This appeal presents one simple issue—whether an immediate appeal may be taken, under the collateral order doctrine, from an order denying a motion to dismiss a civil action on the ground of inconvenient forum. We shall hold that it may not and shall therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Special Appeals dismissing petitioners’ appeal.
BACKGROUND
In April, 1998, respondents Freddie James and Beverly James filed suit in the Circuit Court for Baltimore City against 29 corporate defendants, seven of which had their principal place of business in Maryland. The other 22 defendants were incorporated or had thеir principal place of business in various other States. The complaint is titled “Short Form Asbestos Complaint.” It provides very little information but incorporates by reference “The Law Offices of Peter T. Nicholl Master Complaint CT-5,” which is nowhere to be found in the record extract. It is evident, and not disputed, however, that the complaint arises from Mr. James’s contracting of mesothelioma due to his exposure to asbestos. In May, 1998, respondents Thomas Wise and Barbara Wise filed a similar short form complaint against 30 corporate defendants, seven of which had their principal place of business in Maryland. As with the James complaint, the Wise complaint provides little information but incorporates the Nicholls Master Complaint CT-5 and arises from the contracting of mesothelioma due to exposure to asbestos.
In July, 1998, petitioners Pittsburgh Corning and Owens Corning—two of the defendants named in the James and Wise cоmplaints—filed motions to dismiss those complaints on the ground of inconvenient forum. The motions were based on the facts that the plaintiffs were all Virginia residents, that their exposure to asbestos products occurred in Virginia, at the Newport News Shipyard, and that they never lived in Maryland or were exposed to asbestos in this State. In accompanying memoranda, the petitioners noted that the *660 plaintiffs’ physicians resided in Virginia, that fact witnesses with knowledge of the Newport News Shipyard would likely be found in Virginia, that relevant documentary evidence also would likely be in Virginia, and that, under Maryland conflict of laws рrinciples, Virginia law would apply to the claims. None of the defendants, to our knowledge, has ever challenged either the subject matter jurisdiction of the circuit court or the jurisdiction of that court over them; nor does there appear to be any basis for such a challenge in this record. Although they asserted that Maryland is “a distinctly inconvenient forum” for trial, they made no claim of any actual inability to obtain and present testimonial or documentary evidence, or other specific prejudice, if trial were conducted in Maryland. Their principal argument seemed to be based on the more altruistic concern that, if these Virginia plaintiffs are permitted to litigate their cases in Maryland, it “would clearly frustrate the Court’s continuing efforts to provide trial dates to its own citizens.” Owens Corning added that “Maryland jurors should not be required to give up 4-6 weeks of their lives to hear a case that originated in all salient respects in the Commonwealth of Virginia, while other cases involving Maryland citizens remain on the docket.”
On August 17, 1998, the court, by order of Judge Joseph H.H. Kaplan, the circuit administrative judge, denied the motions. A week later, the two cases, along with several others, were consolidated for trial sсheduled to commence on June 7, 1999. Petitioners noted immediate appeals from Judge Kaplan’s order, claiming the right to file such an appeal under the collateral order doctrine. On respondents’ motion, the Court of Special Appeals dismissed the appeals under Maryland Rule 8—602(а)(1) (appeal not allowed by the rules or other law). We granted certiorari to review that ruling.
DISCUSSION
We have made clear, time and again, as has the United States Supreme Court, that the collateral order doctrine is a very narrow exception to the general rule that appellate review ordinarily must await the entry оf a final
*661
judgment disposing of all claims against all parties. It is applicable to a “small class” of cases in which the interlocutory order sought to be reviewed (1) conclusively determines the disputed question, (2) resolves an important issue, (3) resolves an issue that is completely separate from the merits of the action,
and
(4) would be effectively unreviewable if the appeal had to await the entry of a final judgment.
See Peat & Co. v. Los Angeles Rams,
The issue of whether an order denying a motion to dismiss or transfer based on incоnvenient forum raises an issue “completely separate from the merits of the action” was addressed squarely by the Supreme Court in
Van Cauwenberghe v. Biard,
The Court first determined that, in ruling upon a motion to dismiss for inconvenient forum, the trial court must look into “the relative ease of access to sources of proof; availability of compulsory process for attendance of unwilling ... witnesses; possibility of view of premises, if view would be appropriate to the action; and all other practical problems that make trial of a case easy, expeditious, and inexpensivе.”
Van Cauwenberghe, supra,
Petitioners urge that this Court “need not, and should not, mechanically adopt the
[Van Cauwenberghe
] ruling,” pointing out that it involved an interpretation of Federal procedure that is not binding on us and that it may have been influenced by the Supreme Court’s recognition that an interlocutory appeal was, or might have been, possible under 28 U.S.C. § 1292. It is of interest to note that the conclusion reached in
Van Cauwenberghe
merely confirmed those reached earlier in five of the Federal Circuits.
See Carlenstolpe v. Merck & Co., Inc.,
Petitioners argue that, if we were to look at each case individually in determining whether the issues raised by the inconvenient forum motion are completely separate from the merits of the action, this case might well warrant immediate review. As the Van Cauwenberghe Court held, however, we cannot establish rules of appealability for individual cases, for there would then be little or no certainty in this important area. Parties would be encouraged and, as a practical matter, perhaps even required, to file immediate appeals in every case, leading to the very harm sought to be avoided by the final judgment rule. Justice Marshall made the more convincing point that, in many of these cases, the court must, indeed, inquire into the underlying facts and legal theories of the case in order to consider and resolve the various factors that will *664 determine whether the pending forum is, in fact, inconvenient. The necessity of that inquiry, the validity and results of which will be challenged in the appeal, swirls the issues presented by the motion with those presented by the claim itself, in both the trial and appellate courts, thereby negating the notion that the issues are “completely separate.”
Petitioners fare no better with respect to the fourth element, of unreviewability, which, in
Bunting v. State,
Petitioners claim that, if they are required to proceed to trial in Maryland and await correction of what they regаrd as an erroneous ruling until after final judgment, their right not to be tried in the instant forum “will be irretrievably lost.” In their brief, they suggest that the denial of a motion to dismiss based on an inconvenient forum is always immediately appeal-able because, quoting
Jenkins v. Smith,
Our view as to that was, to some extent, foreshadowed in
Stewart v. State,
In
Lennox v. Mull,
There are but a few decisions from courts in other States, some holding that orders denying a motion to dismiss based on inconvenient forum are immediately appealable, some holding to the contrary. In some of those cases, the issue was resolved on the basis of a specific rule or statute. They are not helpful to our analysis. The holding in
Lennox v. Mull
is entirely consistent with the recent pronouncements from this Court, beginning with
Stewart
and
Parrott
and continuing through
Bunting v. State, supra,
“In sum, the idea that аn issue is not effectively reviewable after the termination of trial because it involves a ‘right’ to avoid the trial itself, should be limited to double jeopardy claims and a very few other extraordinary situations. Otherwise, as previously indicated, there would be a proliferation of appeals under the сollateral order doctrine. This would be flatly inconsistent with the long-established and sound public policy against piecemeal appeals.”
Bunting,
JUDGMENT OF COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS AFFIRMED, WITH COSTS. MANDATE TO ISSUE FORTHWITH.
Notes
. We adopted the collateral order doctrine as set forth by the Supreme Court in
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
