OPINION OF THE COURT
Thе question presented is whether a pretrial order dismissing the class aspects of a suit, but allowing the case to proceed as an individual action, is an appealable final order. We hold that it is.
Appellants Edward and Marie Bell brought a class action pursuant to Pa.R.Civ.P. 2230 1 against appellee Ben *227 eficial Consumer Discount Company alleging that appellee failed to record the satisfaction of mortgages as required by statute. 2 Appellee filed preliminary objections. The trial court sustained the preliminary objections to the suit as a class action, but permitted the named plaintiffs to proceed in their individual capacities. An appeal from this order was taken to the Superior Court which granted appellee’s motion to quash the appeal. On reconsideration, the court affirmed the order per curiam (Spaeth, J., filed a dissenting opinion in which Hoffman, J., joined). 3 We granted appellants’ petition for allowance of appeal to decide whether an order dismissing a class action is final and appealable. 4
With exceptions not relevant here 5 the Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act gives the appellate courts of the Commonwealth jurisdiction over appeals only from “fi *228 nal orders.” 6 We must decide whether orders denying class action status are “final” within the meaning of that Act.
Whether an order is final and appealable cannot necessarily be ascertained from the face of a decrée alone, nor simply from the technical effect of the adjudication. The finality оf an order is a judicial conclusion which can be reached only after an examination of its ramifications. We follow the reasoning of the United States Supreme Court that a finding of finality must be the result of a practical rather than a technical construction.
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
In resolving this question we are faced with three alternatives: (1) orders denying class status are final and *229 appealable; (2) such orders are interlocutory and not appealable; and (8) only those orders which effectively terminate the action are appealable (the “death knell” doctrine).
We believe that orders denying class action status possess sufficiently practical aspects of finality to make them appealable. When an action is instituted by a named individual on behalf of himself and a class, the members of the class are more properly characterized as parties to the action. A subsequent order of a trial court allowing an action to proceed as a class action is not a joinder of the parties not yet in the action. The class is in the action until properly excluded. An order dismissing the class aspects of a suit puts the class members out of court, is a final order for those parties and is therefore appealable. See
Alexander v. Mastercraft Construction Co., Inc.,
This is the reasoning this Court relied on in
Lee v. Child Care Services,
“an order sustaining preliminary objections and dismissing the class aspects of [an] action is a final order even though individual aspects of the action may survive the order. The order effectively puts out of court those members of the сlass not parties to the individual action. . . . DiAngeli v. Fitzgerald,433 Pa. 529 ,252 A.2d 706 (1969).”
*230
In
Brandywine Joint Area School Authority v. VanCor, Inc.,
“We conclude that while an order overruling preliminary objections to an additional party complaint is interlocutory, an order granting such objections and dismissing the complaint is final and appealable. Although the plaintiff in the additional party complaint may have a further cause of action against the defendant in the additional party complaint subsequent to the resolution of the basic litigation, he is precluded in the basic litigation from determining his rights vis-a-vis the additional defendant in the litigation.”
Id. at 51,
Our determination that these orders are appealable avoids the harsh consequences attendant to a conclusion that orders which put parties out of court are unappealable. 8 Moreover, it is consistent with the policies to be served by Pa.R.Civ.P. 2230.
*231 Although our class action rule is somewhat different than its federal counterpart 9 the purposes to be served by these actions are identical. Professor Charles Alan Wright described this dual purpose:
“ ‘By establishing a technique whereby the claims of many individuals can be resolved at the same time, the class suit both eliminates the possibility of repetitious litigation and provides small claimants with a method of obtaining redress for claims which would otherwise be too small to warrant individual litigation.’ Thus effective use of the class action device could serve the interests both of judicial administration and of justice.” 10
Refusing to allow appeals here would undermine the basic objectives of the class action rule. The judicial process would not achieve the benefits of having matters affecting large numbers of people litigated expeditiously in a single action. By allowing appeals from orders denying class status, individuals with small but meritorious claims will not be turned away without recourse where the action should be characterized as a class action but has not been so designated.
Appellee urges that to allow appeals from these orders will increase the workload in the already overburdened appellate courts. They remind us of the principles of ju *232 dicial economy upon which the finality rule is based. 11 We are mindful of the need to avoid piecemeal review but we are convinced that our decision today is faithful to those principles.
After a decision by a trial court that an action is not properly maintainable as a class action, an early determination by an appellate court that a matter is, or is not, a proper class action avoids repetitious litigation. 12 Resolving the merits of a suit against a single defendant by a potentially large number of plaintiffs in one action “serve[s] the interests both of judicial administration and of justice.” Moreover, this holding recognizes our basic duty to review thosе orders which end parties’ participation in an action.
Despite the contention that allowing appeals from these orders might, perhaps, increase the number of cases for appellate review, we believe, as does Professor Wright, that “ [i] f better justice can be obtained by broadening the scope of appellate review, then evеn congestion delay and expense are not too high a price to pay.” 13 We do not perceive our appellate responsibilities as a variable function of our caseload. 14 Appellate review at this juncture is a judicial duty which we may not abdicate by simply saying that we do so to avoid “congestion, delay and expense.”
*233 Our holding also avоids the undesirable consequences that adoption of the “death knell” doctrine would bring. 15
*234 Although that doctrine allows appeals from those orders which effectively terminate an action, 16 it forces appellate courts to make difficult and burdensome ad hoc factual determinations. 17 Courts which have adopted this approach have experiеnced great difficulty applying it. 18 *235 Allowing appeals from orders denying class action status brings a uniformity that the death knell doctrine does not. Ours is a rule that litigants, trial courts, and appellate courts can apply without the uncertainty which attends the death knell doctrine.
Any suggestion that allowing appeals from such orders will encourage class actions by unscrupulous individuals more anxious to blackmail defendants into settlement than to adjudicate the merits of the claim underestimates the legal and professional resources available to combat such abuses of the judicial process. 19 Allowing these appeals does not create new litigation and throw open once-closed doors of courts to frivolous law suits. As with any mixеd finding of law and fact, we will give appropriate deference to the trial courts’ determinations whether an action is properly maintainable as to class action. The effect of our holding here is simply that denials of class status will be reviewable before parties are excluded from litigating the merits of the claims.
Appellants have instituted an action on behalf of themselves and a class of which they aver they are members. The trial court decided that the action is not properly a class action, but may continue as an individual action. Because the trial court’s order operates to remove parties from the litigation, the order which puts individuals out *236 of this particular action, is final and the merits of the appeal must be considered.
Order of the Superior Court quashing the appeal vacated. Case remanded to the Superior Court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. Pa.R.Civ.P. 2230 provides:
“(a) If persons constituting a class are so numerous as to make it impracticable to join all as parties, any one or more of them *227 who will adequately represent the interest of all may sue or be sued on behalf of all, but the judgment entered in such action shall not impose personal liability upon anyone not a party thereto.
“(b) An action brought on behalf of a class shall not be dismissed, discontinued, or compromised nor shall a voluntary non-suit be entered therein without the approval of the court in which the action is pending.”
. Act of May 28, 1715, 1 Sm.L. 94, § 9, 21 P.S. § 681, as amended by Act of July 31, 1968, P.L. 866, § I, 21 P.S. § 682 (Supp.1975).
.
Bell
v.
Beneficial Consumer Discount Co.,
. See Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act of 1970, Act of July 31, 1970, P.L. 673, art. II, § 204, 17 P.S. § 211.204 (Supp.1975).
In
Piltzer
v.
Independence Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n,
. The Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act specifically provides that appeals may be taken from interlocutory orders in certain circumstances. Id., art. V, § 501, 17 P.S. § 211.501 (Supp.1975).
. See id., art. II, § 202, 17 P.S. § 211.202 (Supр.1975); art. II, § 203, 17 P.S. § 211.203 (Supp.1975); art. III, § 302, 17 P.S. § 211.-302 (Supp.1975); art. IV, § 402, 17 P.S. § 211.402 (Supp.1975); art. IV, § 403, as amended, 17 P.S. § 211.403 (Supp.1975).
. Whether a particular order in a given set of circumstances is “final,” and therefore, appealable has long vexed the courts. In
Dickinson v. Petroleum Conversion Corp.,
“Half a century ago this Court lamented, ‘Probably no question of equity practice has been the subject of more frequent discussion in this court than the finality of decrees. * * *
The cases, it must be conceded, are not altogether harmonious.’ (citation omitted). This lamentation is equally fitting to describe the intervening struggle of the courts; sometimes to devise a formula that will encompass all situations and at other times to take hardship cases out from under the rigidity of previous declarations; sometimes choosing one and sometimes another of the сonsiderations that always compete in the question of appealability, the most important of which are the inconvenience and costs of piecemeal review on the one hand and the danger of denying justice by delay on the other.”
See also
Canter
v.
American Ins. Co.,
. The decision that an action may not proceed as a class action frequently results in the termination of the litigation even though individuаl named plaintiffs could, in theory pursue the merits of their claims. Notwithstanding these harsh consequences, one state supreme court and intermediate appellate courts in two other states have held such orders to be interlocutory and not appealable.
Taylor
v.
Major Finance
Co.,
Inc.,
. In
McMonogle
v.
Allstate Ins. Co.,
. Wright, Class Actions,
. See, e. g.,
Canter
v.
American Ins.
Co.,
. Wright, supra note 10, at 170.
. Wright, The Doubtful Omniscience of Appellate Courts, 41 Minn.L.Rev. 751, 780 (1957). Cf.
Budget Laundry Co., v. Munter,
. The Appellate Court Jurisdiction Act delineates the breadth оf our jurisdiction. We have previously found it is our duty under the Act to review cases which put parties out of court. We are not now at liberty to contract our jurisdiction simply because of the number of cases that may await appellate review.
. The “death knell” doctrine, first announced in
Eisen v. Carlisle & Jacquelin (Eisen I), 370
F.2d 119 (2d Cir. 1966), cert. denied,
Supreme courts in the four states which have found such orders to be appealable have relied, at least in part, on the death knell concept.
Reader v. Magman-Superior Copper Co.,
By tying the appealability determination to the circumstances of the individual case, the death knell doctrine forces the appellate court to determine in each case the monetary point at which the litigant cannot be expected to continue the action and thus places an even heavier burden upon the appellate courts. This process combats uniformity and is antitheticаl to the appellate court’s duty to provide standards which trial courts can effect generally. See
Korn v. Franchard Corp.,
. Insofar as the death knell doctrine allows review of orders which effectively terminate an action it does no more than conclude that an order which has, or will, put an end to the action is a final order and, as such, is reviewable. The doctrine adds noth'ing to the resolution of the finality question in cases in which it is clear that the action may continue, yet there has been an issue presented which appears to be ripe for appellate review.
. Finality is determined vis-a-vis the particular litigant affected rather than as a function of the legal consequences of the trial cоurt’s order. Appellate courts are unsuited to make such factual determinations. Cf. Traynor, The Riddle of Harmless Error, at 20-21.
. In the Second Circuit an individual claim of $386 qualifies for appeal under the death knell doctrine but one of $8500 does not.
Korn v. Franchard Corp., Milberg v. Western Pac. R. R. Co.,
“[D]espite the obvious appeal of the ‘death-knell’ doctrine, I am not sure it affords a rule that is truly workable or, indeed, is legally sustainable. If my fears should be realized, I might wish on some subsequent occasion to request that the court cоnsider in banc whether we are not obliged to formulate a rule that will avoid the necessity of making such ad hoc judgments as have been required in these and other cases and also will afford equality of treatment as between plaintiffs and defendants.”
See
Hackett
v.
General Host Corp.,
. See American Bar Association, Code of Professional Responsibility, Disciplinary Rules 2-103, 2-104 (adopted by the Supreme Court of Pеnnsylvania, February 27, 1974); Supreme Court Rule 17-5 (“The Disciplinary Board of the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania”). See also Restatement of Torts, § 674 (1938 ed.):
“One who initiates or procures the initiation of civil proceedings against another is liable to him for the harm done thereby, if
(a) the proceedings are initiated
(i) without probable cause, and
(ii) primarily for a purpose other than that of securing the adjudication of the claim on which the proceedings are based, and (b) except where they are ex parte, the proceedings have terminated in favor of the person against whom they are brought.”
