This is an interlocutory appeal from the denial of a motion to dismiss a complaint for legal malpractice on grounds of
forum non conveniens. See
D.C.Code § 13-425 (2001). In
Frost v. Peoples Drug Store,
The appellee in this case initially did not question our jurisdiction to hear this appeal. But “consent of the parties cannot enlarge our jurisdiction.”
Burtoff v. Burtoff,
As we have done in the past, we now decide again to adhere to the Supreme Court’s teaching regarding the applicability of the collateral order doctrine. We are obliged to overrule Frost and Jenkins and hold that denials of forum non conveniens motions to dismiss are not immediately appealable as of right to this court. Since we therefore do not have jurisdiction to entertain the instant appeal, we dismiss it without reaching the merits. The dismissal is without prejudice to a potential future challenge to the trial court’s ruling after a final judgment is entered in that court.
I.
According to his complaint, 1 appellee Michael Lewis slipped and fell on the ice at a Mobil gas station in Arlington, Virginia on *743 December 18, 1995. In addition to suffering physical injuries, Lewis was allegedly “the victim of racial and other discrimination and harassment” by a station attendant. Lewis hired appellant Sylvia Rolin-ski, a lawyer licensed in both Maryland and the District of Columbia, to sue Mobil and its employee. Lewis signed his contingency fee agreement with Rolinski in Maryland, where Rolinski lived and maintained her law office.
On August 28, 1998, Rolinski filed Lewis’s lawsuit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. Lewis’s complaint against Rolinski alleges that the case against Mobil had no connection with the District, “except that Plaintiff [Lewis] resided in the District of Columbia at the time of filing of suit, but not at the time of [the] incident.” 2 On May 5, 1999, the District Court ruled that venue did not lie in the District of Columbia and granted Mobil’s motion to transfer the case to the Eastern District of Virginia pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1406. A few months later, the Virginia District Court granted judgment on the pleadings to Mobil, holding that because Virginia rather than District of Columbia law applied to § 1406 transfers, Lewis’s claim was barred by Virginia’s two-year statute of limitations for personal injury actions.
A year later, in August 2000, Lewis filed suit against Rolinski in the Superior Court of the District of Columbia. By this time, Lewis was a resident of Maryland (as was Rolinski). Lewis’s complaint charged that Rolinski was professionally negligent in failing to sue Mobil within the two-year Virginia statute of limitations, in lodging the Mobil lawsuit in the District of Columbia (“which was without jurisdiction to entertain such suit”) instead of a proper forum, and in not appealing the District Court’s decision to transfer that suit to Virginia.
Rolinski moved to dismiss the complaint on grounds of
forum non conve-niens.
In ruling on the motion, the trial judge evaluated whether the District of Columbia was a convenient forum for the litigation by weighing the “private” and “public” interest factors listed in
Gulf Oil Corp. v. Gilbert,
The judge next considered the public interest factors,
4
which “emphasize the burden imposed on the forum in relation to its interest in the litigation, as well as the interest of other potential fora in addressing the dispute locally.”
Smith v. Alder Branch Realty Ltd. P’ship,
Rolinski then appealed the judge’s ruling to this court. Focusing on the public interest factors, Rolinski contends that the District has no real connection with this controversy and should not be burdened with it. The lawsuit belongs, she argues, in Maryland, where she has her law office, where Lewis hired her as his lawyer, where both parties were resident when Lewis filed his suit against her, and — of pivotal importance — where the malpractice cause of action arose. The cause of action arose in Maryland and not the District of Columbia, Rolinski explains, because her alleged malpractice lay only in her failure to sue Mobil before the applicable two-year statute of limitations ran. If she caused injury to Lewis, Rolinski continues, it was only by her inaction up to that point, and not by her subsequent filing of the complaint against Mobil in federal court in the District of Columbia (or anything else she did or omitted doing after the limitations period had expired). 5 Hence, Rolin-ski argues, neither her untimely filing in the District nor her membership in the D.C. Bar means that the District has any substantial contacts with or interest in the particular dispute at hand. Moreover, Ro-linski adds, because Maryland has more substantial contacts with the cause of action than the District of Columbia has, the burden was on Lewis to justify his choice of forum in order to avoid dismissal of his complaint. The judge improperly shifted *745 the burden of proof on the forum non conveniens issue to her, Rolinski claims, by not requiring Lewis to furnish such an affirmative justification.
Lewis responds that the judge properly deferred to his choice of forum because it is at best unclear where his malpractice cause of action arose and the District does have substantial contacts with the controversy. Lewis relies not only 'on Rolinski’s conduct and Bar membership in the District of Columbia, but also on his own residence in the District at relevant times prior to the institution of the present action. 6
II.
The jurisdiction of this court to hear appeals from the Superior Court is defined by statute. Subject to certain exceptions that are not pertinent to this appeal, we have jurisdiction to review only “final orders and judgments” of the Superior Court.
7
D.C.Code § ll-721(a)(l) (2001). “The lack of finality is a bar to appellate jurisdiction.”
Dyer v. William S. Bergman & Assocs.,
Normally, an order or judgment is deemed to be final “only if it
*746
disposes of the whole case on its merits so that the court has nothing remaining to do but to execute the judgment or decree already rendered.”
In re Estate of Chuong,
Some trial court rulings that do not conclude the litigation nonetheless are sufficiently conclusive in other respects that they satisfy the finality requirement of our jurisdictional statute. We follow the Supreme Court in recognizing a “small class” of orders that fall within this category:
that small class which finally determine claims of right separable from, and collateral to, rights asserted in the action, too important to be denied review and too independent of the cause itself to require that appellate consideration be deferred until the whole case is adjudicated.
Cohen,
In 1974 this court concluded that what we thought of then as “[t]he broad scope of the
Cohen
holding” warranted allowing interlocutory appeals from denials of motions to dismiss on grounds of
forum non conveniens. Frost,
By 1984, some members of this court were having second thoughts about our holding in
Frost.
In
Jenkins v. Smith,
another interlocutory appeal from a denial of a
forum non conveniens
motion, the court
sua sponte
went en banc to reconsider Frost’s holding. In the event, however, neither party in
Jenkins
urged us to overrule
Frost.
With the issue in that non-adversarial posture, the en banc court issued a brief per curiam opinion that declined to reexamine the jurisdictional question decided in
Frost.
There the matter has rested in this court for the past sixteen years. But in the meantime there was an important development in the Supreme Court. In
Coopers & Lybrand v. Livesay,
The Supreme Court came to that conclusion because “the question of the convenience of the forum is not ‘completely separate from the merits of the action’ ” (the second
Coopers & Lybrand
condition).
Van Cauwenberghe,
Public interest factors relevant to a forum non conveniens determination— such as the “local interest in having localized controversies decided at home” and the interest in having “the trial of a diversity case in a forum that is at home with the state law that must govern the case,” [Gulf Oil, 330 U.S.] at 509[,67 S.Ct. 839 ] — -also thrust the court into the merits of the underlying dispute. To evaluate these factors, the court must consider the locus of the alleged culpable conduct, often a disputed issue, and the connection of that conduct to the plaintiffs chosen forum.
Id. 9
Our opinions in
Frost
and
Jenkins
did not consider whether denials of
forum non
*748
conveniens
motions satisfied the second
Coopers & Lybrand
condition of appeala-bility. Nor, of course, could those opinions have considered the subsequent decision of the Supreme Court in
Van Cauwenberghe.
For both those reasons we are obligated to reconsider our prior holdings. Having “chosen to adopt” the Supreme Court’s collateral order doctrine, we have embraced as well all three requirements for its application that the Supreme Court laid down in
Coopers & Lybrand. Estate of Chuong,
Taking a fresh look at the jurisdictional issue then, we think that we must follow the Supreme Court’s lead in
Van Cauwen-berghe.
Although Rolinski urges us to be skeptical about the Supreme Court’s analysis, this very case illustrates how consideration of a
forum non conveniens
motion “thrust[s] the court into the merits of the underlying dispute.”
The burden of establishing that the District of Columbia is an inconvenient forum ordinarily rests with the defendant. That burden is a heavy one. Once the court has considered the relevant private and public interest factors, “unless the balance is strongly in favor of the defendant, the plaintiffs choice of forum should rarely be disturbed.”
Gulf Oil,
Neither party in this case resided in the District of Columbia when Lewis filed his lawsuit against Rolinski. To decide where to assign the burden of proof and resolve the
forum non conveniens
motion, therefore, it is necessary to determine where Lewis’ malpractice claim arose and — if the answer to that question is Maryland or Virginia rather than the District — which jurisdiction has more substantial contacts with the claim.
See Coulibaly v. Malaqui
*749
as,
The question of where a cause of action for attorney malpractice arises is a question of first impression in this jurisdiction. The courts of other jurisdictions have divided on the issue. Some courts look to the place where the plaintiff was harmed.
See Weiner v. Prudential Mort. Investors, Inc.,
Regardless of which approach this court might take to the problem, resolving it in this case would entangle us in the merits of Lewis’s claim against Rolinski. Under any approach we would need to ascertain, first, the scope of Lewis’s claim — including whether it encompasses only Rolinski’s failure to sue Mobil before the Virginia statute of limitations ran or also what Ro-linski did or did not do in connection with the suit in federal court in the District of Columbia. Then, if we were to adopt the “place of injury” approach, we would need to determine exactly when the injury to Lewis occurred and where Lewis sustained that injury (where, perhaps, he was located, i.e., residing, at that precise time). If, on the other hand, we were to adopt the “place where the negligence occurred” approach, we would need to decide where that was — in Virginia, which may have been the only state where venue was proper for the personal injury action against Mobil; in Maryland, where Rolinski evidently had her law office and did her legal work on that action; or in the District of Columbia, the jurisdiction that Rolinski and Lewis selected for their suit against Mobil. Once we answered these, and perhaps other, questions relating to the substance of Lewis’s malpractice claim, we might have further detailed scrutiny of that claim yet to perform; for if we determined that the claim arose in, say, Virginia, the next step in our analysis would have to be to determine whether Virginia’s or the District’s contacts with the claim were the more substantial.
In this appeal we shall undertake to answer none of the foregoing questions. That Rolinski’s forum non conveniens motion raises such questions only serves to confirm — if confirmation were needed— that the holding of a unanimous Supreme Court in Van Cauwenberghe is correct. A trial court order denying a motion to dismiss on grounds oí forum non conveniens and allowing the action to proceed does not satisfy the stringent requirements of the collateral order doctrine. We have no *750 authority to relax those requirements in order to expand the legislatively defined limits on our jurisdiction. We therefore follow Van Cauwenberghe, expressly overrule the contrary holdings of Frost and Jenkins, and hold that the denial by the Superior Court of a motion to dismiss a complaint on grounds of forum non conve-niens is not immediately appealable to this court as of right. We lack jurisdiction to entertain such an appeal.
In reaching that conclusion, we do not minimize the concern expressed in
Frost
and
Jenkins
that a ruling denying a
forum non conveniens
motion may be effectively unreviewable on appeal from a final judgment (which is the third requirement of the collateral order doctrine as articulated in
Coopers & Lybrand).
An appellant complaining that the District of Columbia is an inconvenient forum has the heavy burden of showing that the trial court abused its “broad discretion” in denying the motion,
see Nixon Peabody LLP v. Beaupre,
As the Supreme Court noted in
Van Cauwenberghe,
these concerns are mitigated to a degree by the potential availability of a statutory procedure for discretionary interlocutory review.
As we have been careful to emphasize in other contexts, the certification procedure of § ll-721(d) “is intended to be exceptional and not merely a means of accelerated review for what may appear to be a difficult issue.”
Medlantic Health Care Group, Inc. v. Cunningham,
III.
We hold that trial court orders denying motions to dismiss on grounds of forum non conveniens do not fall within the collateral order doctrine and are not immediately appealable to this court as of right. As the certification procedure of D.C.Code § ll-721(d) was not invoked in this case, our holding requires us to dismiss the present appeal for lack of jurisdiction without reaching the merits. 10
So ordered.
. The Court acknowledged that "in certain cases, the
forum non conveniens
determination will not require significant inquiry into the facts and legal issues presented by a case, and an immediate appeal might result in substantial savings of time and expense for both the litigants and the courts.”
Id.
at 529,
Notes
. For present purposes we take as true the factual allegations of the complaint.
See
*743
Blake v. Prof'l Travel Corp.
. Interestingly, Rolinski claims that Lewis was working as her law clerk and did the research for his own case on the choice of forum and the statute of limitations applicable to this claim against Mobil — the very issues that Lewis claims Rolinski mishandled. Lewis responds that he deferred to Rolinski’s judgment on those issues.
. The private interest factors listed in Gulf Oil, all of which the judge considered, include:
1) the relative ease of access to sources of proof; 2) the availability of compulsory process for attendance of unwilling witnesses; 3) the cost of obtaining attendance of willing witnesses; 4) the possibility of viewing the premises, if view would be appropriate to the action; 5) all other practical problems concerning the ease, expedition and expense of the trial; 6) the enforceability of a judgment once obtained; 7) evidence that the plaintiff attempted to vex, harass or oppress the defendant by his choice of forum, and 8) the relative advantages and obstacles to fair trial.
Mills v. Aetna Fire Underwriters Ins. Co.
. The public interest factors include:
1) administrative difficulties caused by local court dockets congested with foreign litigation; 2) the local interest in having localized controversies decided at home; 3) the unfairness of imposing the burden of jury duty on the citizens of a forum having no relation to the litigation, and 4) the avoidance of unnecessary problems in conflict of laws and in the interpretation of the laws of another jurisdiction.
Mills,
. Rolinski discounts Lewis's claim, which the trial judge did not address, that she was negligent in not appealing the transfer of her lawsuit against Mobil to the Eastern District of Virginia pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1406. We note that the transfer order was not appeal-able interlocutorily,
see Ukiah Adventist Hosp. v. FTC,
299 U.S.App. D.C. 54, 57,
. Per his complaint, Lewis was a resident of the District of Columbia when Rolinski filed suit on his behalf in the District Court here. The implication of his arguments is that Lewis was also a resident of the District of Columbia before then, at the time the statute of limitations ran on his claims against Mobil. The record does not clearly establish that fact, however; and as mentioned earlier, Lewis alleged in his complaint that he was not a District resident when his causes of action against Mobil arose.
. This court has been given jurisdiction over appeals from certain specified interlocutory orders and rulings of the Superior Court (but not including orders denying motions to dismiss the complaint on forum non conveniens or other grounds). See, e.g., D.C.Code §11-721(a)(2), (3), § 23-104 and § 23-1324(b), (d) (2001). In addition, as we discuss hereinafter, we are authorized in civil cases to permit an interlocutory appeal where the trial judge states in, writing that the ruling in question “involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial ground for a difference of opinion and that an immediate appeal ... may materially advance the ultimate termination of the litigation or case’.” D.C.Code § 11-721(d). The trial judge in this case did not furnish such a statement.
. This rule, that a party must ordinarily raise all claims of error in a single appeal following final judgment on the merits, serves a number of important purposes. It emphasizes the deference that appellate courts owe to the trial judge as the individual initially called upon to decide the many questions of law and fact that occur in the course of a trial. Permitting piecemeal appeals would undermine the independence of the [trial] judge, as well as the special role that individual plays in our judicial system. In addition, the rule is in accordance with the sensible policy of "[avoiding] the obstruction to just claims that would come from permitting the harassment and cost of a succession of separate appeals from the various rulings to which a litigation may give rise, from its initiation to entry of judgment.”
Cobbledick v. United States,
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
. Because our decision that we lack jurisdiction over this appeal overturns prior decisions to the contrary, Rolinski asks that we make our holding prospective only. We cannot do that.
See Davis v. Moore,
