Court Opinion

ID: 9380775
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2023-03-21 14:06:20.708997+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T17:17:27.469073
License: Public Domain

[J-77-2022]
                    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
                               WESTERN DISTRICT

       TODD, C.J., DONOHUE, DOUGHERTY, WECHT, MUNDY, BROBSON, JJ.

    DARYL A. YOUNT,                              :   No. 2842 DD3
                                                 :
                      Petitioner                 :   Appeal from the Determination of
                                                 :   Subpoena of the Hearing Committee
               v.                                :   of the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund
                                                 :   for Client Security Board of Trustees
                                                 :   at No. CSF-2338-01-20 dated
    PENNSYLVANIA LAWYERS FUND FOR                :   November 23, 2021
    CLIENT SECURITY,                             :
                                                 :   ARGUED: November 29, 2022
                      Respondent                 :

                                         OPINION

JUSTICE WECHT                                               DECIDED: MARCH 21, 2023
        Although this matter arises under our disciplinary docket, it concerns not attorney

discipline, but rather a point of procedure. The underlying proceedings took place before

the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security,1 an entity created by this Court to

reimburse clients for financial losses caused by their attorneys. Daryl A. Yount, Esquire,

an attorney involved in these proceedings, sought access to an audio recording of a

hearing conducted on October 19, 2021, before a Hearing Committee appointed by the

Fund’s Board of Trustees.2 Attorney Yount attempted to obtain this recording via the

subpoena process provided by Pa.R.D.E. 521(c), an effort that the Hearing Committee

rejected.   Although we affirm the Hearing Committee’s determination that Attorney

1      Hereinafter, the “Fund.” The Fund is governed by the Pennsylvania Rules of
Disciplinary Enforcement. See Pa.R.D.E. 501-32.
2       Hereinafter, the “Board.”
Yount’s subpoena was invalid, we do so without prejudice to his ability to seek the

requested item through other means.

       By way of background, the Fund consists of “contributions of the members of the

Bar to aid in ameliorating the losses caused to clients and others by defalcating members

of the Bar acting as attorney or fiduciary.”3 The Fund’s Board investigates applications

by injured clients (known as “Claimants”) concerning the conduct of their attorneys

(known as “Covered Attorneys”), and determines whether to authorize disbursements

from the Fund in order to compensate those clients for their losses.4 All such payments

from the Fund are “a matter of grace and not of right,” and the Rules permit “no appeal

from a decision of the Board” with respect to disbursements.5 The Board is further

empowered to appoint hearing committees to investigate claims, as it did here.6

       “All claims filed with the Fund shall be confidential and shall not be disclosed. This

confidentiality requirement extends to all documents and things made and/or obtained,

and all investigations and proceedings conducted and/or held by the Fund in connection

with the filing of a claim.”7   Notably, Rule 504(d) exempts certain entities from the

confidentiality requirement, allowing the Fund to disclose confidential information to them.

These entities include the Office of Disciplinary Counsel (“ODC”) and the Disciplinary

Board.8 Covered Attorneys are not included within subsection (d), and thus are not

entitled to obtain confidential information, notwithstanding the fact that the Fund

3      Pa.R.D.E. 502(a).
4      Pa.R.D.E. 503(d)(2)-(3).
5      Pa.R.D.E. 502(a).
6      Pa.R.D.E. 503(d)(1).
7      Pa.R.D.E. 504(a).
8      Pa.R.D.E. 504(d)(5).

                                      [J-77-2022] - 2
proceedings involve their conduct.      Rule 504(e) goes on to provide, however, that

“[r]equests for the release of confidential information by any person or entity, other than

those identified in subsection (d), must be made to the Fund through the issuance of a

subpoena; requests for same made under the Freedom of Information Act will not be

honored.”9

       The facts giving rise to this matter are not relevant to the issue before us and, in

any event, are confidential. It suffices to say that Attorney Yount found himself the subject

of a claim to the Fund, and that he believes that he may be the subject of further

disciplinary action in the future. The proceedings before the Fund culminated in a hearing

before a Hearing Committee on October 19, 2021. At the beginning of the hearing, the

Hearing Committee Chair informed those present that there would be no formal transcript

of the testimony, but that the hearing was being recorded for “internal purposes,”

specifically the later preparation of a summary of the hearing for the use of the Hearing

Committee and the Board.10 Attorney Yount did not object to this at the time. After the

hearing, however, he sent an email requesting access to the recording. When his informal

efforts proved unsuccessful, Attorney Yount sought to compel the Fund to provide him

with the recording through a subpoena issued under Rule 521(c).

       Rule 521(c) provides, in relevant part:

       (2) At any stage of an investigation and/or proceeding under this
       subchapter, the Board shall have the right to summon witnesses and/or

9      Pa.R.D.E. 504(e).
10     As the Fund emphasizes, the rules and regulations adopted by the Board provide
that, with regard to hearings, “[t]here shall be no stenographic record of the proceedings,
unless the Board determines, in its sole discretion, there is a need for a stenographic
record.” Board Rules and Regulations 3.4(d). The Board is authorized to adopt such
procedural rules pursuant to Pa.R.D.E. 503(d)(5) (granting the Board the power to “adopt
rules of procedure not inconsistent with these rules”).

                                      [J-77-2022] - 3
       require production of records by issuance of subpoenas. Should the Board
       determine to conduct a hearing, the Claimant and/or the Covered Attorney
       may request the issuance of a subpoena to summon a witness to testify at
       such hearing. The costs associated with the issuance and service of the
       subpoena and the witness’ appearance shall be borne by the requesting
       party.11

Rule 521(c)(5) further provides that challenges to the validity of a subpoena issued under

that Rule are to be heard by a hearing committee or by the full Board, and that those

entities’ determinations are appealable to this Court.12

       On November 24, 2021, the Hearing Committee determined that Attorney Yount’s

subpoena was invalid, adopting the recommendation of the Fund’s counsel. The Hearing

Committee’s determination was based primarily upon the fact that, although Rule 521(c)

allows a Covered Attorney to subpoena a witness to testify at a hearing, it does not

authorize the attorney to subpoena documents, communications, or recordings created

during the investigation of a claim. The Hearing Committee stressed that Attorney Yount

was informed at the beginning of the hearing that there would be no transcript and that

the audio recording was being prepared for internal purposes only, and that he did not

object at the time. The Hearing Committee further determined that, under Rule 504, the

audio recording was confidential because it was made in connection with a claim to the

Fund, and it recorded confidential proceedings conducted in furtherance of that claim.

Although Rule 504(e) refers to the use of a subpoena to obtain confidential information,

the Hearing Committee concluded that this subsection of the Rule was not intended to

11     Pa.R.D.E. 521(c)(2).
12       Pa.R.D.E. 521(c)(5) (“Any challenge to the validity of a subpoena issued under this
rule shall be heard by a hearing committee or the full Board. A determination by such
committee or the Board may be appealed to the Supreme Court under subparagraph
(8)(iii) within ten days after service of the determination on the party bringing the appeal.”).

                                       [J-77-2022] - 4
allow a Covered Attorney to circumvent the confidentiality requirement, and that such a

reading would compromise the ability of the Fund and the Board to perform its duties.

       Attorney Yount appealed the Hearing Committee’s determination pursuant to Rule

521(c)(5) by filing a petition for review in this Court. Following the procedure outlined in

Rule 521(c)(8)(iii),13 we issued a rule to show cause upon the Fund14 as to why the

subpoena determination should not be reversed. The Fund responded, largely reiterating

the reasons provided by the Hearing Committee. The Fund further suggested that the

audio recording may be protected by attorney-client privilege and/or the attorney work

product doctrine.15 After receiving the Fund’s response, this Court requested further

briefing from the parties and listed the matter for oral argument, which we heard on

November 29, 2022.

       Attorney Yount presents three questions for our review:

       1. Does Pa.R.D.E. 504(e) allow Yount to issue a subpoena against [the
       Fund] to obtain the October 19, 2021, audio recording?
       2. Has Yount properly served a subpoena upon [the Fund] to obtain the
       recording pursuant to Pa.R.D.E. 521(c)?
       3. Does [Yount] have a due process right under Pennsylvania law to obtain
       a copy of the recording in his defense against the ongoing [ODC]
       investigation?16

13      Pa.R.D.E. 521(c)(8)(iii) (“A petition for review of a determination made under
subparagraph (5) must set forth in detail the grounds for challenging the determination.
Upon timely receipt of a petition for review, the Court shall issue a rule to show cause
upon the party to the proceeding who is not challenging the determination, returnable
within ten days, why the determination should not be reversed.”).
14     Because the Fund is the named respondent, we refer to it, rather than the Board
or the Hearing Committee, as the relevant party to this appeal.
15    The Fund did not advance these privilege theories in its subsequent briefing.
Because we affirm the Hearing Committee’s subpoena determination on other grounds,
we need not address any claim of privilege, and we offer no comment thereon.
16     Attorney Yount’s Br. (unpaginated) (capitalization modified).

                                      [J-77-2022] - 5
       Attorney Yount principally contends that his subpoena was valid and enforceable

under Pa.R.D.E. 504(e). He concedes that the audio recording at issue is confidential

under Rule 504(a). However, because Rule 504(e) provides that requests to the Fund

for confidential information must be made through a subpoena, and because he obtained

a subpoena, Attorney Yount argues that he is entitled to the recording that he sought.

Attorney Yount further argues that he followed the correct procedure to obtain the

subpoena and to appeal the Hearing Committee’s subpoena determination to this Court.

And finally, Attorney Yount asserts that he has a due process right to use the audio

recording in any future disciplinary proceeding.

       The Fund, in response, asserts that Attorney Yount’s appeal is moot because the

proceedings before the Fund have ended, and thus there remains no controversy to

resolve.17 If we decline to dismiss the appeal as moot, then the Fund argues that we

should affirm the Hearing Committee’s determination because the language of Rule

521(c) makes clear that Attorney Yount only was entitled to subpoena witnesses for the

hearing, not to use a subpoena to obtain documents produced during the proceedings.

The fact that Attorney Yount wishes to use the audio recording in any future disciplinary

proceeding is of no moment, the Fund argues, and does not impact the validity, or lack

thereof, of a subpoena issued under Rule 521(c). In any event, the Fund highlights,

Attorney Yount is not without recourse in any future disciplinary proceeding, because the

Rules of Disciplinary Enforcement provide another source of subpoena authority that,

unlike Rule 521(c), applies to such proceedings.

17     In addition to advancing this argument in its brief, the Fund requested dismissal of
this appeal on mootness grounds in a separate filing entitled “Application for Relief of
Respondent the Pennsylvania Lawyers Fund for Client Security for Suggestion of
Mootness.” In light of our disposition of the appeal, we dismiss this application as moot.

                                     [J-77-2022] - 6
       Resolution of this matter turns upon our interpretation of the Pennsylvania Rules

of Disciplinary Enforcement. Our review is plenary, and “to the extent we must engage

in . . . analysis of our own procedural rules, we apply conventional interpretative

principles.”18 These interpretive principles include familiar tools of statutory construction.

       As a threshold matter, we reject the Fund’s suggestion of mootness.

Notwithstanding that the proceedings before the Fund have concluded, the parties’

dispute over the audio recording remains extant. “An issue before a court is moot when

a determination is sought on a matter which, when rendered, cannot have any practical

effect on the existing controversy.”19 Were we to reverse the determination of the Hearing

Committee and conclude that Attorney Yount’s subpoena was valid, there would be a

practical effect—enforcement of the subpoena. Accordingly, regardless of whether there

is any business remaining before the Fund vis-à-vis the claim that brought Attorney Yount

before it, there remains a live controversy that necessitates our resolution.

       We agree with the Fund, however, on the merits of the dispute. Notwithstanding

Attorney Yount’s references to Rule 504(e), it is undisputed that he sought the subpoena

at issue under Rule 521(c). The relevant portion of that Rule bears repeating:

       At any stage of an investigation and/or proceeding under this subchapter,
       the Board shall have the right to summon witnesses and/or require
       production of records by issuance of subpoenas. Should the Board
       determine to conduct a hearing, the Claimant and/or the Covered Attorney
       may request the issuance of a subpoena to summon a witness to testify at
       such hearing.20

18      In re Return of Seized Prop. of Lackawanna Cnty., 212 A.3d 1, 6-7 (Pa. 2019)
(citing In re Fortieth Statewide Investigating Grand Jury, 191 A.3d 750, 756 (Pa. 2018)).
19     Commonwealth v. Holt, 273 A.3d 514, 549 (Pa. 2022) (quoting Printed Image of
York, Inc. v. Mifflin Press, Ltd., 133 A.3d 55, 59 (Pa. Super. 2016)).
20     Pa.R.D.E. 521(c)(2) (emphasis added).

                                       [J-77-2022] - 7
       As the text makes plain, both the Board and the Covered Attorney (Attorney Yount)

are permitted to obtain subpoenas in connection with proceedings before the Fund. But

the scope of that subpoena authority differs. The Board has the right to “summon

witnesses and/or require production of records.” The Covered Attorney, by contrast, may

only request a subpoena “to summon a witness to testify” at a hearing. By expressio

unius est exclusio alterius,21 the fact that the Rule spells out one particular purpose for

which the Covered Attorney may request a subpoena necessarily implies that the other

purpose is excluded. This distinction is particularly clear given the close proximity of the

language providing the Board, but not the Covered Attorney, with the authority to require

“production of records.”

       Attorney Yount’s subpoena was only valid for the purpose of summoning witnesses

to testify at a hearing. He attempted to use it to require the production of an audio

recording. For this reason alone, the Hearing Committee did not err in determining that

Attorney Yount’s subpoena was invalid.

       None of Attorney Yount’s arguments to the contrary are meritorious. Although

Attorney Yount presently relies upon Rule 504(e), the fact remains that he obtained the

subpoena under Rule 521(c). Rule 521(c) is the only authority listed on the subpoena

and, as Attorney Yount goes to the trouble of arguing in his brief, he followed the review

procedures specified in Rule 521(c). In any event, Rule 504(e) is not an independent

source of subpoena power. It does not authorize anyone to obtain a subpoena. Rather,

Rule 504(e) merely provides that the Fund will not release confidential information to any

21     “Under the doctrine of expressio unius est exclusio alterius, ‘the inclusion of a
specific matter in a statute implies the exclusion of other matters.’” Thompson v.
Thompson, 223 A.3d 1272, 1277 (Pa. 2020) (citing Atcovitz v. Gulph Mills Tennis Club,
Inc., 812 A.2d 1218, 1223 (Pa. 2002)).

                                      [J-77-2022] - 8
person or entity not listed in Rule 504(d) absent a subpoena.22 Rule 504(e) in no way

remedies the facial defect in Attorney Yount’s subpoena issued under Rule 521(c).

       As for Attorney Yount’s invocation of due process, we discern no such violation.

Attorney Yount offers only rote citation of the proposition that procedural due process

requires “adequate notice, opportunity to be heard, and the chance to defend oneself

before a fair and impartial tribunal having jurisdiction over the case.”23 Although Attorney

Yount explains how he wishes to use the audio recording in a future anticipated

disciplinary proceeding, he makes no effort to establish that he has been deprived of

notice and an opportunity to be heard in the present case. Indeed, one of the issues that

Attorney Yount presented in this appeal consists solely of an averment that he followed

the correct procedures to obtain review of the subpoena and the Hearing Committee’s

subpoena determination.24 There is no credible assertion that Attorney Yount has been

denied the process to which he was due at any stage of this matter.

       We cannot speak to any disciplinary proceedings at this juncture, as they lie

outside the scope of this appeal. We do note, however, that although Rule 521(c) does

not permit Attorney Yount to obtain a subpoena requiring the production of records in

22    See Pa.R.D.E. 504(e) (“Requests for the release of confidential information by any
person or entity, other than those identified in subsection (d), must be made to the Fund
through the issuance of a subpoena; requests for same made under the Freedom of
Information Act will not be honored.”).
23     Attorney Yount’s Br. (unpaginated) (quoting Krupinski v. Vocational Tech. Sch., E.
Northampton Cnty., 674 A.2d 683, 685 (Pa. 1996); Lyness v. Commonwealth State Bd.
of Med., 605 A.2d 1204, 1207 (Pa. 1992); Commonwealth v. Fahy, 737 A.2d 214, 220
(Pa. 1999)).
24     To the extent that this issue requires discussion, we do not differ with Attorney
Yount’s assertion that he followed the procedures outlined in Pa.R.D.E. 521(c) and has
obtained the appropriate review. This is, however, irrelevant to the question of whether
he is entitled to relief.

                                      [J-77-2022] - 9
connection with a proceeding before the Fund, there is another Rule that more directly

applies to the disciplinary proceedings that are the subject of Attorney Yount’s concern.

Rule 213(a)(1) provides that, “[a]t any stage of an investigation, both Disciplinary Counsel

and a respondent-attorney shall have the right to summon witnesses before a hearing

committee or special master and require production of records before the same by

issuance of subpoenas.”25 We further note that counsel for the Fund represented to this

Court at oral argument that the Fund has preserved the audio recording during the course

of this litigation, and we trust that the parties can reach an arrangement whereby the

recording will continue to be preserved until such a time that Attorney Yount either

attempts to obtain it or determines that he no longer desires it. Accordingly, although we

affirm the subpoena determination below, we do so on the narrow grounds that Attorney

Yount’s subpoena was invalid under Rule 521(c), and we do so without prejudice to

Attorney Yount’s ability to seek access to the audio recording under Rule 213 or by any

other mechanism available to him under the law.

       The Hearing Committee’s determination is affirmed.

       Chief Justice Todd and Justices Donohue, Dougherty, Mundy and Brobson join the

opinion.

25     Pa.R.D.E. 213(a)(1) (emphasis added).

                                     [J-77-2022] - 10