Ford Motor Company appeals from the denial of its petition for a writ of mandamus and/or prohibition in which Ford sought to have the Superior Court of Clarke County rule that a judge of the State Court of Clarke County had violated clear legal duties under Georgia law and had grossly abused his discretion. The state court judge had issued a discovery order requiring Ford to produce documents Ford contended were privileged under the attorney work-product doctrine because they had been prepared in anticipation of litigation and the statutory exception to that privilege had not been met. We affirm the superior court’s denial of extraordinary relief and reiterate the precept that mandamus is not a vehicle by which a party may obtain review of a judicial order which is subject to appellate review.
The defendant in the mandamus action filed by Ford is Judge Kent Lawrence of the State Court of Clarke County. In a product liability action brought by intervenor Artumus Gibson, Jr., against Ford, Judge Lawrence conducted an in camera inspection of disputed documents and ordered Ford to give the plaintiffs crash test documents the judge acknowledged had been prepared in anticipation of litigation because the judge determined “the substantial equivalent of the documents can not be obtained by Plaintiffs without undue hardship, and the Plaintiffs have a substantial need for the documents____” See OCGA § 9-11-26 (b) (3). After Judge Lawrence denied Ford’s motion for reconsideration and ordered Ford to produce the disputed discovery material, Ford filed in superior court its petition for a writ of mandamus and/or prohibition. The superior court held a hearing at which plaintiff Gibson was permitted to intervene in the mandamus action. The superior court issued an order denying Ford’s application for extraordinary relief after finding “Judge Lawrence has neither violated any legal duties nor grossly abused his discretion. In fact, . . . Judge Lawrence has not abused his discretion whatsoever.” Ford filed a direct appeal to this Court from the denial of mandamus relief. 1
In each of the foregoing cases, this Court ruled that the mandamus court had properly denied mandamus relief seeking to compel judicial action different from the judicial action taken because, in each case, the judicial action complained of was subject to appellate review, whether it be by means of the interlocutory application procedure or by pursuing the issue in the context of an appeal from an adverse final judgment.
White v. Lumpkin,
supra,
Ford suggests our decision in
Carey Canada, Inc. v. Head,
Citing North Fulton Med. Center v. Stephenson,
Ford has obtained access to interlocutory appellate review, despite the trial court having declined to issue a certificate of immediate review, by the grant of supersedeas by the Court of Appeals (see footnote 1, supra) and, like all litigants, Ford has the right to appeal upon the entry of an adverse final judgment. Since Ford has methods of obtaining appellate review, the extraordinary writ of mandamus is not available, and the superior court did not err when it denied mandamus relief to Ford.
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Ford filed its petition for writ of mandamus on June 28, 2004. On August 10, 2004, after the mandamus court had denied mandamus relief and the plaintiffs in the underlying tort litigation had filed a motion for sanctions, Ford filed in this Court a motion seeking to stay Judge Lawrence’s discovery order and to stay Judge Lawrence’s consideration of the motion for sanctions. We denied Ford’s motion on August 12. On August 25, Judge Lawrence granted the motion for sanctions, and entered a clarifying order on August 26. Ford filed a notice of appeal from the August 25-26 orders which Judge Lawrence dismissed pursuant to OCGA § 5-6-48 (b) (2). In his September 1 order, Judge Lawrence invited Ford to seek appellate review by applying for supersedeas pursuant to Rule 40 (b) of the Rules of the Court of Appeals. Judge Lawrence dismissed a second notice of appeal filed by Ford and Ford then filed a petition for supersedeas in the Court of Appeals. On September 7, the Court of Appeals issued an order granting the petition for supersedeas of Judge Lawrence’s orders dismissing Ford’s notices of appeal “[b]ecause it appears that the August 25, 2004 order of [Judge Lawrence] . . . constitutes (in addition to a discovery sanction) a contempt order or ruling, as contemplated by
Johnson & Johnson v. Kaufman,
