210 Pa. Code r. 1114 - Standards Governing Allowance of Appeal
(a)
General Rule. Except as
prescribed in Pa.R.A.P. 1101 (appeals as of right from the Commonwealth Court),
review of a final order of the Superior Court or the Commonwealth Court is not
a matter of right, but of sound judicial discretion, and an appeal will be
allowed only when there are special and important reasons therefor.
(b)
Standards. A petition
for allowance of appeal may be granted for any of the following reasons:
(1) the holding of the intermediate appellate
court conflicts with another intermediate appellate court opinion;
(2) the holding of the intermediate appellate
court conflicts with a holding of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court or the United
States Supreme Court on the same legal question;
(3) the question presented is one of first
impression;
(4) the question
presented is one of such substantial public importance as to require prompt and
definitive resolution by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court;
(5) the issue involves the constitutionality
of a statute of the Commonwealth;
(6) the intermediate appellate court has so
far departed from accepted judicial practices or so abused its discretion as to
call for the exercise of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court's supervisory
authority; or
(7) the intermediate
appellate court has erroneously entered an order quashing or dismissing an
appeal.
Notes
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