delivered the opinion of the court:
The present appeal arises out of plaintiff’s declaratory judgment action seeking a declaration of nonliability to defendant for the alienation of affections of defendant’s spouse. Defendant appeals from an interlocutory order of the trial court impounding certain court records and prohibiting either party from making public any “pleading filed in this cause nor any discovery papers or transcripts until further order of the court.” We dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Illinois law clearly holds that there can be no appeal from a non-final order unless specifically authorized by the Supreme Court Rules. (Ill. Const. 1970, art. VI, sec. 6; People ex rel. Scott v. Silverstein (1981),
The purpose of Rule 307(a)(1) is to permit, as a matter of right, interlocutory review of the exercise of a court’s equitable power to grant the type of coercive injunctive relief formerly available exclusively in courts of equity jurisdiction. (Lake Shore Racquet Club, Inc. v. Fireman’s Fund Insurance Cos. (1980),
“a judicial process, by which a party is required to do a particular thing, or to refrain from doing a particular thing, according to the exigency of the writ, the most common sort of which operate as a restraint upon the party in the exercise of his real or supposed rights.” (Wangelin v. Goe (1869),50 Ill. 459 , 463.)
It is also frequently stated that whether an order is properly characterized as injunctive and therefore within the provisions of Rule 307(a)(1) must be determined by its substance rather than its form. See, e.g., Smith v. Goldstick (1982),
However, any attempt to define injunctive relief would be incomplete if it did not also take into account the historical traditions peculiar to equity jurisprudence out of which such relief originally arose. (See Baltimore Contractors v. Bodinger (1955),
We believe a similar situation obtains in the case of orders impounding court records. Here, too, the authority to impound did not derive from a court’s power to grant equitable relief but rather from the inherent power any court has to control its own records. (See Rex v. Mayor of Maidstone (1825), 6 Dowl. & R. (Eng.) 334, cited at Annot.,
It is the responsibility of this court to see that no unauthorized extension or reduction of appellate jurisdiction occurs whether by direct or indirect means. Any such ad hoc decision as urged by defendant disorganizes practice by encouraging attempts to secure or oppose appeals with a corresponding waste of time and money. The scope of appellate jurisdiction is defined by rules promulgated by the supreme court and any enlargement on the allowable list of appealable interlocutory orders must be initiated by a change of those rules. Accordingly, we dismiss the present appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
Appeal dismissed.
GOLDBERG and CAMPBELL, JJ., concur.
Notes
Of course, an appeal may be taken from a contempt citation for failure to obey a subpoena on the rationale that the citation is a final order in a collateral proceeding — but not beforehand under the interlocutory appeal provisions. See People ex rel. Scott v. Silverstein (1981),
