J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17
NON-PRECEDENTIAL DECISION - SEE SUPERIOR COURT I.O.P. 65.37

ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                 PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDINGCREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATESLP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLANDPREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGA,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGSLP
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZIITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: JAMES RIGAS

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP Appellant             No. 1311 EDA 2016


                Appeal from the Order December 10, 2014
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17


ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                 PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDINGCREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICZITO I, LPATIONS LP,
HIGHLAND VIDEO ASSOCIATESLP,
HIGHLAND PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC.,
HIGHLAND COMMUNICATIONS
LLP,HIGHLAND HOLDING II,
HIGHLANDPREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGA,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGSLP
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZIITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: ZITO I, LP

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                       No. 1312 EDA 2016


                Appeal from the Order December 10, 2014
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                 -2-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                 PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDINGCREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP, HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGS,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGS LP,
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: ZITO MEDIA, L.P.

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                       No. 1313 EDA 2016


                   Appeal from the Order March 22, 2016
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                 -3-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17


ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,           IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,                PENNSYLVANIA
WENDING CREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGA,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGSLP
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZIITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: ZITO MEDIA, L.P.

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                       No. 1314 EDA 2016


                Appeal from the Order December 27, 2013
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                 -4-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17


ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,             IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                  PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDING CREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGS,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGS LP,
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZITO MEDIA, LP.,


APPEAL OF: ZITO I, L.P.

                 v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                        No. 1315 EDA 2016


                 Appeal from the Order December 27, 2013
           In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
         Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                  -5-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                 PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDING CREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGS,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGS LP,
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: JAMES RIGAS

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                       No. 1316 EDA 2016


                Appeal from the Order December 27, 2013
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                 -6-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                 PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDING CREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGS,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGS LP,
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: JOHN RIGAS

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                       No. 1317 EDA 2016


                Appeal from the Order December 27, 2013
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                 -7-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,            IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                 PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDING CREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGS,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGS LP,
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: JAMES RIGAS

                v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                       No. 1318 EDA 2016


                  Appeal from the Order January 21, 2015
          In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
        Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280




                                 -8-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

ISLAND PARTNERS, INC., ROUMALI,                   IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF
INC., GRISTMILL PROPERTIES INC.,                        PENNSYLVANIA
SYRACUSE HILTON HEAD HOLDING, LP,
WENDING CREEK 3656 LLC,HILTON
HEAD COMMUNICATIONS LP, HIGHLAND
VIDEO ASSOCIATES LP, HIGHLAND
PRESTIGE GEORGIA INC., HIGHLAND
COMMUNICATIONS LLP,HIGHLAND
HOLDING II, HIGHLAND PREFERRED
COMMUNICATIONS LLC, HIGHLAND
HOLDINGS, ELENI INTERIORS INC,
ILIAD HOLDINGS,NCAA HOLDINGS,
INC., DORIS HOLDINGS LP,
DORELLENIC,DOBAIRE DESIGNS,
COUDERSPORT THEATRE,
COUDERSPORT TELEVISION CABLE CO.,
RIGAS ENTERTAINMENT LTD, TIMOTHY
RIGAS, JOHN J. RIGAS, MICHAEL J.
RIGAS, JAMES P. RIGAS, WENDING
CREEK FARMS INC., ZITO I,LP AND
ZITO MEDIA, LP.,

APPEAL OF: ZITO I, L.P.

                    v.

DELOITTE & TOUCHE, LLP                              No. 1319 EDA 2016


                      Appeal from the Order January 21, 2015
              In the Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia County
            Civil Division at No(s): March Term 2004 No. 040306280

BEFORE: LAZARUS, OTT, and FITZGERALD,* JJ.

MEMORANDUM BY FITZGERALD, J.:                      FILED OCTOBER 27, 2017

        This action arises from the 2002 failure of Adelphia Communications

Corporation (“Adelphia”) and ensuing civil and criminal investigations.   In

*   Former Justice specially assigned to the Superior Court.




                                       -9-
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

2004, Appellants John Rigas, James Rigas, Zito I, L.P. (“Zito I”) and Zito

Media, L.P. (“Zito Media”) (collectively “Appellants”) and other plaintiffs filed

a civil complaint in the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas against Deloitte

& Touche LLP (“Deloitte”), the former accountant and auditor for Adelphia

and other entities managed by Adelphia, for Deloitte’s alleged role in

Adelphia’s failure. In essence, the complaint alleged that Deloitte directed

the accounting decisions that ultimately ruined Adelphia but then refused to

stand behind these decisions once the federal government began to

investigate Adelphia.

      In 2005, Deloitte removed the case to the United States Bankruptcy

Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. The federal Judicial Panel on

Multidistrict Litigation (“JPML”) then transferred the case to the United

States District Court for the Southern District of New York (“District Court”)

as part of multidistrict litigation (“MDL”) relating to Adelphia’s collapse. The

District Court entered two orders dismissing most of Appellants’ claims 1 and

remanded the remaining claims (three claims by Zito Media) to the

Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas. Subsequently, the Court of Common

Pleas granted summary judgment to Deloitte on Zito Media’s remaining

claims on the ground that Zito Media’s expert report failed to provide a


1 The first order granted, in part, Deloitte’s motion to dismiss Appellants’
amended complaint, while the second granted, in part, Deloitte’s motion for
summary judgment on Appellants’ second amended complaint.                  For
convenience, we refer to both orders collectively as the “dismissal orders.”



                                     - 10 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

reasonable calculation of its damages. These nine appeals followed, which

we have consolidated for purposes of disposition.

      In the appeals at 1311, 1312, and 1314-1319 EDA 2016, Appellants

ask us to review the dismissal orders that the District Court entered during

MDL proceedings.      Under City of Waco v. United States Fidelity &

Guaranty Co., 293 U.S. 140 (1934), and its progeny, the only court that

had jurisdiction to review these rulings was the United States Court of

Appeals for the Second Circuit. Because we lack jurisdiction to review the

District Court’s dismissal orders, we quash these appeals.

      In the only remaining appeal at 1313 EDA 2016, we reverse the

court’s order granting summary judgment against Zito Media because Zito

Media’s expert provides a reasonable calculation of damages that should go

to the jury.

               APPELLANTS’ ALLEGATIONS AGAINST DELOITTE

      Appellants allege the following: in 1952, John Rigas purchased a cable

television franchise for the small town of Coudersport, Pennsylvania.

Appellants’ Am. Compl., ¶ 10.    Over the next thirty years, John acquired

additional cable companies. Id. ¶ 10, n.2.

      In 1985, John hired Deloitte to provide him and his companies with

accounting and auditing services.   Id. ¶¶ 15-17. John ran the companies

with his sons James, Timothy, and Michael. In July 1986, they reorganized

five of the companies into a single holding company, Adelphia, which they



                                    - 11 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

subsequently took public.    Id. ¶¶ 14, 19, 22.      Rigas family members

(including John, James, Timothy, Michael, and members of their immediate

families) retained voting control over Adelphia.    Id. ¶ 22.    The family

privately owned another set of companies (the “Managed Entities”) that

Adelphia managed for a fee: Highland Preferred, Highland Prestige, Highland

Video, Hilton Head, and Coudersport TV.         Id. ¶¶ 10-13 & n.3, 27.

Coudersport TV’s assets eventually were transferred to Zito Media. 2 None of

the Managed Entities had any employees. In addition, the Rigas family held

partnerships (the “Rigas Family Partnerships” or “RFP’s”) that owned

interests in the Managed Entities and in Adelphia securities.    One of the

RFP’s was Highland Holdings.3 Id. ¶¶ 30-31.

     Between 1985 and 2002, Deloitte provided advice to Adelphia and the

RFP’s with respect to documentation and disclosure of certain transactions

between and among these entities known as “related party transactions.”

Specifically, Deloitte advised that disclosure of receivables and payables

among the RFP’s, on the one hand, and Adelphia, on the other, should be on

a net basis rather than showing each balance individually. Id. ¶ 61.




2 It appears that Zito Media does not own any assets other than those
transferred by Coudersport TV.

3We refer to Rigas family members, Adelphia, the Managed Entities and the
RFP’s collectively as “the Rigas family.”



                                   - 12 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

      Adelphia needed substantial capital to implement its business strategy

of acquiring new cable systems and increasing its subscriber base by

upgrading systems and providing new services.        Adelphia raised this new

capital mainly through public offerings of securities, private sales of

securities to the RFP’s, and credit facilities. Id. ¶ 67. Deloitte advised on

the proper accounting treatment for transactions in which Adelphia acquired

capital necessary to purchase new cable systems, upgrade older systems,

and provide new services. Id. ¶¶ 67-73. These transactions, known as “co-

borrowing agreements,” turned previously existing RFP credit facilities into

“co-borrowing” facilities, with both an RFP and an Adelphia subsidiary named

as borrowers. Id. ¶ 75. Deloitte advised that funds drawn on co-borrowing

agreements did not need to be reflected on Adelphia’s balance sheet so long

as the RFP had the ability to repay the debt. Id. ¶¶ 82, 91.

      Deloitte provided advice with regard to Adelphia’s financial statements

and its filings with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”). Id. ¶¶

38-39, 53-54. Deloitte provided similar services to the Managed Entities and

audited every credit facility into which the Managed Entities entered. Id. ¶¶

41, 43.   Relying on Deloitte’s advice, the Rigases and their companies

incurred hundreds of millions of dollars in debt to invest in Adelphia.

      In 1996, an Adelphia entity and one of the Managed Entities entered

into a joint “co-borrowing” agreement, the purpose of which was to lend

funds to the Rigas family for the purchase of Adelphia securities. Id. ¶ 75.



                                     - 13 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

Deloitte’s team of accountants reviewed this agreement and learned that it

was joint and several, that all borrowers would be responsible for all

borrowings made pursuant to the agreement, and that the banks could look

to any borrower for repayment.      Id. ¶¶ 77-81.        Deloitte instructed that

Adelphia could treat the co-borrowed debt of the Managed Entity as a

contingent liability on Adelphia’s books. According to Deloitte, so long as the

Managed Entity had the ability to repay the debt, no need existed to reflect

this debt on Adelphia’s balance sheet.       Id. ¶ 82.   Deloitte also concluded

that the 1996 co-borrowing agreement did not present any new risk. Id. ¶

84.

      Between 1999 and 2001, Adelphia subsidiaries and several RFP’s

entered into three additional co-borrowing agreements, the last of which

included Zito Media as a co-borrower. Id. ¶¶ 85-86. The structure of each

co-borrowing agreement was similar to the 1996 agreement.             Id. ¶ 89.

Deloitte’s advice with respect to each agreement was the same: (1) the

Managed Entity debt was a contingent liability of Adelphia that Adelphia

need not report on its balance sheet provided that the Rigases had the

ability to repay their portion of the co-borrowed debt; and (2) regardless of

which co-borrower drew down on the facility, the co-borrower who used the

funds should record the debt on its books. Id. ¶ 91. Deloitte also advised

that Adelphia did not need to include footnotes on its financial statements




                                    - 14 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

describing the total amount of debt borrowed by Managed Entity co-

borrowers. Id. ¶ 92.

      In early 2002, following the Enron debacle, the SEC announced new

guidance   regarding   disclosures   of   off-balance   sheet   debt.   Deloitte

interpreted that guidance as now requiring that Adelphia disclose (1) the

existence of co-borrowing facilities, (2) the key terms of co-borrowing

agreements, including either party’s right to draw the entire amount and

joint and several liability, and (3) the off-balance sheet debt, or the amount

borrowed under these facilities by the Managed Entities, including Zito

Media, that was not reflected on Adelphia’s balance sheet. Id. ¶ 112.

      During a February 28, 2002 audit committee meeting, Deloitte

confirmed that the prior co-borrowing disclosure had not been insufficient,

but that a different disclosure was necessary due to the SEC’s new guidance.

Id. ¶ 117.   Deloitte’s presentation included a review of their 2001 audit,

which they lauded as one of the best ever for Adelphia. Their presentation

also reflected significant direct placements to the Rigases in 2001, several of

which correspond directly to draws from co-borrowing facilities by RFP’s. Id.

¶118. Deloitte representatives stated they “had a very good audit, that they

were comfortable with this, and they were fine.” Id. ¶ 119. As of March 27,

2002, Deloitte had verbally approved substantially the entire draft of the

2001 Adelphia 10-K for filing with the SEC in the next few days and signed

off on an earnings press release to be issued by Adelphia. Deloitte’s practice



                                     - 15 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

was not to sign off on such a press release until it was confident that the

audit was substantially complete. Id. ¶ 125.

      After extensive review by Deloitte and its outside counsel and

concurrence as to the substance of the release, Adelphia issued an earnings

report and held a conference call with analysts to discuss the earnings

results. Among other things, the earnings release disclosed the amount that

the Rigas co-borrowers had borrowed pursuant to the co-borrowing

agreements. Id. ¶ 126. Following the conference call, issues arose in the

marketplace regarding the amount of Managed Entity debt. Id. ¶ 128.

      Within days, the SEC began investigating Adelphia’s accounting

treatment and disclosure of the co-borrowing agreements. Id. ¶ 129. The

Rigases and Adelphia turned to Deloitte for assistance with responding to the

SEC, because only Deloitte had the information necessary to defend its

accounting determinations. Id. ¶ 130. After it became clear that the SEC

disagreed over how to account for the co-borrowing agreements, Deloitte

decided not to stand by its past accounting decisions and the advice that it

consistently had rendered to the Rigases, Adelphia, and the Managed

Entities. Id. ¶ 131. Instead, Deloitte took steps to distance itself from the

controversy surrounding the disclosure regarding the co-borrowing debt.

Id.

      Deloitte substituted its national office for the engagement team that

previously had provided advice to Adelphia and Plaintiffs and requested



                                   - 16 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

documentation that the engagement team had already reviewed.             Id. ¶¶

132-33.   Ultimately, Deloitte refused to sign the audit opinion unless the

SEC concurred with its accounting decisions, a step Deloitte had never taken

before. Id. ¶ 134. According to Appellants, Deloitte placed its own interests

above the best interests of its clients. Id. ¶ 137.

      As a result of Deloitte’s refusal to sign the 2001 audit opinion, Adelphia

was unable to issue its 2001 10-K, which ultimately led to, inter alia,

defaults under various agreements, a severe diminution of the value of

Adelphia’s shares, and Adelphia’s shares being delisted by NASDAQ in June

of 2002. Id. ¶ 138. The harm to Adelphia in turn damaged the Managed

Entities, which were co-borrowers with Adelphia and, in some cases, had

lent funds to the other entities to purchase Adelphia securities which were

severely devalued as a result of Deloitte’s actions. Id. ¶ 139. The RFP’s,

whose value was tied to Adelphia’s in various ways, lost value as well. Id.

¶¶ 139-40.

      Following Adelphia’s failure, the federal government brought civil and

criminal charges against Adelphia and members of the Rigas family.          The

SEC filed an action against Adelphia and John, James, Timothy, and Michael,

and the Department of Justice indicted John and Timothy on criminal

charges relating to the practices discussed above, including Adelphia’s

treatment of netting, co-borrowing arrangements, purchases of Adelphia

securities, and marketing support agreements.         Id. ¶¶ 145-47.   John and



                                     - 17 -
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J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

Timothy were eventually convicted of conspiracy, securities fraud, and bank

fraud. Id. ¶ 157.

      After their convictions, the Rigas family entered into a global

settlement with the government. John Rigas forfeited or transferred to other

family members substantially all of his assets, including all of his interests in

Adelphia, the Managed Entities and other RFP’s, and his non-business

assets. Id. ¶ 158. James Rigas gave up all of his interests in Adelphia and

most of his interests in the Managed Entities and other RFP’s.         Id. ¶ 159.

Most of the RFP’s were forfeited to the government. Id. ¶ 160. Prior to the

forfeiture of Highland Holdings, Highland Preferred, Highland Prestige,

Highland Video and Hilton Head to the United States, these entities assigned

all of their assets that they did not retain in order to comply with the

Government-Rigas settlement agreement to John Rigas, Michael Rigas,

Timothy Rigas, James Rigas, and Ellen Rigas Venetis, including the entities’

interests in claims against Deloitte. Id. ¶ 161. In turn, John Rigas, Michael

Rigas, Timothy Rigas, James Rigas, and Ellen Rigas Venetis transferred and

assigned the assets and rights received from the entities to Zito I.         Id. ¶

162. According to the amended complaint, the United States consented to

the transfer of assets, including the entities’ litigation rights against Deloitte,

during   the   course   of   negotiations   leading   to   the   Government-Rigas




                                      - 18 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

Settlement Agreement. Id. ¶ 163. Coudersport TV was not forfeited to the

government; its assets were transferred to Zito Media. Id. ¶ 164.4

                         PROCEDURAL HISTORY

      On March 26, 2004, Appellants filed a civil complaint against Deloitte

in the Court of Common Pleas. Deloitte removed this action to Bankruptcy

Court on the ground that it was related to Adelphia’s pending bankruptcy

proceedings. The JPML thereupon transferred the case to the District Court

as part of MDL proceedings involving Adelphia.     After transfer, the District

Court stayed the case while other cases in the MDL moved forward, including

a securities class action against Deloitte. On May 7, 2013, the District Court

ordered this case to proceed.

      On June 6, 2013, Appellants filed a single amended complaint against

Deloitte alleging breach of contract, breach of professional duty, negligent

misrepresentation,   tortious   interference,   breach   of   fiduciary   duty,

contribution and indemnity. Zito I alleged that it had standing as successor-

in-interest to Highland Holdings, Highland Preferred, Highland Prestige,

Highland Video and Hilton Head. Zito Media asserted that it had standing as

successor-in-interest to Coudersport TV.

      Deloitte filed a motion to dismiss the amended complaint. In an order

and opinion dated December 27, 2013, the District Court dismissed (1) all


4 We will discuss further evidence below on pages 36-39 in connection with
Zito Media’s appeal at 1313 EDA 2016.



                                    - 19 -
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claims by John Rigas under the doctrine of in pari delicto and (2) all claims

by James Rigas, Zito I and Zito Media except these plaintiffs’ tort actions for

professional negligence and negligent misrepresentation.

      The District Court granted the motion of James Rigas, Zito I and Zito

Media for leave to file a second amended complaint (“SAC”) repleading its

claim for breach of contract.   Subsequently, Deloitte moved for summary

judgment on all clams in the SAC. In an opinion and order on December 10,

2014, the District Court held that (1) Zito I lacked standing to bring any

negligence or contract claims against Deloitte, (2) James Rigas failed to

state a cause of action on his remaining contract and negligence claims, and

(3) Deloitte failed to demonstrate that it was entitled to judgment as a

matter of law against Zito Media on its contract and negligence claims.

Accordingly, the District Court entered summary judgment in favor of

Deloitte except for Zito Media’s claims of breach of contract, professional

negligence and negligent misrepresentation.

      Zito I and James Rigas moved for reconsideration, but on January 21,

2015, the District Court denied reconsideration and ordered the Clerk to

remand Zito Media’s case to Philadelphia County. Because Appellants’ action

against Deloitte was the last matter in the MDL proceedings, the District

Court directed the Clerk to close MDL proceedings and notify the JPML of this

closure.




                                    - 20 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

      Following remand, Deloitte moved for summary judgment on Zito

Media’s remaining contract and tort claims on the ground that Zito Media

failed to prove damages. On March 22, 2016, the Court of Common Pleas

granted summary judgment in favor of Deloitte.     These appeals followed.

Specifically:

         (1) At 1311 EDA 2016, James Rigas appealed the District
         Court’s dismissal orders;

         (2) At 1312 EDA 2016, Zito I appealed the District Court’s
         dismissal orders;

         (3) At 1313 EDA 2016, Zito Media appealed the Court of
         Common Pleas’ order granting summary judgment to
         Deloitte on the claims remanded to state court;

         (4) At 1314 EDA 2016, Zito Media appealed the District
         Court’s dismissal orders;

         (5) At 1315 EDA 2016, Zito I joined in Zito Media’s appeal
         at 1314 EDA 2016;

         (6) At 1316 EDA 2016, James Rigas joined in Zito Media’s
         appeal at 1314 EDA 2016;

         (7) At 1317 EDA 2016, John Rigas appealed the District
         Court’s dismissal orders;

         (8) At 1318 EDA 2016, James Rigas appealed the District
         Court’s dismissal orders and its order denying
         reconsideration; and

         (9) At 1319 EDA 2016, Zito I appealed the District Court’s
         dismissal orders and its order denying reconsideration.

The Court of Common Pleas did not order Appellants to file statements of

errors complained of on appeal.




                                   - 21 -
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J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

                    QUESTIONS RAISED ON APPEAL

     James Rigas raises the following questions in his appeals at 1311 EDA

2016 and 1318 EDA 2016:

        A. Did the [District Court] err in ignoring unrefuted
        evidence adduced by [James Rigas] in granting summary
        judgment against him?

        B. Did the [District Court] err in refusing to apply Section
        552 of the Restatement (Second) of Torts with respect to
        [James Rigas’] negligent misrepresentation claim against
        his accountant?

James Rigas’ Brief, 1311 & 1318 EDA 2016, at 4.

     John Rigas raises the following questions in his appeal at 1317 EDA

2016:

        A. Did the [District Court] err in relying upon [John Rigas’]
        federal convictions in dismissing his claims pursuant to in
        pari delicto where the factual conduct giving rise to the
        convictions is not apparent from the general jury verdict?

        B. Did the [District Court] err in dismissing [John Rigas’]
        claim pursuant to in pari delicto without considering policy
        considerations in accordance with Official Comm. of
        Unsecured         Creditors        of       AHERF         v.
        PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP, 989 A.2d 313 (Pa.
        2010)?

John Rigas’ Brief, 1317 EDA 2016, at 4.

     Zito I raises the following questions in its appeal at 1312 EDA 2016

and 1319 EDA 2016:

        A. Did the [District Court] err in dismissing [Zito I’s] claims
        for lack of constitutional standing instead of remanding
        them to the state court from which they were removed?




                                    - 22 -
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J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

         B. Did the [District Court] err in dismissing [Zito I’s] claims
         based on a lack of standing when the evidence adduced
         demonstrated that [Zito I’s] predecessors in interest had
         assigned the claims against [Deloitte] to plaintiff?

         C. Did the [District Court] err in applying the parol
         evidence rule to bar evidence of an assignment based
         upon a contract to which [Deloitte] was not a party?

         D. Did the [District Court] err in determining that plaintiff
         lacked standing to pursue a claim transferred to it when
         the transfer of the claim was not void but only potentially
         voidable?

Zito I’s Brief, 1312 & 1319 EDA 2016, at 8.

     Zito Media raises the following questions in its appeal at 1313 EDA

2016:

         Did the [Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas] err in
         rejecting a damages calculation as a matter of law as pure
         speculation merely because the expert used combined
         projections for all of the plaintiff companies, which were
         operated as a group, before separately allocating value to
         each particular plaintiff?

         Did the [Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas] abuse its
         discretion in refusing to permit [Zito Media] to correct a
         perceived deficiency in its expert report on damages even
         though doing so would not have caused [Deloitte] any
         prejudice or delayed the scheduled trial?

Zito Media’s Brief, 1313 EDA 2016, at 2.

     Zito Media raises the following questions in its appeal at 1314 EDA

2016:5



5 As noted above, Zito I and James Rigas join in this appeal in their own
appeals at 1315 EDA 2016 and 1316 EDA 2016.



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         A. Did the [District Court] err in dismissing a tortious
         interference claim for inadequately pleading intent when
         plaintiff alleged that [Deloitte] knew that interference was
         certain or substantially certain to occur as a result of its
         actions consistent with Sections 8A and 766 of the
         Restatement (Second) of Torts and the comments thereto?

         B. Did the [District Court] err in discounting [Zito Media’s]
         factual allegations supporting a fiduciary relationship
         between [Zito Media] and [Deloitte] and dismissing [Zito
         Media’s] breach of fiduciary duty claim solely because [Zito
         Media’s] officers were highly-educated?

Zito Media’s Brief, 1314 EDA 2016, at 2.

 LACK OF JURISDICTION OVER APPEALS AT 1311, 1312, and 1314-
                       1319 EDA 2016

      Appellants challenge the District Court’s two dismissal orders in their

appeals at 1311, 1312 and 1314-1319 EDA 2016. Deloitte argues that we

should quash these appeals due to lack of jurisdiction to review the District

Court’s orders. According to Deloitte, these orders, coupled with the remand

order, “effectively end[ed] the life of the matter in federal court” and made

the dismissal orders immediately appealable to the United States Court of

Appeals for the Second Circuit. Deloitte’s Brief at 1312 and 1319 EDA 2016,

at 17-18 (citing Berman v. Tyco Int’l Ltd., 492 Fed. Appx. 152, 154 (2d

Cir. 2012)). Since Appellants failed to appeal to the Second Circuit, Deloitte

contends, the dismissal orders are no longer subject to review “by any court,

either state or federal.”   Deloitte’s Brief at 23 (citing Carr v. Am. Red

Cross, 17 F.3d 671, 678 (3d Cir. 1994)). Based on our analysis of City of

Waco, we agree.



                                    - 24 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

        To understand City of Waco’s role, we examine these proceedings

against the backdrop of statutes that govern removal, MDL and remand

proceedings.     Deloitte removed Appellants’ action to the Bankruptcy Court

under 28 U.S.C. § 1452(a)6 because it was related to Adelphia’s pending

bankruptcy proceedings. Following removal, the JPML 7 transferred this case

to the District Court to coordinate this case with other MDL proceedings

pending against Adelphia.8 The District Court dismissed all but three claims



6   28 U.S.C. § 1452(a) provides:

           A party may remove any claim or cause of action in a civil
           action other than a proceeding before the United States
           Tax Court or a civil action by a governmental unit to
           enforce such governmental unit’s police or regulatory
           power, to the district court for the district where such civil
           action is pending, if such district court has jurisdiction of
           such claim or cause of action under section 1334 of this
           title.

28 U.S.C. § 1452(a).

This case was referred to the Bankruptcy Court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §
157(a) and a standing order of the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. See
Shubert v. Law Offices of Paul J. Winterhalter, 531 B.R. 546, 550
(Bankr.E.D.Pa. 2015) (“Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 157(a) and the Standing
Order of Reference for this District, ‘any and all proceedings arising under
Title 11 or arising in or related to a chapter 7, 11, 12, or 13 case under Title
11 are and shall be referred to the Bankruptcy Judges for the district’).

7 The JPML “consist[s] of seven circuit and district judges designated from
time to time by the Chief Justice of the United States . . .” Id. § 1407(d).

8 The MDL statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1407, provides in relevant part: “When civil
actions involving one or more common questions of fact are pending in
different districts, such actions may be transferred to any district for



                                       - 25 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
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by Appellants, denied reconsideration of the second dismissal order and

remanded this action to the Court of Common Pleas pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §

1452(b).9

        Remand orders themselves are “not reviewable on appeal or

otherwise by the [federal] courts of appeals.” 28 U.S.C. § 1452(b). Further,

as a state court, we are bound by the District Court’s remand order and

must treat it as valid and enforceable.       See Resolution Trust Corp. v.

Warwick Nurseries, Ltd., 675 A.2d 730, 732 (Pa. Super. 1996) (“state

courts are bound by the judgment of federal courts” and must give federal

proceedings full faith and credit (citation omitted)).    The questions thus

become: what is the effect of the remand order?          Where and when do

Appellants have the right to appeal the dismissal orders that preceded the


coordinated or consolidated pretrial proceedings.” Id. § 1407(a). The
transferee court oversees all pretrial and discovery proceedings, but not
trial. Id. The transfer “shall be made by the [JPML] upon its determination
that transfers for such proceedings will be for the convenience of parties and
witnesses and will promote the just and efficient conduct of such actions.”
Id.

9   28 U.S.C. § 1452(b) provides:

           The court to which such claim or cause of action is
           removed may remand such claim or cause of action on any
           equitable ground. An order entered under this subsection
           remanding a claim or cause of action, or a decision to not
           remand, is not reviewable by appeal or otherwise by the
           court of appeals under section 158(d), 1291, or 1292 of
           this title or by the Supreme Court of the United States
           under section 1254 of this title.




                                     - 26 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
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District Court’s remand order? Appellants maintain that they can wait until

the conclusion of post-remand proceedings in the Court of Common Pleas

and then appeal the dismissal orders to this Court, as they attempt to do in

eight of their nine appeals. Deloitte counters that Appellants had the right

to appeal to the Second Circuit from the District Court, even though the

District Court did not dispose of all claims and all parties, and therefore

Appellants cannot wait until now to appeal.

        City of Waco demonstrates that Deloitte is correct: the remand order

triggered Appellants’ right to appeal the dismissal orders to the Second

Circuit.    In City of Waco, the plaintiff, a Texas citizen, sued contractors

Combs & Glade, also Texas citizens, and the City of Waco, Texas (“the City”)

in Texas state court alleging state law claims for injuries that the plaintiff

incurred when he ran his car into an obstruction in a public street. City of

Waco, 293 U.S. at 141. The City sued the United States Fidelity & Guaranty

Company (“USF&G”), a citizen of Maryland and surety on the contractors’

bond, alleging, as a matter of state contract law, that USF&G was obligated

as surety to pay any liability created against the City by the contractors’

acts.      Id.   USF&G removed the entire action to federal court, which

dismissed the City’s action against USF&G on the ground that USF&G was an

improper and unnecessary party.       Id. at 141-42.   The district court then

remanded the case to Texas state court because no basis for federal

jurisdiction existed once the claim against USF&G was dismissed from the



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case. Id. at 142. The City appealed the order dismissing its claim against

USF&G to the Fifth Circuit, which dismissed the appeal, “holding that, as no

appeal lies from an order of remand, the cause was irrevocably out of the

District Court, the action of that court in dismissing the city’s cross-action

was moot, and its propriety could not be reviewed.”      Id. at 142-43.    The

United States Supreme Court reversed.        The Court held that the district

court’s remand order was not subject to review, but the order dismissing the

claim against USF&G was appealable, because “in logic and in fact the

decree of dismissal preceded that of remand and was made by the District

Court while it had control of the cause. Indisputably this order is the subject

of an appeal; and, if not reversed or set aside, is conclusive upon [the

City].” Id. at 143.

      Under City of Waco, federal appellate courts have jurisdiction to

review decisions that are collateral to the remand order when (1) the

decision has a conclusive effect in subsequent proceedings, and (2) the

decision can be “disaggregated” from the remand order.             Kircher v.

Putnam Funds Trust, 547 U.S. 633, 644 n.13 (2006).            “The holding of

[City of] Waco is that when one case presents two distinct claims for relief,

and the district court finally resolves one while remanding the other, the

claim that was not remanded may be appealed within the federal system.”

Daniels v. Liberty Mut. Ins. Co., 484 F.3d 884, 888 (7th Cir. 2007)

(emphasis in original).   The purpose underlying this rule is to provide an



                                    - 28 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

avenue of federal appellate review to parties who otherwise would have no

recourse if the district court dismisses some, but not all, of their claims and

then orders the case remanded to state court.

      Two decisions recognize that City of Waco applies to bankruptcy

cases involving the same remand statute, section 1452(b), that the District

Court applied in the present case.     See Good v. Voest-Alpine Indus.,

Inc., 398 F.3d 918, 922-24 (7th Cir. 2005) (citing In re Adams, 809 F.2d

1187, 1188-89 (5th Cir. 1987) (order dismissing party or claim and

preceding remand under section 1452(b) is appealable under City of

Waco)).

      Many other decisions provide helpful illustrations of City of Waco in

non-bankruptcy cases.10    See Kircher, 547 U.S. at 644 n.13; see also

Regan v. Starcraft Marine, 524 F.3d 627, 631-32 (5th Cir. 2008) (where

district court dismissed claim against one defendant and remanded state law

claim to state court, appeals court had jurisdiction to review order dismissing

federal law claim under City of Waco, because it was separable in logic and

fact from remand order and would have preclusive effect in subsequent state

court proceedings); Daniels, 484 F.3d at 888; LLC Carlson v. Arrowhead



10 Although non-bankruptcy cases involve a different remand statute, 28
U.S.C. § 1447(d), we find these cases analogous, because section 1447(d)
contains similar (albeit not identical) language to section 1452(b), and the
rationale for applying City of Waco to these cases is the same as in
bankruptcy cases.



                                    - 29 -
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Concrete Works, Inc., 445 F.3d 1046, 1052 (8th Cir. 2006) (City of Waco

requires that reviewed decision be conclusive on parties and logically and

factually precedent to remand order); Morris v. T E Marine Corp., 344

F.3d 439, 445 (5th Cir. 2003) (“it is absurd to suppose that the proper

forum for Morris to appeal a federal district court’s summary judgment order

is the Louisiana state appellate court”) (emphasis in original); Hernandez

v. Seminole Cnty., 334 F.3d 1233, 1241 (11th Cir. 2003); Christopher v.

Stanley–Bostitch, Inc., 240 F.3d 95, 99 (1st Cir. 2001); Beneficial

Consumer Disc. Co. v. Poltonowicz, 47 F.3d 91, 93 (3d Cir. 1995) (in

action involving three parties, where district court dismissed action against

one defendant, the IRS, and remanded two parties’ claims against one

another to state court, order dismissing IRS was appealable under City of

Waco); Carr, 17 F.3d at 678 (order remanding case to state court

transformed prior order dismissing one of several defendants into final,

appealable order). The Second Circuit, which Deloitte contends is the only

court that had jurisdiction to review the District Court’s dismissal decisions,

has issued an unpublished decision applying City of Waco. See Berman,

492 Fed. Appx. at 152.    There, the district court granted partial summary

judgment to the defendant on the plaintiff’s federal claim and one state law

claim and remanded the remaining state law claims to New York state court.

Id. at 153. The plaintiff appealed to the Second Circuit, which held that it

had jurisdiction to review the dismissal of the federal and state claims: “In



                                    - 30 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
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[remanding the case], the district court effectively ended the life of the

matter in federal court. Thus the district court’s grant of a partial summary

judgment has become a final judgment for our purposes.” Id. at 154.

        City of Waco and its progeny instruct that when a federal district

court dismisses claims or parties and remands the remaining claims to state

court, the dismissal order is immediately appealable to the federal court of

appeals. If the aggrieved party fails to timely appeal the resolved claim to

the federal court of appeals, that claim is beyond review by any court, either

state or federal.   Because Appellants did not appeal the District Court’s

dismissal orders and order denying reconsideration to the Second Circuit,

they forfeited their right to appeal these orders.

        Appellants argue that City of Waco only permits appeals to federal

appellate court when the district court dismisses federal law claims, but not

when the district court only dismisses state law claims, as happened in this

case. Zito I’s Reply Brief, 1312 and 1316 EDA 2016, at 5. City of Waco

itself defeats this argument, because no federal claims were involved in that

case.    Instead, (1) two state law claims were removed to federal district

court, (2) the district court dismissed one state law claim and remanded the

second claim to state court, and (3) the Supreme Court held that the district

court’s decision as to the dismissed state law claim was appealable to the

Fifth Circuit. See City of Waco, 293 U.S. at 141-43. Therefore, so long as

the district court’s order is conclusive in later proceedings and can be



                                     - 31 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

“disaggregated” from the court’s remand order, Kircher, 547 U.S. at 644

n.13, the order is subject to immediate appeal to a federal appeals court,

regardless of whether it resolves federal claims alone, state claims alone or

both federal and state claims.

      The test is not the source of the dismissed claims but whether there is

anything left for the district court to do other than remand the remaining

claims to state court.   Here, after dismissing the lion’s share of state law

claims, there was nothing left for the District Court to do in this case other

than remand11 the remaining claims to state court. Thus, the remand order

was equivalent to a final, appealable order that triggered Appellants’ right to

appeal to the Second Circuit.    Cf. Gelboim v. Bank of Am. Corp., 135

S.Ct. 897 (2015) (during MDL proceedings, order granting motion to dismiss

one discrete case in its entirety was immediately appealable, even though

other cases in MDL docket with unresolved issues remained unappealable).

      Appellants also argue that City of Waco does not apply when, as

here, the state court proceedings were originally removed to Bankruptcy

Court under 28 U.S.C. § 1452 due to section 1452(b)’s mandate that “[a]n

order remanding a claim or cause of action . . . “is not reviewable by appeal

or otherwise by the court of appeals . . .”      28 U.S.C. § 1452(b).      We

disagree.   This statute only prescribes that the remand order itself is not


11Assuming that the District Court had jurisdiction to issue remand orders in
MDL proceedings. See n.12, infra.



                                    - 32 -
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appealable; it does not preclude appeals of decisions collateral to the

remand order, such as the present dismissal orders. See Good, 398 F.3d at

922-24; Adams, 809 F.2d at 1188-89.

     Because we lack jurisdiction over Appellants’ appeals at 1311, 1312

and 1314-1319 EDA 2016, we are constrained to quash these appeals.12




12One additional comment is necessary. We stated above that we are
bound by the District Court’s remand order. Our duty is not to determine
whether the order is valid but what effect it had on further proceedings.

Had we possessed the authority to review the validity of the remand order,
we might have concluded that the District Court lacked jurisdiction to enter a
remand order at the conclusion of MDL proceedings. The MDL statute
provides that at the conclusion of pretrial proceedings, the action “shall be
remanded by the [JPML] . . . to the district from which it was transferred
unless it shall have been previously terminated.” 28 U.S.C. § 1407(a).
Under this provision, the district court assigned to supervise MDL
proceedings (the “transferee” court) is not itself authorized to remand the
case; it may only suggest that the JPML remand the case to the transferor
court. See In re Wilson, 451 F.3d 161, 165 n.5 (3d Cir. 2006); U.S. ex
rel. Hockett v. Columbia HCA/Healthcare Corp., 498 F.Supp.2d 25, 36
(D.D.C. 2007). This rule applies even when just one case remains on the
MDL docket. See Lexecon Inc. v. Milberg Weiss Bershad Hynes &
Lerach, 523 U.S. 26, 34 (1998); Wilson, 451 F.3d at 170.

Thus, although Appellants’ action was the final case in a lengthy series of
MDL cases relating to Adelphia, one might ask whether the District Court
lacked jurisdiction to remand Zito Media’s remaining claims to the Court of
Common Pleas. If it indeed lacked jurisdiction, all proceedings following the
remand order, including the present appeals, are nullities. But because we
cannot overrule the District Court’s remand order, any challenge to its
validity should be addressed to the District Court or the JPML, not us. We
express no view as to whether it is too late for any party to challenge this
order’s validity in federal court.




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J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

                       APPEAL AT 1313 EDA 2016

      With regard to the two claims of Zito Media remaining after remand,

which we review together, the Court of Common Pleas granted summary

judgment to Deloitte on the ground that Zito Media’s damages expert

improperly aggregated the valuations of all the Managed Entities and failed

to provide a reasonable calculation of damages specific to Zito Media. We

conclude that the expert’s methodology was reasonable, and that Zito Media

should have the opportunity to present his valuation to the jury.

      Our review is governed by the following principles:

             [S]ummary judgment is appropriate only in those cases
         where the record clearly demonstrates that there is no
         genuine issue of material fact and that the moving party is
         entitled to judgment as a matter of law. When considering
         a motion for summary judgment, the trial court must take
         all facts of record and reasonable inferences therefrom in a
         light most favorable to the non-moving party.

                                   * * *

             This clearly includes all expert testimony and reports
         submitted by the non-moving party or provided during
         discovery; and, so long as the conclusions contained within
         those reports are sufficiently supported, the trial judge
         cannot sua sponte assail them in an order and opinion
         granting summary judgment. Contrarily, the trial judge
         must defer to those conclusions . . . and should those
         conclusions be disputed, resolution of that dispute must be
         left to the trier of fact.

Summers v. Certainteed Corp., 997 A.2d 1152, 1159, 1161 (Pa. 2010)

(citations and quotation marks omitted). Further,




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J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

        the trial court must resolve all doubts as to the existence
        of a genuine issue of material fact against the moving
        party, and, thus, may only grant summary judgment
        where the right to such judgment is clear and free from all
        doubt. On appellate review, then,

           an appellate court may reverse a grant of summary
           judgment if there has been an error of law or an
           abuse of discretion. But the issue as to whether
           there are no genuine issues as to any material fact
           presents a question of law, and therefore, on that
           question our standard of review is de novo. This
           means we need not defer to the determinations
           made by the lower tribunals.

Id. at 1159 (citations and quotation marks omitted).

     To satisfy its burden of proof as to damages, Zito Media had to furnish

“only a reasonable quantity of information from which the fact-finder may

fairly estimate the amount of damages.” Delehanty v. First Pennsylvania

Bank, N.A., 464 A.2d 1243, 1257 (Pa. Super. 1983).

        [T]he fact-finder . . . may not render a verdict based on
        speculation or guesswork. Yet, the fact-finder may make a
        just and reasonable estimate of the damage based on
        relevant data, and in such circumstances may act on
        probable and inferential, as well as upon direct and
        positive proof. Thus, the law does not demand that the
        estimation of damages be completely free of all elements
        of speculation. While the trier of fact may not use sheer
        conjecture as a basis for arriving at a verdict, it may use a
        measure of speculation in aiming at a verdict or an award
        of damages, and an even greater degree of flexibility is
        granted in regard to testimony concerning prospective or
        future damages, which are at best, not always easy or
        certain of ascertainment and are to a large extent based
        on probabilities and uncertainties.        So then, mere
        uncertainty as to the amount of damages will not bar
        recovery where it is clear that the damages were the
        certain result of the defendant’s conduct.



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Id. (citations omitted).

      In this case, Zito Media is the successor in interest to Coudersport TV,

one of the Managed Entities to whom Deloitte provided accounting services.

Zito Media submitted an expert report that Deloitte failed to exercise

reasonable care in its advice to the Managed Entities concerning the co-

borrowing agreements and its 2001 audit of co-borrowing groups.

      Zito Media also retained Jeffrey Brandon of Waller Capital to provide

an expert report concerning the damages that Zito Media incurred due to

Deloitte’s alleged negligence. Brandon has seventeen years of Wall Street

experience in valuing cable and related industries. R.R. at 619a.13

      Brandon explained that the cable industry lends itself to modeling, and

that models could form the basis for expert testimony about what the

Managed Entities’ financial condition would be like today but for Deloitte’s

conduct.   Brandon identified the common variables and metrics used for

such valuation purposes, including homes passed growth, basic video

subscriber penetration, monthly revenue/basic video subscriber and EBITDA

margin. Id. at 628a-631a.

      Michael Mulcahey, a former Adelphia employee in its treasury

department, gathered the historical data and developed models to project

the Managed Entities’ losses.    Id. at 794a-802a.     Brandon learned that


13 For the parties’ convenience, we cite to the reproduced record in the
course of summarizing the relevant evidence of Zito Media’s damages.



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Mulcahey obtained this information from SEC filings and books and records

kept by Adelphia and the Managed Entities.     Id. Brandon also shared his

thoughts with Mulcahey about “what a model might look like . . . and how

one might go about building a model . . . [and] what common practice is in

terms of modeling cable companies.” Id. at 794a.

     Mulcahey developed two models. Brandon tested the metrics in each

model and found both models reasonable.       Id. at 638a.   The first model

assumed that Deloitte’s advice concerning co-borrowing agreements had

never occurred, and that there were no co-borrowing agreements between

1999 and 2001. This model took into account historical financial data as of

December 31, 1998, prior to the 1999-2001 co-borrowing agreements, and

projected the Managed Entities’ losses through 2023.      Id. at 627a.   The

second model assumed that the Managed Entities entered into the 1999-

2001 co-borrowing agreements but did not default due to Deloitte’s refusal

to issue the audit opinion for the co-borrowing groups’ 2001 financials. This

model took into account historical financial data as of December 31, 2001

and also projected the Managed Entities’ losses through 2023. Id.

     For each model, Brandon applied three common analytical processes

to determine a range of values for the Managed Entities: (1) publicly traded

cable company multiples; (2) recent cable company acquisition multiples;

and (3) discounted cash flow.      Id. at 640a, 645a-647a, 650a, 652a.

Brandon concluded that but for Deloitte’s negligence, under the first model,



                                   - 37 -
J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

the Managed Entities’ value ranged between $1.536 to $1.699 billion, and

under the second model, their value ranged between $2.191 to $2.436

billion. Id. at 722a, 724a. Brandon then apportioned these values between

the two plaintiffs in this action, Zito Media, the successor to Coudersport TV,

and Zito I, the successor to all other Managed Entities. In the first model,

based on subscriber data provided by Mulcahey,14 Brandon apportioned

3.21% of the Managed Entities’ value to Zito Media and the other 96.79% to

Zito I, resulting in a damage range for Zito Media between $49 and $55

million. Id. at 723a, 826a. In the second model, again based on subscriber

data provided by Mulcahey,15 Brandon apportioned 1.7% of the Managed

Entities’ value to Zito Media and 98.3% to Zito I, resulting in a damage

range for Zito Media between $37 and $41 million. Id. at 725a, 826a.

      Deloitte argued, and the Court of Common Pleas agreed, that Brandon

only provided an aggregate damages figure for the Managed Entities but not

a specific damage figure for Zito Media.       We disagree.      Brandon first

provided an aggregate range of damages for the Managed Entities under

each model but then calculated a separate damage range for Zito Media—



14 Mulcahey prepared a spreadsheet showing that Coudersport TV owned
3.21% of Managed Entity subscribers for purposes of the first model. R.R.
823a, 826a.

15 Mulcahey prepared a spreadsheet showing that Coudersport TV owned
1.7% of Managed Entity subscribers for purposes of the second model. R.R.
824a, 828a.



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J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

between $49 and $55 million under the first model and between $37 and

$41 million in the second model.

      In Reading Radio, Inc. v. Fink, 833 A.2d 199 (Pa. Super. 2003), this

Court approved valuation methodology similar to Brandon’s. The plaintiff’s

expert in Reading Radio valued two radio stations as a package and then

deriving a separate value for the station in question. Id. at 209. The expert

observed that the radio industry would view the stations as a “combination,”

thus giving the station in question a higher value than if it were alone. Id.

Moreover, the expert ultimately provided a separate value for the station in

question.    Id.     Analogously, in this case, Zito Media asserted that

Coudersport TV was not operated by itself but as part of the Managed

Entities, which benefited collectively from operating efficiencies and group

buying power.      R.R. 811a (declaration of James Rigas).   Thus, Zito Media

has a reasonable basis for arguing that Brandon could take the Managed

Entities’ aggregate value into account when computing Zito Media’s

damages.

      According to Deloitte, two decisions—Stevenson v. Economy Bank

of Ambridge, 197 A.2d 721 (Pa. 1964), and Wujcik v. Yorktowne Dental

Assoc., Inc., 701 A.2d 581 (Pa. Super. 1999)—demonstrate that “purely

amalgamated damages analyses such as that presented by Zito Media are

legally insufficient.”   Deloitte’s Brief, 1313 EDA 2016, at 17.      Neither

decision supports Deloitte’s argument.        The issue in Stevenson was



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J-A13037-17, J-A13038-17, J-A13039-17, J-A13040-17, J-A13041-17,
J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

whether a bank was liable for improperly restricting the plaintiff’s access to

cash in a safe deposit box. Our Supreme Court held that the plaintiff could

only obtain nominal damages from the bank. Stevenson, 197 A.2d at 727.

The Court reasoned that the plaintiff was litigating her entitlement to the

cash in another court, and the outcome of that case would render the action

against the bank moot; if she was entitled to the cash, she would recover it

in the other action, and if she was not, she suffered no harm from the bank’s

conduct. Id. at 726-27. This decision has no relevance to the propriety of

Brandon’s expert opinion in the present case.       In Wujcik, the plaintiff, a

dentist, agreed to work for a dental practice on condition that he receive

thirty-five percent of the fees actually collected by the practice. The plaintiff

did not prove what the practice actually collected but simply showed that

dentists customarily collect between 90-93% of accounts receivable.         This

Court held that proof of dentists’ “average collection percentage would be

little more than pure speculation of the actual amount collected by [the

practice] on those accounts generated by [the plaintiff’s] work.”       Wujcik,

701 A.2d at 584.     In contrast, Brandon identified the range of damages

suffered not by the average cable company but specifically by Zito Media.

      Deloitte contends that Brandon’s opinions are unreliable because he

simply accepted financial data provided by Mulcahey, a “disgraced Adelphia

insider” who helped Adelphia commit fraud.         Deloitte’s Brief, 1313 EDA

2016, at 19, 20-21. The Rules of Evidence provide:



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J-A13042-17, J-A13043-17, J-A13044-17, J-A13045-17

            An expert may base an opinion on facts or data in the case
            that the expert has been made aware of or personally
            observed. If experts in the particular field would
            reasonably rely on those kinds of facts or data in forming
            an opinion on the subject, they need not be admissible for
            the opinion to be admitted.

Pa.R.E. 703.      Here, Brandon was “made aware of” data that Mulcahey, a

financial    officer   at   Adelphia,   gathered   for   him.   Deloitte   has   not

demonstrated that this data was inaccurate or fabricated, or that it is

unreasonable for a financial expert to rely on this type of data in formulating

his damages assessments. The thrust of Deloitte’s argument is that the data

is unreliable because Mulcahey himself is a fraudster. Deloitte’s Brief, 1313

EDA 2016, at 19-22. While Deloitte points to several examples that indicate

Mulcahey participated in financial wrongdoing at Adelphia, we cannot see

why Mulcahey’s conduct automatically invalidates the data that he gathered

for Brandon. Mulcahey’s credibility, or lack thereof, might be a subject for

the factfinder to weigh during trial,16 but it does not nullify Brandon’s opinion

as a matter of law.

      Finally, Deloitte argues that the deposition testimony of Michael and

James Rigas proves that Zito Media suffered no damages. Although these

witnesses might not have pinpointed the exact amount of Zito Media’s


16Zito Media argues that findings of fact from a previous SEC action that
Deloitte raises as evidence of Mulcahey’s fraud are inadmissible in this case
under Pa.R.E. 403, 404(a)(1), 607(b) and 608(b)(1). Zito Media’s Brief at
1313 EDA 2016, at 9-10. We leave it to the Court of Common Pleas to
address these issues, assuming that they arise at all on remand.



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damages, Michael Rigas testified that Coudersport TV lost “all value at least”

and “all of [its] assets . . .” Zito Media’s Reply Brief, 1313 EDA 2016, at 10-

11. Thus, Zito Media did not admit that it suffered no damages whatsoever.

The amount of damages it suffered is a matter for the factfinder.

      For these reasons, we quash all appeals except for Zito Media’s appeal

at 1313 EDA 2016. In 1313 EDA 2016, we remand for further proceedings

in accordance with this memorandum.

      Appeals quashed at 1311, 1312, 1314, 1315, 1316, 1317, 1318 and

1319 EDA 2016.      Order at 1313 EDA 2016 reversed and remanded for

further proceedings in accordance with this memorandum.        Applications to

quash dismissed as moot.     Application for post-submission communication

denied as moot. Jurisdiction relinquished.

Judgment Entered.




Joseph D. Seletyn, Esq.
Prothonotary



Date: 10/27/2017




                                    - 42 -
