When Can You File an Interlocutory Appeal in New York Civil Litigation?

Área de práctica:Others

An interlocutory appeal is a request to a higher court to review a trial judge's decision before the case ends.


It is available only when specific legal conditions are met and strict procedural requirements are satisfied. The threshold for obtaining an interlocutory appeal is strict, and you must show that the trial court's order involves a controlling question of law on which there is substantial ground for difference of opinion, or that immediate review will materially advance the case termination. Courts do not grant these appeals lightly, and timing, certification, and procedural compliance directly affect whether your appeal will be heard at all. This article walks through the requirements, procedural hurdles, and strategic considerations that determine whether an interlocutory appeal is viable in your dispute.

Contents


1. Core Requirements for Interlocutory Appeals


RequirementWhat You Must Establish
Controlling Question of LawThe order turns on an unsettled point of law that affects the case outcome and divides judicial opinion
Substantial Ground for DifferenceReasonable jurists could disagree on the legal issue; it is not frivolous or clearly resolved
Material Advancement of TerminationImmediate review will shorten the case, avoid wasteful discovery, or resolve a dispositive issue
Certification by Trial JudgeThe trial court must explicitly certify that the order meets the legal standard and immediate review is appropriate

The certification requirement is your first procedural hurdle. You cannot file an appeal and ask the appellate court to certify the order yourself. The trial judge must sign a certification statement, usually attached to the order or filed separately, that explains why the order qualifies for immediate review. Many practitioners overlook this step, resulting in a dismissed petition before the appellate court considers the merits. If the trial judge refuses to certify, you may ask the appellate court to grant permission directly, but that path is narrower and less frequently successful.

The controlling question of law prong does not require the legal issue to be novel or unprecedented. It means the order decides a point of law that, if wrong, would alter the case trajectory. For example, a ruling on evidence admissibility, contract enforceability, or party standing may qualify if reasonable jurists could disagree and if the ruling materially affects what happens next. Courts scrutinize this prong carefully and often reject appeals on issues they deem settled in prior case law.



2. Procedural Roadmap and Timing Considerations


Once the trial court enters an order, you typically have 30 days to move for certification if the judge has not already granted it. This deadline is firm, and missing it forecloses the interlocutory appeal route for that order. After certification, you file a notice of appeal and petition for leave to appeal in the appellate division, usually within the same 30-day window. Record preservation becomes critical at this stage. You must ensure that all relevant documents, transcripts, and exhibits are included in the record on appeal, because the appellate court will not consider materials outside that record.

In New York state courts, the Appellate Division reviews interlocutory appeals with a deferential standard toward factual findings but reviews legal conclusions de novo. This distinction matters for strategy. If your appeal turns on a question of law, such as contract interpretation, you have a better chance of reversal than if it turns on the trial judge's factual assessment of witness credibility or evidence weight.

Practitioners in high-volume courts often face delays in obtaining certification or appellate rulings. Incomplete loss affidavits, missing transcripts, or service defects can stretch the timeline and result in dismissal. Document your certification request in writing, serve it on all parties, and keep a dated copy. If the judge does not rule within a reasonable time, consider filing a follow-up letter or motion to compel certification.



3. Strategic Defense Angles and Procedural Defects


Opposing counsel will scrutinize your certification motion and petition for weaknesses. Common defenses include arguing that the legal issue is not truly controlling because the case can proceed without resolving it, that the law is settled, or that immediate review will not materially advance termination. If the trial judge has not certified, an opponent may argue that the appellate court lacks jurisdiction to hear the appeal.

Affirmative defects in your petition can result in dismissal even if the underlying legal issue has merit. These include failure to serve the petition on all parties, omission of required certifications, incomplete record on appeal, or failure to comply with appellate rules on formatting or page limits. Many interlocutory appeals fail on procedural grounds, not legal merits. Before filing, have a colleague review your petition against the applicable appellate rules.



4. Interlocutory Appeals in New York State Courts: Practical Significance


In New York state courts, interlocutory appeals are governed by statute and case law that sets a high bar for immediate review. The trial court's discretion to certify is broad, but the appellate court's willingness to accept and decide interlocutory appeals is limited. Even if your trial judge certifies an order, you face a second gatekeeping step at the appellate level. Prepare your petition to explain not only why the legal issue is unsettled but also why waiting until final judgment would waste judicial resources or cause undue prejudice. If the order would require a new trial or would bar entire categories of evidence or claims, make that connection explicit.



5. Documentation, Record Preservation, and Forward Steps


Start building your record for appeal immediately after the trial court issues the order you intend to challenge. Request certified copies of the order, any certification statement, and all motion papers. If a hearing was held, obtain a transcript from the court stenographer. Many practitioners delay transcript requests and discover later that transcripts are unavailable or significantly delayed, jeopardizing the appeal timeline.

Preserve all evidence and communications related to the legal issue you plan to appeal. Document the harm caused by the order. If it bars discovery that would have been relevant, if it allows evidence you believe is inadmissible, or if it creates a dispositive bar to your claims, write a contemporaneous memorandum explaining the impact.

Before filing a certification motion, consult with a colleague on whether the legal issue truly meets the controlling question standard. Many well-intentioned certification motions fail because the legal issue, while important to the parties, is not sufficiently unsettled to warrant immediate appellate review. An honest assessment at this stage can save time and preserve credibility with the trial judge.

Consider whether an interlocutory appeal is the right vehicle or whether other remedies, such as a stay of proceedings or an expedited final judgment, might better serve your interests. If the case involves administrative action or regulatory review, you may have access to an administrative appeal process that operates under different standards.

Finally, evaluate the cost and delay of an interlocutory appeal against the benefit of immediate review. Appellate briefing, oral argument, and decision can take months. If the trial court's ruling does not prevent the case from proceeding to resolution, proceeding to trial and appealing after final judgment may be more efficient. An interlocutory appeal makes sense when the order is truly dispositive, when immediate review will avoid substantial waste, or when the legal issue is so important that it warrants appellate attention before trial.


02 Jun, 2026


La información proporcionada en este artículo es únicamente con fines informativos generales y no constituye asesoramiento legal. Los resultados anteriores no garantizan un resultado similar. La lectura o el uso del contenido de este artículo no crea una relación abogado-cliente con nuestro despacho. Para asesoramiento sobre su situación específica, consulte a un abogado calificado autorizado en su jurisdicción.
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