Lead Opinion
This case is an interim review that was initiated by the State in a pending death penalty case. This Court, upon considering the State’s application for interim review and Martin’s motion to dismiss for want of jurisdiction, provisionally granted the application and ordered the parties to address the following question:
Whether this Court has jurisdiction to consider the State’s argument that the State’s motion to recuse was improperly denied and, if so, whether that motion was properly denied.
For the reasons set forth below, we conclude the jurisdiction question in the negative and, accordingly, dismiss the State’s appeal without addressing the recusal question.
We have previously noted the following regarding appeals:
There is no right to appeal granted by either the State or Federal Constitutions to civil litigants or to the defendant or*419 the State in criminal cases. Instead, the right to appeal depends upon statute.
(Footnotes omitted.) State v. Smith,
The State raises the additional argument, never before addressed by this Court,
Because we hold that the interim review procedure is no more permissive regarding the subject matters over which the State may appeal than the statutes governing appeals by the State in ordinary criminal cases, and because the denial of a motion to recuse is not among the issues listed in OCGA § 5-7-1 as appealable by the State in criminal cases, we conclude that we lack jurisdiction to consider the State’s claim that the trial court erred by denying the State’s motion to recuse in this case. Accordingly, this case must be dismissed.
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
State v. Slavny,
This Court has considered interim review appeals by the State of matters not listed in OCGA § 5-7-1 in several previous cases; however, neither the parties nor this Court raised the question of jurisdiction in those cases. State v. Johnson,
Concurrence Opinion
concurring.
As in Ritter v. State,
Since then, a Pennsylvania court has held that an order denying the prosecutor’s motion for recusal is appealable under a rule which permits appeal from collateral orders. Commonwealth v. Stevenson,
Accordingly, I again urge the General Assembly to permit the State to appeal from the denial of a motion to recuse in a criminal case, since the correct determination of the issue of recusal, regardless of who raises it, is critical to the integrity of the entire trial process.
I am authorized to state that Justice Hunstein joins in this concurrence.
