In 1900-17, he worked in the office of state controller in Kiev and Saint Petersburg.
During World War I Lototsky served as a gubernatorial commissar of Bukovina and Pokuttia.
As such, he was instrumental in the January 1, 1919 declaration of autocephaly of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.
[6] Due to the occupation of Turkey by the Entente and the Bolshevik takeover of Ukraine, he emigrated to Vienna in March 1920[7] and to Prague in 1922, where he was a lecturer and eventually professor of canon law at the Ukrainian Free University until 1928.
His ashes were transferred to St. Andrew Cemetery in South Bound Brook, New Jersey, United States, in 1971 and reburied.