NHS Youth Services, Inc. v. Shamokin Area S.D. & the Bd. of Directors of the Shamokin Area S.D. ( 2022 )


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  •           IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    NHS Youth Services, Inc.              :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    Shamokin Area School District and the :
    Board of Directors of the             :
    Shamokin Area School District,        :         No. 1264 C.D. 2020
    Appellants         :         Argued: December 16, 2021
    BEFORE:      HONORABLE MARY HANNAH LEAVITT, Judge1
    HONORABLE ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    HONORABLE CHRISTINE FIZZANO CANNON, Judge
    OPINION NOT REPORTED
    MEMORANDUM OPINION BY
    JUDGE COVEY                                              FILED: January 10, 2022
    The Shamokin Area School District (District) and the District’s Board
    of Directors (collectively, SASD) appeal from the Northumberland County
    Common Pleas Court’s (trial court) November 18, 2020 order granting NHS Youth
    Services, Inc.’s (NHS) Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Motion). SASD
    presents five issues for this Court’s review: (1) whether the trial court erred by
    holding that enforcement of the alleged contract between NHS and SASD was an
    appropriate matter for mandamus relief; (2) whether the trial court erred by holding
    that the parties entered into a binding contract; (3) whether the trial court erred by
    concluding that an order entered in an earlier companion matter was controlling,
    despite that it was not a final order; (4) whether the trial court erred by granting
    partial summary judgment where there exist genuine issues of material fact; and (5)
    whether the trial court erred by ordering SASD to take all reasonable steps to collect
    1
    This matter was assigned to the panel before January 3, 2022, when President Judge
    Emerita Leavitt became a senior judge on the Court.
    NHS’s tuition payments without making findings of fact or conclusions of law
    concerning whether SASD has already made and exhausted reasonable efforts to do
    so. After review, this Court affirms.
    NHS is a Pennsylvania non-profit corporation that operated
    Northwestern Academy (Academy), a juvenile justice complex for adjudicated
    delinquent and dependent youth in Northumberland County who typically struggle
    with behavioral health, drug and alcohol, and/or sexual offense related issues. The
    Academy is located within the SASD’s geographic boundaries.
    Pursuant to Section 1306 of the Public School Code of 1949 (School
    Code),2 24 P.S. § 13-1306, SASD was required to provide educational services to
    the adolescents who reside at the Academy. Section 1308 of the School Code, 24
    P.S. § 13-1308, requires school districts whose students are residents at the Academy
    to make tuition payments for those students to SASD as the host school district.
    From the 2002-2003 school year through the 2012-2013 school year, SASD elected
    not to educate the Academy’s students in its schools.
    Rather, in 2003, SASD and NHS purportedly agreed that NHS would
    provide state-mandated education to the Academy’s students on Academy grounds,
    thereby discharging SASD’s statutory obligations (Contract). SASD Superintendent
    Gerald T. Nesvold (Nesvold) signed the Contract on February 10, 2003. Also, on
    February 10, 2003, Nesvold and NHS Senior Vice President Michael J. Breslin
    (Breslin) signed a First Addendum to the Contract, further defining NHS’s duties
    (Addendum).        See Reproduced Record (R.R.) at 57a-59a. Breslin signed the
    Contract on March 24, 2003. Attachment “A” to the Contract further defined
    SASD’s and NHS’s obligations with respect to billing and accounting, which
    included SASD providing a monthly status report to NHS. See R.R. at 55a-56a.
    2
    Act of March 10, 1949, P.L. 30, as amended, 24 P.S. §§ 1-101 - 27-2702.
    2
    According to the Contract’s and Addendum’s terms, NHS would provide SASD with
    information necessary to establish students’ tuition liability and allow SASD to
    obtain reimbursement from the students’ home districts. The Contract required
    SASD to “promptly process all information received from [NHS] in order to
    promptly establish liability for tuition and in order to promptly secure
    reimbursement between school districts . . . .” R.R. at 51a. SASD was required to
    “pay to [NHS] the net funds received by [SASD] on account of the students residing
    at the [] Academy, after subtracting seven percent of such amounts . . . .” R.R. at
    51a. The Contract further required SASD to “make such payments to [NHS] on a
    monthly basis, and [] include therewith a full accounting of the status of
    reimbursement billing and accounts with regard to each student.” R.R. at 52a.
    With respect to the Contract term, the Contract provided:
    21. The commitments herein with regard to
    reimbursement between school districts and the
    commitments herein with regard to payments and
    subtractions between the parties to this [Contract] shall
    remain in effect until the final settlement and
    reconciliation of all payments and reimbursements
    between districts relating to the 2002-2003 school year.
    Any overpayment or underpayment between the parties
    shall be corrected through a reconciliation payment in
    accord with any adjustments of reimbursements between
    districts as calculated by the Pennsylvania Department of
    Education [(Department)].
    22. It is the intent of the parties to enter into agreements
    for the 2003-2004 school year and for each year thereafter,
    subject to negotiations in good faith regarding the
    calculation of the amount to be subtracted by [SASD]
    when calculating net payments to [NHS]. The terms and
    conditions of this [Contract] shall remain in effect until
    such time as a new agreement is signed and executed, or
    until terminated by either party hereto on (60) sixty days
    written notice to the other party.
    3
    R.R. at 53a.
    Further, paragraph 15 of the Addendum stated:
    The term of [the Contract] shall be for a period of one year
    beginning July 1, 2002 and ending June 30, 2003. It is the
    intent of the parties to enter into agreements for the 2003-
    2004 school year and each year thereafter. The terms and
    conditions of [the Contract] shall remain in effect until
    such time as a new agreement or addendum thereto is
    signed and executed or until the [Contract] or this
    Addendum are terminated by either party hereto on sixty
    (60) days written notice to the other party.
    R.R. at 59a.
    2007 Action
    In 2007, NHS filed an action against SASD for mandamus, breach of
    contract and specific performance (2007 Action).3 NHS sought mandamus relief
    based on SASD’s statutory obligation to provide for the Academy’s students’
    education, and its Contract with SASD to provide the required educational services.
    On November 29, 2007, NHS filed a Motion for Peremptory Judgment (PJ Motion).
    Therein, NHS alleged that: SASD had received payments from both the Department
    and the students’ home districts; SASD had deposited the funds in an escrow
    account; and SASD refused to pay NHS. On December 5, 2007, SASD filed its
    Answer to the PJ Motion. See R.R. at 542a-555a.
    In the PJ Motion, NHS further averred, in relevant part:
    10. Recognizing the treatment needs of the students at the
    Academy and seeking a cost effective and economical
    means of assuring the provision of mandatory educational
    services to students at the Academy, [SASD] contracted
    with NHS to provide educational services on the grounds
    3
    Docketed at CV-07-1435. The 2007 Complaint is not part of the original record.
    4
    of the Academy to students committed to the
    Academy. . . .
    [In its Answer to the PJ Motion, SASD admitted this
    allegation in part, stating in pertinent part: “It is admitted
    that [SASD] and NHS have entered into a contractual
    relationship for the education of incarcerated pupils at
    [NHS’s] facility.” R.R. at 558a.]
    11. NHS, under the direction and supervision of [SASD],
    provides education services to adolescents from
    throughout Pennsylvania who are placed at the Academy.
    [SASD answered: “Admitted.” R.R. at 558a.]
    12. NHS has provided and continues to provide mandated
    educational services as specified under the [C]ontract
    with [SASD].
    [SASD answered: “Admitted.” R.R. at 558a.]
    13. [SASD] ha[s] charged, and continue[s] to charge, the
    school districts of residence of each of the Academy’s
    students the mandated tuition and proportionate cost of the
    rental of the Academy’s facilities and to receive payments
    from the school districts of residence.
    [SASD answered, in pertinent part:
    Admitted in part and denied in part. It is
    admitted that [SASD] charges the home
    school districts of pupils incarcerated at the []
    Academy rental fees and tuition. It is
    specifically denied that the rental payments
    are “mandated[].[”] It is denied that [SASD]
    receives from the home school districts the
    rental payments it charges. [SASD] does
    charge the home school districts of the
    incarcerated pupils a “rental” fee at the behest
    of [NHS]. However, since the [Department]
    has declared that such charges are
    impermissible, some home school districts of
    incarcerated pupils, when billed by [SASD],
    pay the rental fee and others do not.
    R.R. at 558a.]
    5
    14. The [C]ontract between [SASD] and NHS, at
    [p]aragraph 16, directs [SASD] to pay NHS the “net funds
    received by[ SASD] on account of the students residing at
    [the] Academy, after subtracting seven percent of such
    amounts, as payment in full for tuition and all other
    charges.” The proportional rental charges [SASD]
    collects are specifically excluded from “the net funds
    received by[ SASD]” when it calculates the amount it may
    subtract for processing the tuition payments.
    [SASD answered: “Admitted.” R.R. at 559a.]
    15. [SASD] does not dispute the calculation and amount
    of the tuition and the rental charges owed to NHS.
    [SASD answered: “Admitted.” R.R. at 559a.]
    16. [SASD] dutifully collected the proportional rental
    charges from the school districts of residence and paid
    those amounts to NHS until September 2003.
    [SASD answered: “Admitted.” R.R. at 559a.]
    ....
    43. Specifically, [SASD] admit[s] that [it is] required to
    pay NHS tuition and rental costs for so long as [SASD]
    elect[s] to fulfill [its] statutory duty by contracting with
    NHS to provide educational services on behalf of [SASD]
    to students placed at the Academy.
    [SASD answered: “Admitted in part and denied in part. It
    is admitted that [SASD] [is] required to pay to NHS the
    tuition costs and [is], in fact, doing so. It is denied that
    [SASD] [is] required to pay to NHS rental costs . . . .” R.R.
    at 564a.]
    R.R. at 543a-544a, 548a (emphasis added).
    On March 14, 2008, the trial court granted the PJ Motion (PJ Order).
    The trial court’s PJ Order states, in relevant part:
    1. The uncontroverted facts are that:
    6
    (a) [NHS] and [] [SASD] entered into a contractual
    relationship in 2003 for NHS to provide for the education
    of juvenile offenders committed to NHS.
    (b) Section 1306 of the [School Code] . . . places initial
    responsibility for meeting the educational needs of the
    residents of the [Academy] upon the school district in
    which the said facility is located; therefore, SASD was to
    meet the educational needs of those juveniles placed at
    NHS.
    (c) By virtue of the aforesaid contractual relationship,
    NHS fulfills SASD’s statutory obligation as to the
    educational needs of these juveniles.
    (d) Under Section 1308 of the [School] Code, 24 P.S. §
    13-1308, the tuition of the juvenile offenders is the
    ultimate responsibility of the school district where the
    juvenile resided prior to commitment to the facility,
    payable to the host district (i.e.[,] SASD here).
    (e) Thus, SASD is the conduit between NHS and the other
    school districts throughout this Commonwealth as to the
    tuition expense for the education of the juvenile offenders
    committed to NHS.
    (f) The [C]ontract between NHS and SASD provides for
    the exchange of necessary information for the assessment
    of the reimbursement from the school district, and the
    arrangement for SASD to obtain the same with allowance
    for an administrative fee in connection therewith of seven
    percent.
    (g) The [Contract] provided that NHS would be seeking
    reimbursement for tuition and also “lease rental payments
    to be included in the [i]nter-district tuition payments as
    permitted by [S]ection 1309(a)(1) of the [School Code, 24
    P.S. § 13-1309(a)(1),] . . . [.]” (Paragraph 11 of the
    Contract).
    (h) SASD has not disputed the calculation and amount of
    the tuition and rental charges owed to NHS under the said
    [C]ontract.
    (i) SASD has obtained from the other school districts
    funds in fulfillment of their obligations under the [School]
    7
    Code under the circumstances, as to which SASD has
    placed the same in escrow with interest pending a judicial
    determination as to the propriety of NHS charging a rental
    payment with the tuition.
    R.R. at 61a-62a (footnote omitted). Accordingly, the trial court ordered SASD “to
    dissolve the escrow, to pay the funds held in escrow, with interest accrued thereon[,]
    to [NHS], after deduction of the administrative fee and interest thereon.” R.R. at
    65a.
    On December 30, 2011, NHS filed a Motion to Enforce Final Judgment
    (Motion to Enforce). Therein, NHS averred that SASD “contracted with NHS
    since February 2003 to have NHS educate the students under [SASD’s] supervision
    at the Academy [].” R.R. at 606a (emphasis added). SASD answered: “Admitted in
    [p]art. Both parties mutually entered in[to] the [Contract].” R.R. at 613a. NHS
    acknowledged that, following the PJ Order’s issuance, SASD “dissolved the escrow,
    paid all the funds in the escrow to NHS[,] and generally complied with its contractual
    obligations as required under the law and [the PJ Order].”            R.R. at 608a.
    Nonetheless, NHS alleged in the Motion to Enforce that, due to SASD’s belief that
    lease costs should not be recoverable as part of tuition fees, SASD created another
    escrow account and expressed its intention to cease collecting lease payments.
    On April 5, 2012, the trial court granted the Motion to Enforce (2012
    Order), ordering that:
    (1) [SASD] shall fully comply with the terms of this [trial
    c]ourt’s March 14, 2008 [PJ O]rder, including but not
    limited to the continued collection of lease payments from
    home school districts and prompt payment of those lease
    amounts upon receipt by [SASD] to NHS;
    (2) [SASD] shall dissolve any and all escrow accounts
    established by [SASD] that contain any funds received by
    [SASD] from home school districts or from the
    [Department] relating to tuition and/or lease payments and
    8
    shall pay all of such funds and accumulated interest
    thereon to NHS within 30 days of the date of this [o]rder;
    (3) [SASD] shall provide NHS with a complete and
    accurate accounting of all tuition payments, including
    lease payments, by home school district[s] and the
    [Department], received by [SASD] since April 1, 2008[.]
    R.R. at 67a-68a.
    On May 25, 2018, NHS filed a Petition for Contempt (Contempt
    Petition) in the trial court. On July 25, 2018, SASD filed its response thereto. On
    October 4, 2018, SASD filed a Praecipe requesting that the trial court list the
    remaining non-mandamus claims for trial. On January 10, 2019, the trial court held
    a hearing on the Contempt Petition, which the trial court recessed for the parties to
    file briefs concerning the Contract’s viability. Although both parties filed briefs, the
    trial court has not made a ruling in the 2007 Action.
    Instant Action
    On June 19, 2015, NHS filed a complaint in the trial court (Complaint)
    alleging breach of contract, and seeking mandamus relief and damages. NHS
    attached several exhibits to the Complaint including the Contract, the Addendum,
    the trial court’s PJ Order and the 2012 Order. According to the Complaint, effective
    July 1, 2012, SASD assumed responsibility to provide special education services to
    eligible Academy residents, while NHS continued to provide regular education
    services to children at the Academy. Effective July 1, 2013, SASD assumed
    responsibility for providing both regular and special education services to all
    children at the Academy and, on that date, the parties entered into a lease agreement
    under which SASD would provide educational services at the Academy. NHS
    alleged in the Complaint that it seeks payments that SASD still owes NHS due to
    SASD’s failure to comply with statutory and contractual duties to NHS. Such
    9
    obligations mandate that SASD pay NHS the full tuition and lease costs relating to
    educational services NHS provided to students who attended NHS’s Academy
    pursuant to the Contract terms. The Complaint seeks unpaid tuition and related
    rental expenses, including allegedly withheld tuition payments SASD received from
    home school districts and the Department. On February 16, 2016, SASD filed its
    answer to the Complaint (Answer) denying all material allegations.
    On May 30, 2018, NHS filed the Motion, and on September 25, 2018,
    NHS filed a memorandum of law in support thereof. Therein, NHS argued: (1) the
    Motion should be granted because SASD had failed to respond to the Motion; (2)
    res judicata and collateral estoppel barred SASD from challenging the Contract’s
    validity or enforceability; and (3) SASD’s failure to specifically deny NHS’s
    allegations that SASD had failed to provide a required accounting and that SASD
    had received tuition payments owed to NHS constituted deemed admissions to those
    allegations. Thereafter, SASD filed a Memorandum in Opposition to the Motion
    (Memorandum in Opposition),4 contending therein: (1) the Motion should not be
    granted for failure to file a timely response; (2) res judicata and collateral estoppel
    do not bar SASD from challenging the Contract’s validity and enforceability and
    further challenging the re-issuance of an order in mandamus; and (3) SASD’s
    general denials should not be deemed admissions.
    On October 26, 2018, SASD filed its Answer and Supplemental Brief
    to the Motion (Motion Answer), with numerous documents attached thereto,
    including the October 4, 2018 deposition of SASD’s Business Manager, Karen
    Colangelo (Colangelo), from the 2007 Action (Colangelo Deposition). In the
    Motion Answer, SASD responded to each of the Motion’s allegations. SASD simply
    4
    SASD’s undated Memorandum in Opposition is in the Reproduced Record, but is not
    docketed. According to SASD, the trial court’s prothonotary does not accept briefs, and
    accordingly, neither its brief nor NHS’s brief is listed on the docket.
    10
    responded, “Admitted,” with respect to paragraph 7 of the Motion, R.R. at 420a,
    which stated:
    NHS and SASD entered into a contractual relationship in
    2003 for NHS to provide for the education of Academy
    [s]tudents . . . . See Exhibits “J” and “K” ¶ 1(a). A true
    and correct copy of the Contract between the parties,
    which is also an exhibit to the Complaint, is attached
    hereto as Exhibit “J.”
    R.R. at 19a. Notably, although SASD attached documents to its Answer, it did not
    include affidavits, certifications, or a signed verification.
    On November 3, 2018, NHS filed a Supplemental Memorandum of
    Law in Support of the Motion (Supplemental Memorandum), attached to which were
    four exhibits, including the PJ Motion and SASD’s Answer to the PJ Motion.
    On November 18, 2020, the trial court granted NHS’s Motion, finding:
    [T]he following facts are uncontroverted:
    1. [NHS] and [SASD] entered into a binding written
    agreement in 2003 for [NHS] to provide education of
    juvenile offenders committed to NHS . . . .
    2. SASD had a duty pursuant to Section 15 [of] the
    [Contract] to “take all reasonable steps to ensure that
    the [SASD] receives the maximum reimbursements
    between school districts allowed by the law[.]”[]
    3. SASD had a duty pursuant to Section 16 of the
    [Contract] to pay [NHS] “the net funds received by
    [SASD] on account of the students residing at the []
    Academy, after subtracting [seven percent (7%)] of
    such amounts, as payment in full for tuition and all
    other charges. It is understood and agreed that
    [SASD’s] liability to [NHS] shall be strictly a pass
    through limited to reimbursement it receives from the
    resident’s home district or the [Department], less
    [seven percent (7%)].[”]
    4. SASD had a duty pursuant to Section 18 of the
    [Contract] to make “payments to [NHS] on a monthly
    11
    basis, and shall include therewith a full accounting of
    the status of reimbursement billing and accounts with
    regard to each student.”
    5. SASD failed to provide [NHS] with an accounting
    required by paragraph 3 of the [trial c]ourt’s . . . 2012
    Order in the [2007 Action], which [directed] that
    “[SASD] shall provide NHS with a complete and
    accurate accounting of all tuition payments, including
    lease payments, by home school district and the
    [Department], received by [SASD] since Apri1 1,
    2008.[”]
    SASD Br., App. 1 at 1 (footnote omitted).
    Based on those findings, the trial court ordered:
    1. NHS is entitled to reli[ef] in mandamus and
    JUDGMENT IN MANDAMUS IS HEREBY
    ENTERED against [] SASD . . . and [it] shall:
    a. within twenty (20) days of the date of this [o]rder,
    dissolve any and all escrow accounts established by
    [SASD] that contain any funds received by [SASD]
    from home school district[s] or from the
    [Department] relating to NHS billings and shall pay
    all such funds, less [seven percent (7%)], and
    accumulated interest thereon to NHS;
    b. within twenty (20) days of the date of this [o]rder,
    provide NHS with a complete and accurate
    accounting of the following, for the time period
    January 1, 2003 to the present: (i) all billings that
    [it] received fr[]om NHS; (ii) all billings for tuition
    payments that is [sic] submitted to the [Department]
    or home school district[s]; (iii) all tuition payments
    it received from the [Department] or home school
    districts; and (iv) all tuition payments it remitted to
    NHS;
    c. within thirty (30) days of the date of this [o]rder,
    pay to NHS the sum equal to the difference between
    all tuition payments received and all tuition
    payments remitted, as set forth in subparagraph b.
    above, at (iii) and (iv)[;]
    12
    d. take all reasonable steps to collect tuition payments
    billed to [it] by NHS for which the [Department] or
    home school districts have not yet paid [it] until
    NHS is paid in full for all tuition that was billed to
    [SASD]; [SASD] shall contemporaneously
    document all such efforts;
    e. beginning on [the] 5th day of February, 2021, and
    on or before[] the 5th day of each month
    thereafter[,] [SASD] shall make a full accounting of
    the status of reimbursement billing and accounts
    with regard to each student, and pay to [NHS] the
    sums received by [SASD] during the preceding
    calendar month as a consequence of billings to the
    [Department] or home school districts.           The
    foregoing notwithstanding[,] the payment to be
    made on the 5th day of February, 2021, shall include
    all sums received by [SASD] as a consequence of
    billing to the [Department] or home school
    district[s] not previously remitted to [NHS].
    Id. at 2. SASD appealed to this Court.5
    Initially, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court has explained:
    [S]ummary judgment is only appropriate in cases where
    there are no genuine issues of material fact and 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 and must resolve all doubts as to the
    existence of a genuine issue of material fact against the
    moving party. An appellate court may reverse a grant of
    5
    Our review of a trial court’s order granting summary judgment is de
    novo, and our scope of review is plenary; this Court applies the same
    standard for summary judgment as the trial court. Summary
    judgment is appropriate only where there are no genuine issues of
    material fact and the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter
    of law.
    Lancaster Cnty. Agric. Pres. Bd. v. Fryberger, 
    257 A.3d 192
    , 199 n.13 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2021)
    (citations omitted).
    13
    summary judgment if there has been an error of law or an
    abuse of discretion. Because the claim regarding whether
    there are genuine issues of material fact is a question of
    law, our standard of review is de novo and our scope of
    review is plenary.
    Nicolaou v. Martin, 
    195 A.3d 880
    , 891-92 (Pa. 2018) (citations omitted).
    SASD first argues that the trial court erred by holding that the
    Contract’s enforcement was an appropriate matter for mandamus relief. Quoting the
    Pennsylvania Supreme Court in Commonwealth ex rel. Fortney v. Bartol, 
    20 A.2d 313
    , 315 (Pa. 1941), SASD asserts that “even if there existed a contractual right (not
    reduced to judgment), the remedy would be limited to an action in assumpsit,
    because mandamus against public officials is available only for the enforcement of
    obligations imposed by law and not where the claim rests wholly on contract.”
    SASD Br. at 13 (quoting Fortney, 20 A.3d at 315).
    NHS retorts that SASD waived this argument because it failed to raise
    this issue before the trial court. Alternatively, NHS distinguishes Fortney, claiming
    that the Contract merely restates SASD’s statutory obligation to provide education
    and seek reimbursement for that education and, thus, is subject to mandamus relief.
    The law is well established that “a party has a duty to preserve an issue
    at every stage of a proceeding . . . [and] also must comply with the general rule to
    raise an issue at the earliest opportunity.” Campbell v. Dep’t of Transp., Bureau of
    Driver Licensing, 
    86 A.3d 344
    , 349 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2014). “Issues not raised at the
    earliest possible time during a proceeding are waived.” Grever v. Unemployment
    Comp. Bd. of Rev., 
    989 A.2d 400
    , 402 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010).6 “[A] non-moving
    party’s failure to raise grounds for relief in the trial court as a basis upon which to
    deny summary judgment waives those grounds on appeal.” Harber Phila. Ctr. City
    6
    Grever was superseded on other grounds by Pa.R.A.P. 1513(d), as recognized in Morgan
    v. Unemployment Compensation Board of Review, 
    108 A.3d 181
     (Pa. Cmwlth. 2015).
    14
    Off. v. LPCI Ltd. P’ship, 
    764 A.2d 1100
    , 1105 (Pa. Super. 2000). Thus, “arguments
    not raised initially before the trial court in opposition to summary judgment cannot
    be raised for the first time on appeal.” Devine v. Hutt, 
    863 A.2d 1160
    , 1169 (Pa.
    Super. 2004). Here, SASD did not raise the argument that the alleged Contract’s
    enforcement was an inappropriate matter for mandamus relief in either its
    Memorandum in Opposition or in its Motion Answer. Thus, SASD waived the
    issue.7
    7
    Even if SASD had not waived this issue, this Court would find that Fortney is
    distinguishable, consistent with NHS’s argument that the Contract merely restates SASD’s
    statutory obligation to provide education services and seek reimbursement therefor.
    Although not cited by NHS, its position is supported by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court’s
    analysis in Dombrowski v. City of Philadelphia, 
    245 A.2d 238
     (Pa. 1968), wherein the Court
    considered whether a former city employee with a vested right to retirement benefits had standing
    to pursue a mandamus action. The Dombrowski Court explained:
    The relevancy of Dombrowski’s vested right and his contract with
    [the City of ] Philadelphia [(City)] as this bears upon his standing is
    illustrated by Edelman v. Boardman, Secretary of Revenue, . . . 
    2 A.2d 393
     ([Pa.] 1938). Edelman brought a mandamus action in his
    own name to compel the Secretary of Revenue to escheat certain
    property so that [Edelman] could collect his informer’s fee. We held
    that Edelman had standing ([Id.,] at 396): ‘It is true that where the
    contractual obligation is one which is also imposed by law, it
    may be enforced by mandamus, not because of the contract but in
    spite of it; the party to the contract in such a case acquires an
    interest special to himself as distinguished from that of the
    general public, thus enabling him to bring the (mandamus)
    proceeding in his own name.’ Similarly, Dombrowski’s
    contractual relationship with the [C]ity stems from a duty
    imposed by law, i.e., the creation and administration of a
    retirement system, and, as a party to the contract, he has standing.
    Dombrowski, 245 A.2d at 245 (emphasis added).
    Similarly, here, as NHS emphasizes:
    [T]he Contract simply restates SASD’s statutory obligations to
    provide education [sic] and seek reimbursement for the education
    [sic], so the Court’s entry of the order in mandamus relates to a
    statutory obligation, which is distinguishes [sic] the holding of
    [Fortney]. For example, Section 2 of the Contract states that the
    15
    SASD next argues that the trial court erred by holding that the Contract
    was binding and, assuming arguendo, that it was, the trial court erred by holding that
    the Contract extended beyond the 2002-2003 school year. In support of its position,
    SASD asserts that the Contract execution did not comply with Sections 427, 433,
    and 508 of the School Code, 24 P.S. §§ 4-427, 4-433, 5-508. Specifically, SASD
    contends that the Contract was not approved by a majority of school directors, and
    that the only vote on the Contract was a January 14, 2003 vote taken on the
    Addendum, not the Contract. Further, neither the Contract nor the Addendum
    contain statutorily required signatures. SASD also claims that the Contract’s and
    Addendum’s language is ambiguous with respect to the term during which it was in
    force.
    NHS responds that SASD waived these issues because it is challenging
    the Contract’s enforceability and term for the first time on appeal to this Court.8 This
    Academy is “an ‘institution for the care or training of children’ for
    purposes of [S]ection 1306 of the [] School Code . . . .” [R.R. at]
    47a[]. Sections 4, 5, and 6 of the Contract state that Section 1306 of
    the [] School Code places obligations on SASD with regard[] to
    educating student[s] located at the Academy and [] NHS will
    dispense with SASD’s statutory obligation. [R.R. at] 48a[].
    Sections 9, 10 and 11 of the Contract explain the information NHS
    will provide to SASD as required by the [] School Code to bill for
    its services and how under the [] School Code SASD will seek
    reimbursement for SASD’s services. [R.R. at] 49a-50a[]. Thus,
    SASD[’s] and NHS’s obligations under the Contract are merely a
    recitation of the statutory obligations to provide education and the
    statutory ways to obtain reimbursement for NHS’s services, which
    distinguishes the present situation from [Fortney].
    NHS Br. at 37-38.
    8
    Notably, SASD argued in the Memorandum in Opposition filed in the trial court that res
    judicata and collateral estoppel do not bar it from challenging the Contract’s enforceability, but
    SASD did not argue to the trial court that the Contract was not binding. Accordingly, it did not
    raise the issues before the trial court that it now raises herein, i.e., that the Contract execution did
    not comply with the School Code and therefore, the Contract is unenforceable. NHS
    acknowledges that the issue was raised in a January 2019 hearing on its Contempt Petition in the
    16
    Court agrees. There is nothing in SASD’s Memorandum in Opposition, or in its
    Motion Answer, alleging that the Contract is unenforceable for lack of School Code
    compliance or contracting authority. In fact, SASD admitted in paragraph 7 of the
    Motion Answer that “NHS and SASD entered into a contractual relationship in 2003
    for NHS to provide for the education of Academy [s]tudents . . . .” R.R. at 19a,
    420a.9 Further, SASD did not challenge the term during which the Contract was in
    2007 Action, but emphasizes that was “long after the parties completed their briefing on the
    Motion” in the instant action.
    9
    It is noteworthy that SASD repeatedly acknowledged the contractual relationship in
    numerous filings in the 2007 Action. NHS contends that those acknowledgments constitute
    judicial admissions and, because the PJ Order was based thereon, it cannot be overturned. Further,
    “SASD’s judicial admissions in the 2007 Action that led to the entry of the [PJ] Order - that there
    was a binding contract - are conclusive admissions that cannot be subject to attack or reversed
    even if the 2008 PJ Order was not a final order.” NHS Br. at 44.
    A [j]udicial admission is “an express waiver made in court or
    preparatory to trial by a party or his attorney, conceding for the
    purposes of trial, the truth of the admission,” and may be contained
    in pleadings, stipulations and other like documents. . . . An
    important facet of such an admission is that it has been made for the
    advantage of the admitting party and once the admission has been
    made, the party making it is not allowed to introduce evidence
    attempting to disprove it.
    Lower Mount Bethel Twp. v. N. River Co., LLC, 
    41 A.3d 156
    , 162-63 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2012) (quoting
    Sherrill v. Workmen’s Comp. Appeal Bd. (Sch. Dist. of Phila.), 
    624 A.2d 240
    , 243 (Pa. Cmwlth.
    1993)). Importantly, motions such as those in which SASD acknowledged the Contract’s
    existence, are not pleadings. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 1017. Further,
    for an averment to be a judicial admission[:] [f]irst, the averment
    must be made in a verified pleading, stipulation, or similar
    document. Second, the averment must be made in the same case in
    which the opposing party seeks to rely upon it. In other words, an
    averment made in a pleading in an unrelated cause is not a judicial
    admission that precludes a party from contradicting that averment.
    Third, the averment must relate to a fact and not a legal conclusion.
    Fourth, the averment must be advantageous to the party [that] made
    it. Finally, the fact must be plausible.
    Branton v. Nicholas Meat, LLC, 
    159 A.3d 540
    , 557 (Pa. Super. 2017) (emphasis added; footnote
    omitted).
    17
    force based on alleged Contract ambiguity. Accordingly, this Court concludes that
    SASD waived its arguments challenging the Contract’s validity and term.
    SASD next argues that the trial court erred by declaring that the PJ
    Order had preclusive effect in the instant action. SASD asserts that, although NHS
    argued to the trial court that the doctrines of collateral estoppel and res judicata bar
    SASD’s challenge to the Contract’s enforceability, rather than apply those doctrines,
    it appears the trial court concluded that the law of the case prohibited the trial court
    from making findings contrary to those in the PJ Order and, thus, dictated the
    Contract’s viability.
    [T]his Court has long recognized that judges of coordinate
    jurisdiction sitting in the same case should not overrule
    each others’ decisions.       This rule, known as the
    “coordinate jurisdiction rule,”[10] is a rule of sound
    10
    “[T]he Pennsylvania coordinate jurisdiction rule may be properly considered as part of
    the family of rules making up the law of the case doctrine.” Commonwealth v. Starr, 
    664 A.2d 1326
    , 1332 (Pa. 1995).
    [The law of the case] doctrine refers to a family of rules which
    embody the concept that a court involved in the later phases of a
    litigated matter should not reopen questions decided by another
    judge of that same court or by a higher court in the earlier phases of
    the matter. Among the related but distinct rules which make up the
    law of the case doctrine are that: (1) upon remand for further
    proceedings, a trial court may not alter the resolution of a legal
    question previously decided by the appellate court in the matter; (2)
    upon a second appeal, an appellate court may not alter the resolution
    of a legal question previously decided by the same appellate court;
    and (3) upon transfer of a matter between trial judges of coordinate
    jurisdiction, the transferee trial court may not alter the resolution of
    a legal question previously decided by the transferor trial court.
    The various rules which make up the law of the case doctrine serve
    not only to promote the goal of judicial economy . . . but also operate
    (1) to protect the settled expectations of the parties; (2) to insure
    uniformity of decisions; (3) to maintain consistency during the
    course of a single case; (4) to effectuate the proper and streamlined
    administration of justice; and (5) to bring litigation to an end.
    18
    jurisprudence based on a policy of fostering the finality of
    pre-trial applications in an effort to maintain judicial
    economy and efficiency. See . . . Golden v. Dion &
    Rosenau, . . . 
    600 A.2d 568
    , 570 ([Pa. Super.] 1991) (once
    a matter has been decided by a trial judge[,] the decision
    should remain undisturbed, unless the order is appealable
    and an appeal therefrom is successfully prosecuted).
    Commonwealth v. Starr, 
    664 A.2d 1326
    , 1331 (Pa. 1995) (emphasis added; citation
    omitted).
    SASD posits that, because the PJ Order was an appealable order
    pursuant to Pennsylvania Rule of Appellate Procedure (Rule) 311(a)(5),11 and that
    order could possibly be successfully appealed, based on Starr and its reference to
    Golden, the law of the case does not apply. This Court disagrees that Golden stands
    for that proposition. Rather, it provides for situations where an interlocutory appeal
    is “successfully prosecuted.” Starr, 
    664 A.2d 1331
    . SASD has provided no case
    holding that the mere possibility of a successful appeal serves to suspend the
    coordinate jurisdiction rule. Nonetheless, the coordinate jurisdiction rule applies to
    decisions in the “same case[.]”             
    Id.
     (emphasis added).         Here, the trial court
    incorrectly concluded it was bound by the PJ Order issued in a separate, albeit
    related, case.12
    NHS argues that the trial court “properly held the [PJ] Order is a final
    order, making the [PJ] Order the law of the case, and prohibiting SASD’s ability to
    challenge the [PJ] Order’s effect in this case pursuant to the doctrines of res judicata
    Id. at 1331 (citations omitted).
    11
    Rule 311(a)(5) permits an appeal to be taken as of right from an order granting
    peremptory judgment in mandamus. Further, “failure to file an appeal of an interlocutory order
    [under subpart (a)(5)] does not waive any objections to the interlocutory order[.]” Pa.R.A.P.
    311(g)(1).
    12
    Notwithstanding that the trial court erred by concluding that the law of the case applied,
    this Court must still consider whether partial summary judgment was properly granted, i.e.,
    whether genuine issues of material fact remain.
    19
    and collateral estoppel.” NHS Br. at 17. Contrary to NHS’s contention, the trial
    court did not “h[o]ld the [PJ] Order is a final order[.]” Id. Rather, in a footnote to
    its findings of the “uncontroverted” facts, it stated: “See [PJ Order]. This is the law
    of the case. [Starr.]” SASD Br., App. 1 at 1 n.1. Further, the trial court did not base
    its decision on the res judicata or collateral estoppel doctrines.
    The Pennsylvania Supreme Court has explained:
    Although the doctrines involve distinct considerations, res
    judicata and collateral estoppel both serve to preclude a
    party from pursuing litigation that revisits a claim or an
    issue that has been settled by a previous action, thereby
    preserving the interest in finality of judicial
    determinations, preventing endless litigation, and
    precluding parties from obtaining the proverbial “second
    bite at the apple.” Relating to the preclusion of a claim,
    “[t]he doctrine of res judicata will preclude an action
    where the former and latter suits possess the following
    common elements: (1) identity of issues; (2) identity in the
    cause of action; (3) identity of persons and parties to the
    action; and (4) identity of the capacity of the parties suing
    or being sued.” Daley v. A.W. Chesterton, Inc., . . . 
    37 A.3d 1175
    , 1189-90 ([Pa.] 2012). The related but distinct
    doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes the subsequent
    litigation of an issue where:
    (1) the issue decided in the prior case is
    identical to the one presented in the later
    action; (2) there was a final adjudication on
    the merits; (3) the party against whom the
    plea is asserted was a party or in privity with
    a party in the prior case; (4) the party or
    person privy to the party against whom the
    doctrine is asserted had a full and fair
    opportunity to litigate the issue in the prior
    proceeding; and (5) the determination in the
    prior proceeding was essential to the
    judgment.
    Taylor v. Extendicare Health Facilities, Inc., . . . 
    147 A.3d 490
    , 511 n.30 ([Pa.] 2016), . . . (quoting Off[.] of
    20
    Disciplinary Counsel v. Kiesewetter, . . . 
    889 A.2d 47
    , 50-
    51 ([Pa.] 2005)).
    Critically, neither res judicata nor collateral estoppel
    will preclude subsequent litigation if the prior action
    or ruling in question did not result in a final judgment.
    “It is axiomatic that in order for either collateral estoppel
    or res judicata to apply, the issue or issues must have been
    actually litigated and determined by a valid and final
    judgment.” C[n]ty. of Berks ex rel. Baldwin v. Pa. Lab[.]
    Rel[s.] Bd., . . . 
    678 A.2d 355
    , 359 ([Pa.] 1996).
    In re Est. of Plance, 
    175 A.3d 249
    , 270-71 (Pa. 2017) (bold emphasis added; italics
    omitted).
    Even if this Court was to entertain NHS’s contention, despite any such
    reliance on the doctrines by the trial court, it would find that the doctrines do not
    apply because it is not clear that the PJ Order was a final order. Rule 341 states, in
    relevant part:
    (b) Definition of final order. A final order:
    (1) disposes of all claims and of all parties;
    ....
    (3) is entered as a final order pursuant to paragraph (c)
    of this rule[.] . . .
    ....
    (c) Determination of finality.-- When more than one
    claim for relief is presented in an action, whether as a
    claim, counterclaim, cross-claim, or third-party claim, or
    when multiple parties are involved, the trial court or other
    government unit may enter a final order as to one or more
    but fewer than all of the claims and parties only upon an
    express determination that an immediate appeal would
    facilitate resolution of the entire case. Such an order
    becomes appealable when entered. In the absence of such
    a determination and entry of a final order, any order or
    other form of decision that adjudicates fewer than all the
    claims and parties shall not constitute a final order.
    21
    Pa.R.A.P. 341.
    NHS contends that the 2007 Action’s complaint (2007 Complaint) is
    not a part of the record, so there are no record facts to prove that the PJ Order did
    not dispose of all claims. Notwithstanding, the docket entries for the 2007 Action
    describe the action filed on August 13, 2007 as “Complaint for Mandamus, Specific
    Performance and Breach of Contract[.]” R.R. at 5a. NHS acknowledges that the
    2007 Complaint “asserted three overlapping causes of action, all of which were
    founded on [SASD’s] breaches of the [Contract]: (1) mandamus, (2) breach of
    contract - specific performance, and (3) breach of contract.” NHS Br. at 19; see also
    R.R. at 522a.
    Nonetheless, NHS contends:
    The relief sought in each of the three counts of the 2007
    Complaint are as follows: Count I – Mandamus – (a)
    dissolve the escrow, (b) pay the funds held in escrow with
    interest to NHS, and (c) pay NHS tuition and rental costs;
    Count II – Breach of Contract – Specific Performance –
    (a) dissolve the escrow, (b) pay the funds held in escrow,
    (c) comply with paragraphs 16, 18, and 20 of the Contract,
    and (d) pay NHS tuition and rental costs; and Count III –
    Breach of Contract – [] compensatory damages consisting
    of all rental payments collected but not paid to NHS and
    now held in escrow, including interest.
    NHS Br. at 19-20. However, if NHS intended that the trial court be bound by the
    earlier decision based on res judicata or collateral estoppel, it was incumbent upon
    NHS, as the moving party, to demonstrate that the trial court was constrained due to
    a prior final order, and include the 2007 Complaint in the record, rather than argue
    that, because the 2007 Complaint is not in the record, SASD cannot prove that the
    doctrines do not apply. See Day v. Volkswagenwerk Aktiengesellschaft, 
    464 A.2d 1313
    , 1316 (Pa. Super. 1983) (“The burden rests upon the moving party to
    demonstrate clearly that there is no genuine issue of material fact. Summary
    judgment is properly granted on grounds of res judicata and/or collateral estoppel if
    22
    there is no genuine issue of material fact . . . .”) (citations omitted); see also D.Z. v.
    Bethlehem Area Sch. Dist., 
    2 A.3d 712
    , 731 (Pa. Cmwlth. 2010) (“A party seeking
    to bar re-litigation of a claim must show . . . (1) identity of the thing sued upon;
    (2) identity of the cause of action; (3) identity of the persons or parties to the action;
    and, (4) identity of the quality or capacity of the parties suing or sued.”) (emphasis
    added). NHS did not meet its burden to show that the doctrines apply.
    SASD next argues that the trial court erred by granting partial summary
    judgment when genuine issues of material fact remain in dispute. Specifically,
    SASD asserts that genuine issues of material fact remain with respect to whether
    SASD failed to provide an accounting to NHS, and whether SASD failed to remit
    all tuition payments it received to NHS.
    NHS responds that SASD waived the argument that genuine issues of
    material fact remain, because it failed to raise the argument with the trial court, and
    failed to specifically identify the issues in its Concise Statement of Errors
    Complained of on Appeal (Rule 1925(b) Statement). NHS also contests SASD’s
    Motion Answer’s validity because it was unverified, did not contain counter
    affidavits, and did not include verified or certified copies of documents.
    Given this Court’s holding, herein, that SASD waived its argument
    challenging the existence and term of the Contract, this Court now considers whether
    genuine issues of material fact remain with respect to SASD’s compliance with the
    Contract, the PJ Order, and the 2012 Order.
    In addition to mandating that SASD fully comply with the PJ Order and
    dissolve any escrow accounts containing funds due NHS, the 2012 Order required
    SASD to “provide NHS with a complete and accurate accounting of all tuition
    payments, including lease payments, by home school district[s] and the
    [Department], received by [SASD] since April 1, 2008[.]” R.R. at 67a-68a.
    23
    In its Complaint, NHS alleged:
    Despite continued requests by NHS to SASD to finalize
    accounts between the parties regarding outstanding tuition
    and lease payments that SASD admits are owed to NHS
    under the [Contract], SASD has refused to remit payments
    that it owes to NHS and to provide NHS an accurate and
    ongoing accounting of other payments received (and
    payments not received) from home school districts that too
    are owed to NHS.
    R.R. at 35a, ¶ 25. In its Answer, SASD responded:
    Denied. The averments of this paragraph contain certain
    conclusions of law to which no response is required. If it
    is judicially determined that a response is required, the
    same is denied with strict proof thereof demanded. By
    way of further answer, [SASD] is without sufficient
    knowledge, information or belief to form an opinion as to
    the truth of the averment which is therefore denied, and
    strict proof thereof is demanded.
    R.R. at 74a, ¶ 25.
    Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1035.3, addressing responses to
    summary judgment motions, provides, in relevant part:
    (a) . . . [T]he adverse party may not rest upon the mere
    allegations or denials of the pleadings but must file a
    response within thirty days after service of the motion
    identifying
    (1) one or more issues of fact arising from evidence in
    the record controverting the evidence cited in support of
    the motion or from a challenge to the credibility of one
    or more witnesses testifying in support of the motion, or
    (2) evidence in the record establishing the facts essential
    to the cause of action or defense which the motion cites
    as not having been produced.
    (b) An adverse party may supplement the record or set
    forth the reasons why the party cannot present evidence
    24
    essential to justify opposition to the motion and any action
    proposed to be taken by the party to present such evidence.
    (c) The court may rule upon the motion for judgment or
    permit affidavits to be obtained, depositions to be taken or
    other discovery to be had or make such other order as is
    just.
    (d) Summary judgment may be entered against a party
    [that] does not respond.
    Pa.R.Civ.P. 1035.3 (Note omitted).
    Further, Pennsylvania Rule of Civil Procedure 1035.4 states:
    Supporting and opposing affidavits shall be made on
    personal knowledge, shall set forth such facts as would be
    admissible in evidence, and shall show affirmatively that
    the signer is competent to testify to the matters stated
    therein. Verified or certified copies of all papers or parts
    thereof referred to in an affidavit shall be attached thereto
    or served therewith. The court may permit affidavits to be
    supplemented or opposed by depositions, answers to
    interrogatories, or further affidavits.
    Pa.R.Civ.P. 1035.4.
    In response to paragraph 20(a), (b) of the Motion, wherein NHS averred
    that SASD has failed to provide an accounting, and that SASD has received tuition
    payments from the Department and home districts that it has not remitted to NHS,
    SASD stated in its Motion Answer:
    a. It is denied that [SASD] ha[s] failed to provide [NHS]
    with an accounting. Rather, [SASD] ha[s], in accord
    with the 2012 Order provided complete and accurate
    accounts to [NHS] of all tuition payments, including
    lease payments, by home school districts and [the
    Department], received by [SASD] since April 1, 2008.
    This information has been provided to [NHS] in the
    form of monthly and annual statements of billings
    showing the billing date, student name, sending
    district, educational classification, number of days
    billed, amount billed, education cost, 7% fee amount
    25
    and net due to [NHS]. These documents, all of which
    have been provided to [NHS] are thousands of pages in
    length. By way of example, the August 2012-2013
    Reg[.] Ed[.] Billing statement for the 2012-2013 school
    year is attached hereto . . . . Additionally, [SASD] ha[s]
    provided [NHS] with a monthly statement, each and
    every month from April 1, 2008[,] to the present, of
    disbursements to [NHS] of funds received by sending
    districts. The documents are voluminous and, by way
    of example, the statement of disbursements for the
    period April 9, 2008 through May 13, 2008 is attached
    hereto . . . . By way of further answer, [SASD] ha[s]
    accounted to [NHS] for payments received from [the
    Department]. Such payments are for students deemed
    wards of the state as they have been disclaimed by
    sending districts. [The Department] may approve or
    disapprove billings for disclaimed students. [SASD]
    ha[s], since April 8, 2018[,] shared with [NHS]
    information for disclaimed students as well as those
    allowed or disallowed by [the Department]. See true
    and correct copy of 2009-2010 Disclaimed Students
    accounting and 2012 [Department] approval list
    attached hereto . . . .
    b. Denied. [SASD] ha[s] released all escrow sums as
    required by the 2008 [PJ] Order. Additionally, [SASD]
    ha[s] paid to [NHS] all sums due [NHS] subsequent to
    the 2008 [PJ] Order and 2012 Order. [NHS] has
    asserted the existence of tuition payments received by
    [SASD] and not disbursed to [NHS]. [NHS] has
    provided no detail as to the nature and amount of such
    payments. Pursuant [to Pennsylvania Rule of Civil
    Procedure] 1035.2 (a)(2), [SASD] request[s] that the
    Honorable Court compel [NHS], within [60] days, to
    provide to [SASD] a specific explanation, including
    but not limited to the date and amount of the payment,
    student on whose behalf the payment was made and the
    payor, for each and every payment allegedly received
    by [SASD] but not disbursed to [NHS].
    R.R. at 423a-425a (citation omitted).
    Thus, in its Motion Answer, SASD denied the allegation in detail and
    referenced supporting exhibits. There was no requirement that SASD provide
    26
    affidavits to support that it disputed NHS’s allegation. See Pa.R.Civ.P. 1035.3.
    Although the documents referenced and attached were not certified, they, along with
    purportedly thousands of other documents, were all produced to NHS as part of
    SASD’s obligations under the 2012 Order.13
    Importantly, the Colangelo Deposition, which SASD attached to its
    Motion Answer, see R.R. at 455a-507a, contains testimony from SASD’s own
    Business Manager that, despite SASD’s aforementioned responses, supports
    NHS’s assertions that some payments owed to NHS were not reported to NHS,
    have not been made thereto and thus, SASD did not comply with the PJ Order.
    See NHS’s Supplemental Memorandum, R.R. at 514a-519a.                              For example,
    Colangelo testified that, during certain years, SASD collected monies received for
    subject Academy students and deposited such in the SASD’s general fund, rather
    than disbursing the funds to NHS because SASD could not identify the applicable
    students. See R.R. at 499a. Thus, it is clear that SASD failed to comply with the
    13
    In its Rule 1925(b) Statement, SASD asserted: “[SASD] respectfully suggest[s] that the
    [trial c]ourt erred in entering summary judgment in favor of [NHS] and against [SASD] with
    respect to [NHS’s] claims in mandamus[,] as there exist genuine issues of material fact.” R.R. at
    13a, ¶ 1. Further,
    [SASD] respectfully suggest[s] that the [trial c]ourt erred in
    directing that [SASD] “take all reasonable steps to collect tuition
    payments billed to [it] by NHS for which the [Department] of [sic]
    home school districts have no [sic] yet paid [it] until NHS is paid in
    full for all tuition that was billed to [SASD] . . .” without making
    findings of fact or [conclusions of] law concerning whether [SASD]
    ha[s] already made and exhausted reasonable efforts to make
    collection on the billed tuition payments.
    R.R. at 14a, ¶ 5. Although NHS contends that these statements are insufficiently specific, SASD’s
    Rule 1925(b) Statement responded to the trial court’s two-page order, which did not explain in
    significant detail its reasons for its factual findings and legal determinations. The trial court did
    not otherwise issue an opinion in support of that order. Under these circumstances, SASD’s Rule
    1925(b) Statement was sufficient.
    27
    Contract terms and the PJ Order. Accordingly, the trial court properly granted partial
    summary judgment.
    Finally, SASD contends that the trial court erred by ordering SASD to
    take all reasonable steps to collect NHS’s tuition payments, without making findings
    of fact or conclusions of law concerning whether SASD has already made and
    exhausted reasonable efforts, and imposed on SASD an obligation to indefinitely
    engage in debt collection activity.
    The trial court was clear when it stated:
    SASD failed to provide [NHS] with an accounting
    required by paragraph 3 of the [trial c]ourt’s . . . 2012
    Order in the [2007 Action], which required that “[SASD]
    shall provide NHS with a complete and accurate
    accounting of all tuition payments, including lease
    payments, by home school district[s] and the
    [Department], received by [SASD] since April 1, 2008.[”]
    SASD Br., App. 1 at 1. Accordingly, the trial court ordered SASD to take the steps
    necessary to identify monies collected and due to NHS, and provide NHS with an
    accounting. The trial court’s charge is not an indefinite obligation. Rather, it is an
    obligation that SASD fulfill its statutory and contractual obligations to NHS.
    For all of the above reasons, the trial court’s order is affirmed.
    _________________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge
    28
    IN THE COMMONWEALTH COURT OF PENNSYLVANIA
    NHS Youth Services, Inc.              :
    :
    v.                        :
    :
    Shamokin Area School District and the :
    Board of Directors of the             :
    Shamokin Area School District,        :   No. 1264 C.D. 2020
    Appellants         :
    ORDER
    AND NOW, this 10th day of January, 2022, the Northumberland
    County Common Pleas Court’s November 18, 2020 order is affirmed.
    _________________________________
    ANNE E. COVEY, Judge