This case is another episode in the proliferation of legal weapons on the frontier of landlord-tenant disputes.
On December 29, 1978, the District of Columbia Rental Accommodations Office authorized a rent increase for appellees, Capitol House Associates, to be implement *582 ed in February of the following year. In response, approximately half of the tenants tendered their February rent by checks in the amount of the “old” rent with notations “rent paid in full” or other words to that effect. They did the same in March.
On March 9, 1979, the appellee filed suit for possession based on nonpayment of rent. The striking tenants obtained counsel who requested consolidation of the suits and a jury trial. In response, utilizing a now familiar device created by the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, 1 the appellee moved for a protective order requiring the tenants, now appellants, to deposit their full monthly rent into the registry of the court, pendente lite. The appellee further requested that it be entitled to withdraw each month from the registry of the court the “old” rent charged prior to the February 1st increase, leaving the “amount in dispute” in the court coffers.
Appellants then requested and received a hearing on the matter. At that hearing, appellants’ counsel acknowledged that the amount of the “old” rent was not in dispute but stated that the tenants intended to raise housing code violations as a defense to the action and, therefore, the entire fund should be preserved to meet their claims for potential set-off.
The trial judge examined evidence presented by appellants which consisted of copies of photographs revealing minor paint and plaster defects. In response, appellee testified that these defects had been abated within ninety days of a housing inspection made in June of 1978. After hearing all the evidence, the trial judge noted that the Capitol House building “could fairly be characterized as a middle or upper-middle income apartment house . .. and that the conditions in the building were not typical of inner city low-income developments or projects.” Therefore, in view of the de minimis nature of the alleged housing code violations, the court ordered deposit of the full rent into the registry of the court with that portion of the fund equal to the “old” undisputed rent released to the landlord on a monthly basis. The court ruled that “the fund . . . preserved in the registry of the court in this case, in light of the kinds of housing violations which defendants were able to discuss or demonstrate at the hearing on the motion for [a] protective order, was much more than adequate to fully protect the defendants’ need for any security in this regard.”
Subsequently, appellants were denied a stay of the order in both the trial court and this court. On direct appeal, appellants now charge the trial court with error in releasing the “old” rent from the registry of the court without a full evidentiary hearing at which the appellee would be required to show an extraordinary need for the funds and a likelihood of success on the merits.
At oral argument, we requested supplemental briefs on the question whether the protective order as devised is appealable. We dismiss for want of jurisdiction because the order is neither a final order, an interlocutory order which falls within the provisions of D.C.Code 1973, § 11-721(a)(2), nor an order collateral to the main case under the
test
of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
I
Protective orders were first suggested by the circuit court in dictum.
See Javins v. First National Realty Corporation,
The protective order is an equitable tool of the court requiring the exercise of sound discretion on a case-by-case basis. While the circuit court in
Bell, supra,
made several suggestions in regard to the procedure and the relevant factors to be weighed in determining an appropriately tailored order,
5
this court met the issue on its merits in
McNeal v. Habib,
D.C.App.,
Appellants contend, however, that the procedure has been abused in this case in that the trial judge has essentially entered two rulings, one imposing the protective order and one releasing monies from the registry of the court to the landlord-appel-lee. Therefore, in appellants’ view, the trial judge was required by the due process clause and the second prong of our decision in
McNeal v. Habib, supra
at 514, to hold an evidentiary hearing on the merits of the parties’ entitlement to the fund. We disagree, finding the judge’s action was a permissible exercise of his equity power as outlined by
Bell, supra,
and
McNeal, supra,
and the subsequent circuit court decision in
Cooks v. Fowler,
The evidentiary hearing which appellants seek is only appropriate at the conclusion of the suit for possession if the trial of the case, itself, does not determine the proportionate rights of the parties. In McNeal v. Habib, supra, the action for possession became moot and the trial judge erroneously released the funds to the landlord without holding the necessary hearing. On appeal, we held that a hearing was required at the termination of the controversy to determine the abatement, if any, to which the tenant *584 was entitled depending on evidence of housing code violations, further defects appearing during the course of litigation, and the length of time during which the tenant held over denying the landlord productive use of the property. Id. at 514.
A protective order, on the other hand, is filed pretrial when the tenant appears and defends the suit on the basis of housing code violations. At this early stage in the proceedings, the evidentiary hearing which is mandated by MeNeal v. Habib for dispersal of funds at the termination of the case is not permissible because it would preempt the controversy and might deny a party’s constitutional right to trial by jury. Consequently, a protective order entered by the trial judge is valid only if it is a legitimate exercise of the court’s equity power as contemplated by Bell, supra, and effects no permanent disposition of property to the prejudice of the parties such as the order overturned in McNeal v. Habib, supra. Otherwise, a MeNeal-type hearing would be required, and we refuse to impose such a requirement at the preliminary stage.
Thus, the issue of whether this pretrial order is an appropriate one is resolved by our examination of the nature of the order. Furthermore, while we believe that the order in this case is a valid protective order, we also hold that the order is not appeala-ble. 6
II
We first confirm the rationale for the protective order. The order protects the landlord from forfeiture of income while unwanted tenants hold over in possession without paying rent. It also protects tenants successful in their litigation from forfeiting their lease at the conclusion of the litigation because they cannot make up an unpaid deficiency. Furthermore, it is a manifestation of the good faith of the tenant’s asserted defense.
See Davis v. Rental Associates, Inc.,
D.C.App.,
This protective order is also justified because the court has afforded appellants an adequate opportunity to argue the equities of their case.
See McNeal
v.
Habib, supra
at 513-14 and note 5,
supra.
In suing only for possession, the landlord normally passes up his right to collect back rent.
See Paregol v. Smith,
D.C.Mun.App.,
In an appropriate case where the tenants identify major housing code violations, access to the deposited monies would normally await the outcome of the dispute. But the circuit court which fashioned and approved this equitable remedy also indicated that the court cannot justify “retention in the registry of the court of a portion as to which the tenant’s ultimate liability to pay is crystal clear and the landlord’s immediate need is extreme.”
Id.
Such pass through, in our view, does not violate due process. In
Lindsey v. Normet,
Ill
Therefore, since we conclude that the trial court’s authority to act in this case is justified, we must determine whether these orders are appealable. In no previous case has a protective order per se been appealed directly. 8
Under D.C.Code 1973, § 11-721(a)(1), we have jurisdiction over “all final orders and judgments of the Superior Court.” A final order must dispose of the entire case on the merits and leave nothing remaining but execution of the judgment.
Trilon Plaza Co. v. Allstate Leasing Corp.,
D.C.App.,
*586
In determining the finality of an order, the pertinent needs of the judicial process must also be considered.
Republic Natural Gas Co. v. Oklahoma,
334 U.S 62, 69,
The Supreme Court, however, has recognized limited exceptions to the finality rule in order to permit appeal. Where an order of the trial court directs immediate execution of judgment or delivery of property to a litigant which threatens irreparable injury, the order may be considered final.
Forgay v. Conrad,
Another exception is the collateral order doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., supra. Cohen
is particularly analogous to the issue before us because that case is the homeland of appealable prejudgment security orders.
12
See
9 Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 110.13[5] at 170.
Cohen
dealt with a New Jersey law which required prejudgment security from certain plaintiffs in derivative shareholder actions. The Supreme Court permitted appeal by a plaintiff shareholder to decide the unresolved issue of whether a federal court was required to apply the state law. The protective order is a close kin to this prejudgment security order held appealable in
Cohen. See Cooks v. Fowler,
141 U.S.App. D.C. 236, 241,
First, pre judgment security is required of a plaintiff. On the other hand, the protective order requires the pretrial deposit by a defendant-tenant of an amount based on the previously agreed upon rent. As such, from the standpoint of a tenant, the order does not necessarily foreclose access to the court. Second, in
Cohen
the Supreme Court considered an unresolved question. In this case, the authority of a trial judge to enter a protective order is well settled. The true issue is the question of its amount, the determination of which is vested in the sound discretion of the court. Being a matter of discretion, this order is specifically distinguished by the Supreme Court from an appealable collateral order. “If the right were admitted or clear and the order involved only an exercise of discretion as to the amount of security, a matter the statute makes subject to reconsideration from time to time, appealability would present a different question.”
Id.,
Alternatively, appellants assert that the protective order is an appealable interlocutory order under D.C.Code 1973, § 11-721(a)(2)(C). That statute provides for appeal of orders “changing or affecting the possession of property.” A protective order is not appealable under this statute for two reasons. First, the provision is inapplicable to the exchange of money since any danger of loss can be remedied at the conclusion of the litigation. Judicial control is retained.
See In re Parsons,
D.C.App.,
Accordingly, the purported appeal is
Dismissed.
Notes
. See Bell v. Tsintolas Realty Co., 139 U.S.App. D.C. 101, 430 F.2d 474 (1970).
.
See, e. g., Emray Realty Corp. v. Stefano,
. Two cases were before the circuit court on appeal. One had reached final judgment for the landlord in the trial court and that judgment was stayed by this court conditioned on payment of the accrued rent into the registry of the court. The other case had not reached a judgment, but this court also granted a stay of the protective order in that case conditioned on payment of accrued rent into the registry. The circuit court did not discuss the appealability of the orders and, despite the fact that the only matter before it was the propriety of the stay, the court reached the merits of the trial court’s use of the protective order. Nonetheless, we are bound by the decision.
M. A. P. v. Ryan,
D.C.App.,
. The protective order is aptly named because it benefits both landlord and tenant. The tenant defending the possessory action is protected from the forfeiture of his lease in the event he is successful at the end of lengthy litigation but is unable to pay the rent in arrears. Other tenants are also protected from the potential decline in services resulting from a drop of income to their landlord.
See generally National Capital Hous. Auth. v. Douglas,
D.C.App.,
.“In making a determination of need, the trial court may properly consider the amount of rent alleged to be due, the number of months the landlord has not received even a partial rental payment, the reasonableness of the rent for the premises, the amount of the landlord’s monthly obligations for the premises, whether the tenant has been allowed to proceed
in forma pau-peris,
and whether the landlord faces a substantial threat of foreclosure.”
Bell, supra, 139
U.S.App.D.C. at 111,
. When determining the appealability of orders which potentially threaten irreparable harm, courts must often examine the merits of the underlying claim.
See, e. g., United States v. Wood,
While we hold that this protective order is not appealable, we do not foreclose review of an order which is a gross abuse of discretion and irreparably injures one party.
. See note 5, supra.
. In McNeal v. Habib, supra, we reviewed the propriety of the protective order there as part of our review of the final disposition of the case.
. In
Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. Myers,
.The circuit court in
Bell, supra,
139 U.S.App. D.C. at 111,
. Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra, indicate that this hardship principle “remains ‘an exceptional one,’ apparently confined to orders that direct immediate execution of judgment or delivery of property to an opposing party in circumstances that threaten irreparable injury.”
. Several factors may justify the appealability of prejudgment security orders: the risk of collecting a judgment, the need to resolve a substantial question of law, a controversy over the power of the court to enter the order at issue, or the severe hardship such an order may cause. See Wright, Miller & Cooper, supra at 491-94.
. The predecessor of D.C.Code 1973, § 11-721(a)(2)(C), also permitted appeal from orders “dissolving writs of attachment and the like.”
See
D.C.Code 1967, § 11-741 (a)(2). Under that statute, orders affecting funds in the hands of a garnishee were appealable if they also affected the status quo.
See Bridgett v. Perpetual Bldg. Ass’n.,
D.C.Mun.App.,
. We have indicated in the past that we may look to the analogous federal statutes for guidance in this area.
Royal Credit Co. v. Mas Marques,
D.C.App.,
