Opinion by
The Lehigh County Vocational Technical School (School) and schoolteacher Theodore Obrecht, defendants in a personal injury action initiated by Kellie Bollinger, 1 seek to appeal a Lehigh County Common Pleas Court ordеr denying their summary judgment motion. Bollinger moves to quash the appeal. We quash this appeal for the reasons set forth herein.
Bollinger injured two fingers in the rollers of a school-owned printing press during Obrechts graphic arts class. The complaint alleges that Bollinger sustained permanent injuries as a result of Obrecht and the Schools negligence and willful misconduct in removing safety devices normally covering the rollers. Defendants Obrecht and the School asserted, by way of new matter, governmental immunity as affirmative defenses, 42 Pa. C. S. §§8541-8564.
Obrecht and the School moved for summary judgment, contending that Bollingers entire claim was barred because it was not within a statutory immunity exception, 42 Pa. C. S. §8542(b); that there was no willful misconduct supporting her punitive damages claim, 42 Pa. C. S. §§8549, 8550, 8553, and no “permanent disfigurement” supporting her claim for pain and suffering losses, 42 Pa. C. S. §8553(a). The trial court denied the motion because there remained factual issues of whether the printing press was a fixture within the real propеrty immunity exception,
McCloskey v. Abington School
District,
*565 APPEALABILITY
Of course, we may not address the merits of this appeal unless we have jurisdiction. The Judicial Code vests this Court with appellate jurisdiction of “final” ordеrs from the courts of common pleas. 42 Pa. C. S. §762. 2
In determining appealability of orders, Pennsylvania courts adhere to the “final judgment rule,” which holds that an appeal will lie only from a final order unless otherwise permitted by statute or rule.
Fried v. Fried,
Additionally, thе Pennsylvania Rules of Appellate Procedure allow an appeal as of right from a nonfinal order if it falls within one of the specific classes of inter *566 locutory orders enumerated in Pa. R.A.P. 311. Interlocutory orders may also be appealed by permission of the court pursuant to the procedure outlined in Pa. R.A.P. 1311. Pa. R.A.P. 312. See generally R. Darlington, K. McKeon, D. Schuckers, K. Brown, Pennsylvania Appellate Practice, §§311, 312, 341 (1986).
Moreover, our courts have followed
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
Since the trial courts order denying summary judgment does not fall within Rule 311, and the defendants have not sought permission to appeal, we may address the merits of this matter only if the ordеr is “final,” or alternatively falls within the Cohen collateral order exception.
1. Finality
Our Supreme Court instructs that the finality of an order should not be ascertained solely from the face of the decree or the orders
technical
effect on the entire litigation.
Bell.
Rather, the court should examine the orders
practical
ramifications and determine whether it has a “final aspect.”
Id.; Fried; Pennsylvania Appellate Practice,
§341.5. Under this apрroach, an order will be deemed “final” if it (1) ends the litigation or disposes of the entire case; (2) effectively puts. a litigant “out of court”; or (3) precludes a party from presenting the merits of his or her claim to the trial court.
Nigro v.
*567
Nigro,
The trial courts оrder denying Obrecht and the Schools summary judgment motion obviously does not end this litigation or dispose of the entire case. Nor does the order put these defendants “out of court” or prevent them from proving affirmative defenses at trial sincе the order did not strike defenses from the pleadings.
Halfway Coal Yard, Inc. v. County of Centre,
2. Collateral Order Doctrine
Obrecht and the School contend that the trial courts order is appealable under the “collateral order doctrine.” This doctrine holds that an otherwise unappealable interlocutory order will be appealable if (1) it is separable from and collateral to the main cause of action; (2) the right involved is too important to be denied review; and (3) the question presented is such that if review is postponed until final judgment in the case, the claimed right will be irreparably lost. Pugar.
The collateral order doctrine is an
exception
to the general rule that all appeals must await final judgment.
Zarnecki v. Shepegi,
We conclude that the matters embraced in the decision appealed from are not of such an interlocutory nature as to affect, or to be affected by, decision of the mеrits of this case.
This decision appears to fall in that small class which finally determines claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.
We hold this order appealable because it is a final disposition of a claimed right which is not an ingredient of the cause of action and does not require consideration with it.
Thus, we must inquire whether the clаimed rights affected by the order are also ingredients of the main cause of action.
Recent Pennsylvania decisions provide illumination of what constitutes a separable and collateral order. In
Katz v. Katz,
The defendants rely on
Mitchell v. Forsyth,
In Pennsylvania, immunity is governed by statute. The merits of a plaintiff’s cause of action against government agencies and officers are likewise governed by the same statute. Thus, a trial court analyzing an immunity clаim is actually deciding the same issues that will arise in the underlying action. Unlike matters of federal official immunity, the trial court’s interlocutory order denying an immunity claim under Pennsylvania law, is not separate from and collateral to the main cause of action.
Bollinger’s suit against Obrecht and the School provides an illustrative example of an action where the issues decided in the order denying summary judgment are actual ingredients of the underlying case. The affirmative immunity defenses, being assertеd in the pleadings, raise factual and legal issues to be decided in the main cause of action. Therefore, we conclude that the order is not separate and collateral. 5
*571 CONCLUSION
Obrecht and the Schools attempt to apрeal the order is ineffective to invoke our appellate jurisdiction, because the order is not “final” and there is no applicable statute or rule allowing an appeal as of right. Pennsylvania law provides a vehicle for appellate review of such orders by certification and permission of the Court, but the parties have chosen not to utilize this procedure.
Moreover, the order is not appealable under any recognized exception to the final judgment rule. In essence, Obrecht and the School are asking this Court to create a new exception, under the guise of the collateral order doctrine, for summary judgment denials involving immunity. We decline to do this by straining the collateral оrder doctrine or carving a new exception to the final judgment rule. Such a modification of the right to appeal in Pennsylvania’s scheme of appellate procedure must come from legislative action or Supreme Cоurt promulgation of formal rules. See 42 Pa. C. S. §§5105, 702; Pa. R.A.P. 311, 1311.
Accordingly, we quash this appeal.
Order
Upon consideration of the motion to quash filed by Kellie Bollinger, a minor by Elsie Carraghan, her guardian, and Elsie Carraghan in her own right, the appeal is hereby quashed.
Notes
This action was initiated on behalf of Bollinger, a minor, by her guardian Elsie Carraghan, and by Elsie Carraghan in her own right.
We recognize that the subject of finality and appealability has presented difficult issues for Pennsylvania appellаte courts, often resulting in uncertainty for litigants deciding whether to take an appeal.
See, e.g., Grota v. LaBoccetta,
Moreover, we agree with recent decisions articulating the need for clarification and reform in this areа.
Zarnecki v. Shepegi,
We note that federal case law on this issue is not binding precedent for Pennsylvania courts.
In Mitchell, the plaintiff sued the Attorney General of the United States for damages, based on the Attorney Gеneral’s allegedly unlawful wiretapping of plaintiff’s conversations.
Because we hold thát the instant order does not satisfy the first element of the collateral order doctrine, we need not decide whether the claimed rights are too imрortant to be denied review and whether postponement of appeal will cause an irreparable loss of rights. Fried (all three elements must be satisfied).
Obrecht and the Schools contention that Pennsylvania law confers immunity from suit—not merely damages— would be relevant only if we had to decide whether the instant order irreparably injures the purported right to avoid suit. However, even if they are immune from suit, the mere possibility of an irreparable loss of this *571 loss of this right does not in itself satisfy the' collateral order doctrine. Id.
We wish to emphasize that this is a case about appellate procedure. We will not now review contentions regarding substantive immunity rights because the case is not properly before this Court.
