For these reasons, we

quash the appeal docketed at 1550 MDA 2017 as interlocutory, and affirm the

trial court’s October 6, 2017 order, which was the subject of the appeal

docketed at 1581 MDA 2017.

     Appeal at 1550 MDA 2017 quashed. Appeal at 1581 MDA 2017 affirmed.

Appellants’ Motion for Order Releasing Supersedeas Bond denied.



Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary

Date: 1/16/2019




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