The district court denied the Motion of L. Steve Marler, an indigent prisoner, to appoint counsel for Marler in his products liability case. Marler appeals that order and, distinguishing our prior circuit authority allowing appeal of orders denying appointed counsel in civil rights cases, we dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction.
I
L. Steve Marler is a prisoner in the Louisiana State Penitentiary. While incarcerated he consumed “the Edge,” an ingestible body chemical distributed by Adonis Health Products. When he subsequently suffered a heart attack, he claimed a causal connection and filed a products liability action in Sep *1142 tember 1992 against Adonis Health Products and its officers. Marler pursued his case by sending out a set of interrogatories, collecting evidence about the Edge’s alleged uses, and obtaining affidavits from his family summarizing their conversations with Adonis’s officers. Marler has also contacted the United States Department of Health and Human Services and the Investigation Division of the State of Louisiana’s Department of Justice.
Perhaps tiring of his labor, he moved the district court to appoint him counsel. Marler argued that his lack of knowledge of tort law and his inability to investigate his claim while in jail were a sufficient basis for the district court to appoint him counsel. The district court summarily denied Marler’s motion and Marler appealed.
II
Because we are a court of limited jurisdiction, before examining the merits of this appeal we must determine whether we have jurisdiction.
Mosley v. Cozby,
Ordinarily, we have jurisdiction only over final decisions of district courts. 28 U.S.C. § 1291. A decision is final if it “ ‘ends the litigation on the merits and leaves nothing for the court to do but execute the judgment.’ ”
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
Nevertheless, we sometimes exercise our jurisdiction over an interlocutory appeal pursuant to the collateral order doctrine.
Cohen v. Beneficial Ind. Loan Corp.,
We have seen no case where a circuit has granted plaintiffs the right to appeal immediately the district court’s decision not to grant them counsel in tort suits. The case before us is a civil, products liability ease. We must consider whether our rationale for holding that a plaintiff can appeal immediately the *1143 denial of counsel in civil rights cases applies as well to products liability cases.
The collateral order doctrine provides that a party can immediately appeal an order from the district court if the district court’s order 1) conclusively determines the disputed issue, 2) resolves an important issue that is completely separate from the merits of the action, and 3) is effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment.
Robbins,
There are statements in the cases about a fourth requirement for
Cohen
appealability: the presentation of a serious and unsettled question of law.
See e.g. Nixon v. Fitzger
ald,
While the judges of the present panel might prefer to hold that the denial of appointment of counsel fails to meet any of the three requirements for appealability, as our former colleagues in the Eleventh Circuit held in
Holt,
Ill
In deciding that an order denying appointment of counsel in a civil rights case would not be effectively reviewable on appeal from a final judgment, the
Robbins
panel thought that civil rights plaintiffs might not pursue their claims to trial and through appeal if denied counsel. Hence, the third requirement of interlocutory appealability was held to be satisfied.
Robbins,
Whether or not that is the circumstance of a civil rights case, it cannot be said to apply to a products liability case. Our dockets demonstrate that counsel accept products liability cases on contingent fees, even in the weakest of cases. By denying Marler an immediate appeal we will not lose an important class of tort claims. Furthermore, to the extent it matters, the denial of an appointed attorney is better reviewed at a later stage of the litigation. We agree with the Eleventh Circuit that we can effectively remedy the effects of an erroneous denial of counsel by vacating the judgment and remanding the proceeding for new trial with appointed counsel.
See Holt,
APPEAL DISMISSED.
Notes
.See Appleby v. Meachum,
.
See Wilborn
v.
Escalderon,
.
See Robbins v. Maggio,
