THE COURT:
*876Does an appeal of an order disqualifying counsel result in an automatic stay pursuant *676to Code of Civil Procedure section 916 ?
We decline to address appellants' request for a discretionary stay of all trial court proceedings pursuant to section 923. Given our holding with regard to the automatic stay of the disqualification order, we deem it prudent for the parties to submit any remaining disputes to the trial court in the first instance.
PROCEDURAL HISTORY
This action commenced in March 2017. The dispute is between a contractor (respondent) and subcontractor (appellants). The parties sued each other for alleged damages arising out of a construction project on State Route 91.
On June 26, 2017, respondent filed a motion to disqualify Pepper Hamilton LLP and its individual attorneys (collectively, Pepper Hamilton) from representing appellants in this action and to issue additional injunctive relief pertaining to confidential documents. Respondent claimed that Pepper Hamilton, appellants' litigation counsel, had improperly accessed documents made available by respondent solely for mediation sessions that preceded the commencement of the action.
Appellants opposed the motion, primarily asserting that Pepper Hamilton did not violate the parties' written confidentiality agreement by accessing the documents or subsequently filing a complaint on behalf of appellants while in possession of those documents.
On July 31, 2017, the court granted the motion. The court found "that Pepper Hamilton has obtained confidential and privileged documents that would likely be used advantageously against [respondent] during the course of litigation. Disqualification is therefore appropriate to eliminate the possibility that Pepper Hamilton would exploit the unfair advantage."
Appellants promptly filed notices of appeal. On August 3, 2017, the trial court denied appellants' ex parte application to stay proceedings pending the appeal, rejecting the assertion that the appeal automatically stayed proceedings.
On August 4, 2017, appellants filed a petition for writ of supersedeas, arguing: (1) their appeal of the disqualification order resulted in an automatic *878stay of all trial court proceedings; or (2) if there is no automatic stay, this court should exercise its discretionary power to stay all trial court proceedings. Respondent filed an initial opposition to the petition.
On August 10, 2017, we issued a temporary stay of all trial court proceedings and invited further briefing by the parties. The parties responded and this matter is now set for determination.
DISCUSSION
Among other contentions, the petition presents two pure questions of law: (1) is a *677party who appeals an order disqualifying an attorney statutorily entitled to an automatic stay; and (2) if so, does the automatic stay extend to all trial court proceedings? ( § 916, subd. (a).) We have chosen to focus solely on these two questions in this opinion and forego (for the time being) determining whether a discretionary stay of all trial court proceedings would be appropriate. (See § 923 ["reviewing court" has discretion "to make any order appropriate to preserve the status quo ... or otherwise in aid of its jurisdiction"].)
Given the narrow issues under consideration, supersedeas is the proper remedy and our review is de novo. ( Quiles v. Parent (2017)
A Step Back: Why are Attorney Disqualification Orders Appealable in the First Place?
Asking whether this appeal automatically stays proceedings in the trial court presupposes that attorney disqualification orders are appealable. Of course, orders granting or denying attorney disqualification motions are immediately appealable in California state courts. (E.g., Costello v. Buckley (2016)
The basis for this rule is not obvious or inevitable. "A trial court's authority to disqualify an attorney derives from the power inherent in every court '[t]o control in furtherance of justice, the conduct of its ministerial officers, and of all other persons in any manner connected with a judicial *879proceeding before it, in every matter pertaining thereto.' " ( People ex rel. Dept. of Corporations v. SpeeDee Oil Change Systems, Inc. (1999)
Our Supreme Court, however, long ago held that an order denying a disqualification motion was appealable. ( Meehan v. Hopps (1955)
To be precise, Meehan was an appeal of an order denying a "motion to enjoin ... counsel from further participation in the *678case and to restrain such counsel from disclosing certain confidential information pertaining thereto." ( Meehan , supra , 45 Cal.2d at p. 214,
First, the order in Meehan was one refusing to grant an injunction. ( Meehan , supra , 45 Cal.2d at pp. 215-216,
Second, the order appealed in Meehan was appealable because it was "a final order upon a collateral issue." ( Meehan , supra , 45 Cal.2d at p. 216,
*679In sum, the order disqualifying Pepper Hamilton is appealable, both because it is an order granting an injunction and an order granting a final collateral order. The premises accepted by our Supreme Court in making this rule are important to the remainder of our analysis.
The Text of the Relevant Statutes Suggest an Automatic Stay is Plausible.
We begin our analysis of the questions presented with an examination of the relevant statutes. (See Quiles , supra , 10 Cal.App.5th at pp. 139-140,
*881"Except as provided in Sections 917.1 to 917.9, inclusive, the perfecting of an appeal stays proceedings in the trial court upon the judgment or order appealed from or upon the matters embraced therein or affected thereby, including enforcement of the judgment or order, but the trial court may proceed upon any other matter embraced in the action and not affected by the judgment or order." ( § 916, subd. (a).)
Sections 917.1 to 917.8 do not apply to any appeal of an attorney disqualification order, and section 917.9 is (at the very least) inapplicable on the record presented. (See §§ 917.1 [money judgment], 917.15 [hazardous waste], 917.2 [assignment or delivery of personal property], 917.3 [execution of instruments], 917.4 [directing sale, conveyance, or delivery of real property], 917.5 [appointment of receiver], 917.6 [judgment directing two or more of the acts specified in §§ 917.1 through 917.5], 917.65 [right to attach order], 917.7 [custody of minor], 917.75 [Fam. Code attorney fees or costs], 917.8 [miscellaneous-usurping public office, corporate inspection, nuisance declaration], 917.9 [discretionary undertaking requirements].)
"The purpose of the automatic stay provision of section 916, subdivision (a) 'is to protect the appellate court's jurisdiction by preserving the status quo until the appeal is decided. The [automatic stay] prevents the trial court from rendering an appeal futile by altering the appealed judgment or order by conducting other proceedings that may affect it.' " ( Varian Medical Systems, Inc. v. Delfino (2005)
Appellants perfected an appeal from the order disqualifying Pepper Hamilton. This was an appealable order. Broadly speaking, it appears an automatic stay in this case serves the purpose of section 916. Before wading into applicable case law, we observe that a straightforward reading of the language and purpose of section 916, subdivision (a), suggests: (1) "enforcement of the ... [disqualification] order" is potentially stayed pending appeal; and (2) there is an open question as to whether other trial court proceedings are "embraced *680therein" or "affected" by the attorney disqualification order. *882Appealing a Denial of an Attorney Disqualification Motion Automatically Stays Nothing.
With that background, we turn to Reed , supra ,
Reed started with Meehan 's holding that "an order regarding disqualification of counsel is 'unquestionably collateral to the merits of the case' " and concluded there was no automatic stay. ( Reed , supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 453,
Next, Reed applied Meehan 's"alternative holding that an order denying disqualification of counsel is an order denying an injunction" and again concluded the appeal did "not automatically stay the trial proceedings." ( Reed , supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 453,
Thus, under Reed , regardless of whether one or both of Meehan 's holdings are applied, there is no automatic stay of trial court proceedings when a party appeals the denial of an attorney disqualification motion.
Reed offered some comfort to losing parties appealing the denial of a disqualification motion-they can seek relief from the trial court or appellate court to stay proceedings "to maintain the status quo pending the appeal." ( *681Reed , supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 454,
Does an Automatic Stay Arise From an Appeal of an Order Granting Disqualification?
We now turn to the primary issue presented. No case has decided whether an appeal of an order granting an attorney disqualification motion automatically stays enforcement of the order.
A straightforward application of the text of section 916, subdivision (a), suggests that enforcement of an order disqualifying counsel is automatically stayed by an appeal, particularly when analyzed narrowly under the collateral order rubric. An appealable collateral order is-in essence-a final judgment, wholly distinct from the ongoing case from which it arose. ( In re Marriage of Skell e y , supra , 18 Cal.3d at p. 368,
*884Of course, the attorney disqualification order is also appealable as an injunction. The two holdings of Meehan , supra ,
Section 525 defines an injunction as "a writ or order requiring a person to refrain from a particular act." (Italics added.) Despite this restrictive definition, courts may compel parties to either: (1) "refrain from a particular act"-a prohibitory injunction-or; (2) perform an "affirmative act"-a mandatory injunction. ( Davenport v. Blue Cross of California (1997)
*682"An appeal stays a mandatory but not a prohibitory injunction. This rule is clear, but whether a decree is one or the other may be difficult to determine in some situations since an order entirely negative or prohibitory in form may prove upon analysis to be mandatory and affirmative in essence and effect." ( Kettenhofen v. Superior Court , supra , 55 Cal.2d at p. 191,
Courts distinguish between mandatory and prohibitory injunctions to preserve the status quo pending appeals. ( Paramount Pictures Corp. v. Davis (1964)
The challenged order in this case is generic. "The motion ... for an order disqualifying [Pepper Hamilton] from this litigation ... is granted." As noted above, however, the form of the order is not the true issue. It would have only served as a distraction had the court phrased its order in mandatory or prohibitive language. The legal issue presented is whether an order disqualifying an attorney from ongoing participation in civil litigation is a mandatory *885injunction (requiring affirmative action that changes the status quo) or a prohibitory injunction (restraining parties and attorneys from taking particular actions, consistent with the status quo). Reasonable arguments can be mustered for either conclusion, and the answer depends largely on how one defines the "status quo."
Appellants contend the order is a mandatory injunction. Prior to the disqualification motion, Pepper Hamilton represented appellants as litigation counsel in this case. Pepper Hamilton filed pleadings and otherwise pursued appellants' interests. The effect of the challenged order is to: (1) force appellants to terminate Pepper Hamilton as litigation counsel (or, put another way, force Pepper Hamilton to withdraw from the representation); and (2) force appellants to retain a different firm to represent appellants in this litigation.
Respondent counters that the order is a prohibitory injunction. From respondent's perspective, the order does not compel *683anyone to affirmatively do anything. Pepper Hamilton must refrain from further participation in this litigation. Appellants must refrain from further reliance on Pepper Hamilton in this litigation. That is the full extent of the implied terms of the order. Secondly, even if the order is construed to require some affirmative conduct, the affirmative acts required "are merely incidental to [the order's] purpose of prohibiting [appellants and Pepper Hamilton] from continuing to engage in" unethical conduct. ( People ex rel. Brown v. iMergent, Inc. (2009)
While acknowledging the difficulty of this issue, we conclude that appellants accurately identify the pertinent "status quo." An order disqualifying an attorney from continuing to represent a party in ongoing litigation is a mandatory injunction because it requires affirmative acts that upset the status quo at the time the disqualification motion was filed.
Recall the framework for granting disqualification of counsel. A lawyer's representation of a party in civil litigation is not inherently problematic or blameworthy. The baseline assumption in every civil action is that parties are free to choose an attorney to represent them and attorneys are free to choose whether to represent the party. (See William H. Raley Co. v. Superior Court (1983)
Moreover, the consequence of staying enforcement of an order disqualifying an attorney is to avoid, in all likelihood, mooting the appeal. (See Varian , supra , 35 Cal.4th at p. 189,
Finally, we posit that automatically staying orders disqualifying counsel will not lead to abusive results. Motions to disqualify attorneys are often filed for tactical reasons. This observation was offered as support for Reed 's holding that appeals of orders denying disqualification motions should not stay trial court proceedings. ( Reed , supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at p. 456,
Does the Automatic Stay Extend to All Trial Court Proceedings?
There still remains the secondary question of whether all trial court proceedings are stayed. ( § 916, subd. (a) [automatic stay applies not only to enforcement of challenged order, but to "matters embraced therein or affected thereby"].) "In determining whether a proceeding is embraced *685in or affected by the appeal, we must consider the appeal and its possible outcomes in *888relation to the proceeding and its possible results." ( Varian , supra , 35 Cal.4th at p. 189,
Though decided in different contexts, the case law already discussed in this opinion convincingly demonstrates that an automatic stay of a disqualification order does not extend to all trial court proceedings in the typical case. In Meehan , our Supreme Court held that the attorney disqualification order before it was collateral to trial proceedings on the merits. ( Meehan , supra , 45 Cal.2d at pp. 216-217,
The disqualification order in this case is likewise collateral to the parties' dispute. Fundamentally, this is a lawsuit arising out of a construction project, not one concerning the lawyers' use of confidential documents. Proceedings directed toward resolving the construction dispute will not interfere with this court's determination of the attorney disqualification issue. ( Varian , supra , 35 Cal.4th at p. 190,
Although all trial court proceedings are not subject to the automatic stay, there are some potential issues embraced in or affected by the appeal from the disqualification order that could be subject to the automatic stay. (See § 916, subd. (a).) The trial court disqualified Pepper Hamilton based on its possession and potential use of certain privileged and/or confidential documents. Further trial court proceedings concerning the protected nature of the documents or their permissible use could affect our determination of the disqualification issue, and may be subject to the automatic stay. The parties, however, have not identified any such trial court proceedings, and we therefore lack the *889factual record necessary to define the parameters of the automatic stay.
The parties both raise practical objections to a rule automatically staying enforcement of the attorney disqualification order but not all trial court proceedings pending appeal. As discussed below, those practical objections can be dealt with flexibly in the context of motions or petitions for a discretionary stay of remaining proceedings.
Appellants' Request for a Discretionary Stay of All Proceedings.
Appellants also request, in the alternative, a discretionary stay of all trial court proceedings pending resolution of this appeal. (§ 923; Reed , supra , 92 Cal.App.4th at pp. 454-457,
In the interests of judicial economy, we decline at this time to rule on appellants' request for a discretionary stay. It is premature for this court to conduct a preliminary review of the merits of this appeal to see if there is a " 'substantial question' " (see Veyna v. Orange County Nursery, Inc. (2009)
The order disqualifying Pepper Hamilton cannot be enforced pending this appeal, eliminating appellants' primary argument for irreparable harm. But appellants may be leery of continuing to litigate the case with Pepper *890Hamilton because an affirmance of the disqualification order will mean they need to switch counsel at a later point in the litigation. And Pepper Hamilton may be reluctant to appear in further proceedings pending this appeal without the express consent of respondent, given the fact that respondent is accusing Pepper Hamilton of unethical conduct.
Though they do not acknowledge it in their briefs here (which were premised on the argument that no stay should issue), respondent now appears to have an interest in staying some or all trial court proceedings. The basis of the disqualification motion was that allowing Pepper Hamilton to continue to participate in the litigation would be unfair and prejudicial to respondent. Respondent must now reevaluate and balance whether it is more important to proceed with some or all trial court proceedings, or to exclude Pepper Hamilton from any further involvement pending resolution of the appeal.
The best outcome in this case (and future similarly situated cases) will be for the parties to stipulate to the terms of a stay of trial court proceedings. Trial courts will undoubtedly be receptive if cooperation proves feasible. Parties in these cases may agree that all or some proceedings should be stayed pending appeal, depending *687on the particular exigencies of the litigation. For instance, it may be particularly important to depose certain witnesses immediately; a blunt stay of all proceedings by this court would foreclose the parties and trial court from considering such a carve out.
Should the parties not come to an agreement, they may file a noticed motion for a stay of trial court proceedings (in whole or in part) in the trial court. (See Veyna v. Orange County Nursery, Inc. , supra , 170 Cal.App.4th at p. 157,
DISPOSITION
Let a writ of supersedeas issue staying enforcement of the order disqualifying counsel for appellants, Pepper Hamilton. Pepper Hamilton may continue to represent appellants in this matter pending the resolution of this appeal. The petition for writ of supersedeas is denied to the extent it requests a discretionary stay of all trial court proceedings. The partial denial of the petition is without prejudice to further proceedings in the trial court or in this court as discussed in this opinion.
The temporary stay imposed by this court on August 10, 2017 is modified to stay only enforcement of the disqualification order. The temporary stay is dissolved with regard to its stay of all trial court proceedings. As modified, *891the temporary stay shall remain in place pending finality of this opinion. Respondent's request for judicial notice, filed on August 17, 2017, is denied.
Before Aronson, Acting P.J., Fybel, J., and Thompson, J.
All statutory references shall be to the Code of Civil Procedure.
Appellants are URS Corporation and AECOM. Respondent is Atkinson/Walsh Joint Venture.
A close reading of Meehan suggests that not every order ruling on the issue of attorney disqualification is necessarily one granting or denying an injunction. Arguably, a party could avoid the scope of Meehan 's first holding (if not subsequent case law) by scrupulously avoiding the language of injunctive relief in a disqualification motion. (See Truck Ins. Exchange v. Fireman's Fund Ins. Co. (1992)
Concerning orders denying the disqualification of counsel, courts since Meehan have noted a doctrinal problem with this second rationale. (See, e.g., Machado, supra, 148 Cal.App.4th at pp. 882-883,
We need not decide whether section 917.9 applies to the appeal of an order granting an attorney disqualification motion. "The perfecting of an appeal shall not stay enforcement of the judgment or order in cases not provided for in Sections 917.1 to 917.8, inclusive, if the trial court, in its discretion, requires an undertaking and the undertaking is not given, in any of the following cases: [¶] ... [¶] (2) Appellant is required to perform an act for respondent's benefit pursuant to the judgment or order under appeal." (§ 917.9, subd. (a).) It might be posited that an order disqualifying counsel is an order requiring appellants to perform an act for respondent, i.e., terminate the disqualified attorneys and hire new attorneys. But respondent did not move for a discretionary undertaking and the trial court therefore did not consider the matter.
Unlike a situation in which the motion is granted, there is no possibility of staying only enforcement of the order denying the disqualification motion. There is nothing to stay because such an order does not require anything of anyone.
The parties each cite cases in which the procedural history indicates their preferred outcome, but none of these cases actually analyzed the issue and reached a holding. (See, e.g., Coldren v. Hart, King & Coldren, Inc. (2015)
This second point is particularly true of corporate parties, which cannot represent themselves in court. (Ferruzzo v. Superior Court (1980)
Of course, even if there were no automatic stay of the disqualification order, appellants could always request a discretionary stay. (See Reed, supra, 92 Cal.App.4th at pp. 454-456,
Conceivably, our holding could encourage parties to file appeals rather than writ petitions when faced with an order disqualifying counsel. Writ petitions are almost always a better vehicle for resolving challenges to attorney disqualification orders. This consequence, for good or ill, flows primarily from the rule making attorney disqualification orders appealable. If writ petitions are a better mechanism for resolving attorney disqualification issues, our Legislature or Supreme Court can abrogate or overrule Meehan, supra,
It appears the parties do not contemplate any further trial court proceedings concerning the proper handling and use of these documents. At the hearing on the disqualification motion, the trial court orally ordered the pertinent documents to be destroyed. Appellants agreed at the hearing to comply with that oral order. Appellants represented in documents filed with this court that they in fact have destroyed the pertinent documents. The only remaining issue regarding the documents appears to be whether appellants sufficiently destroyed the documents, a question already submitted to this court by way of respondent's motion to dismiss the appeal pursuant to the disentitlement doctrine. By order of September 21, 2017, we indicated that this motion will be decided in conjunction with the decision on appeal.
