delivered the opinion of the court:
This appeal is brought from a mediation order entered by the circuit court of Williamson County referring this lawsuit, brought by Short Brothers Construction, Inc., against Korte & Luitjohan Contractors, Inc., Safeco Insurance Company of America, and Carterville Community Unit School District No. 5, to mediation pursuant to a local rule of the First Judicial Circuit that gives circuit court judges discretion to refer any civil case to mediation. The trial court entered the mediation order on its own motion. The local rule provides that, upon an assignment to mediation, all further action in the court case shall be stayed until the mediation is complete. Korte & Luitjohan Contractors, Inc., appeals from the mediation order.
The appellant posits this court’s jurisdiction on Supreme Court Rule 307(b) (188 Ill. 2d R. 307(b)), which provides for an appeal from certain interlocutory orders when they are entered ex parte. Among the types of interlocutory orders that are appealable under Supreme Court Rule 307 are orders granting, modifying, refusing, dissolving, or refusing to dissolve or modify an injunction. 188 Ill. 2d R. 307(a)(1). The appellant argues that the mediation order constitutes an order in the nature of an injunction, in that it orders the parties to submit the case to mediation and also acts as a stay on any further proceedings in the trial court pending the completion of the mediation process.
The appellee, Short Brothers Construction, Inc., has filed a motion to dismiss this appeal for the reason that the mediation order is not a final and appealable order and is not an appealable interlocutory order because it is merely ministerial or administrative in nature and is not in the nature of an injunction. We have ordered the motion to be taken with the case. Because we agree with the appellee’s position, we dismiss this appeal.
Whether an order constitutes an appealable injunctive order under Rule 307(a)(1) must be determined from its substance rather than its form. Burns v. Celotex Corp.,
We believe that the mediation order entered in the case at bar falls into this category of administrative, noninjunctive orders, which are not appealable under Supreme Court Rule 307(a)(1). It seems self-evident that the purpose of the mediation process, and the mediation order in the case at bar, is to streamline the judicial process by encouraging compromise and settlement, if not of the entire controversy then at least some portions of it, thereby reducing the workload of the circuit court and lessening the expense and burden to the parties. The mediation order is clearly related to the circuit court’s inherent authority to control its own docket. The mediation order is ministerial or administrative in nature, rather than injunctive in nature, because it is regulating the procedural details of the litigation, rather than affecting the rights of the parties. See In re Asbestos Cases,
Because the mediation order entered by the circuit court is ministerial or administrative in nature rather than injunctive in nature, it is not appealable pursuant to Supreme Court Rule 307(a)(1). We therefore have no jurisdiction to consider this appeal and hereby dismiss it.
For the foregoing reasons, this appeal is hereby dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
DONOVAN, EJ., and HOEKINS, J., concur.
