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LaGrua, Justice. We granted certiorari in this case to determine whether a trial court’s order denying a motion to withdraw as counsel based on alleged conflicts of interest is immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine. For the reasons that follow, we conclude that such orders do not fall within “the very small class” of trial court orders that are appealable under that doctrine, Duke v. State, 306 Ga. 171, 172 (1) (829 SE2d 348) (2019), and thus we affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision in Buckner-Webb v. State, 360 Ga. App. 329 (861 SE2d 181) (2021), albeit for different reasons. I. Pertinent Facts and Procedural History In March 2013, Diane Buckner-Webb, Theresia Copeland, Sharon Davis-Williams, Tabeeka Jordan, Michael Pitts, and Shani Robinson (collectively, “Defendants”) were indicted by a Fulton County grand jury, along with 35 other educators and administrators of the Atlanta Public Schools (“APS”), for conspiracy to violate the Georgia Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (“RICO”) Act, OCGA § 16-14-1 et seq., and other crimes, arising out of their alleged participation in a conspiracy to alter students’ standardized test scores. Of the 35 indicted, 12 APS employees, including Defendants, were tried together between August 2014 and April 2015. In April 2015, the jury found Defendants and five others guilty of at least one count of conspiracy to violate the RICO Act. In April and May 2015, Defendants filed timely motions for new trial through their respective trial attorneys. The trial transcripts were filed into the record between June 2015 and October 2016. Thereafter, despite the fact that each Defendant was represented by a separate attorney at trial, the Circuit Public Defender appointed only one attorney, Stephen R. Scarborough, to jointly represent Defendants as appellate counsel, and he formally entered an appearance on Defendants’ behalf on April 26, 2017. The trial court held a status hearing on Defendants’ motions for new trial in December 2018. Following the status hearing, Defendants were given six months to file particularized motions for new trial, and the State was given six months to respond. On June 28, 2019, more than two years after Scarborough’s appointment as appellate counsel for Defendants and around the time Defendants’ particularized motions for new trial were due for filing, Scarborough filed a “Motion for Rule 1.7[[1]] Determinations” to address alleged conflicts of interest arising from his joint representation of Defendants. Scarborough also filed a motion to withdraw as counsel based upon this conflict of interest. The trial court heard the motion to withdraw on August 8, 2019.[2] In support of his request to withdraw as counsel, Scarborough asserted that: (1) he was in “an ethically untenable position” because his loyalty to each Defendant would require him to omit issues and claims he would otherwise raise in the motions for new trial or, at the very least, to argue those issues “less robustly” than he otherwise would; (2) he had an actual conflict under Rule 1.7 because his duties to each Defendant would materially and adversely affect his performance and legal representation of the others; (3) as required by Rule 1.7, he met separately with Defendants and advised them of the conflict, and Defendants declined to waive the conflict and requested the appointment of conflict-free appellate counsel; and (4) he contacted the General Counsel’s Office at the State Bar of Georgia and, after describing the circumstances, was advised that he could not continue representing Defendants in this case. In response to Scarborough’s assertions, the State argued that there was no conflict of interest in Scarborough’s representation of Defendants on appeal. In furtherance thereof, the State asserted that Scarborough did not provide any specificity as to the purported conflict of interest and that any purported conflict of interest was merely an “erroneous assumption,” unsupported by case law, and inapplicable in a RICO conspiracy case where all of the evidence presented was relevant to all Defendants. After hearing additional argument from both sides, the trial court conducted an ex parte conference in chambers for Scarborough to detail the exact nature of the conflict of interest, which Scarborough noted he could only do “to a degree.”[3] Following the ex parte conference, the trial court resumed the hearing in open court and denied the motion to withdraw, stating that, after “a private session with the public defender where the public defender laid out what they term specifics about conflict,” the court “did not find the conflict specific enough for anybody in this case.” However, the trial court advised the parties that it would like to “expedite the Appeals Court to look at this” and indicated it would issue a certificate of immediate review to “ask [the Court of Appeals] to take this issue up.”[4] On August 21, 2019, the trial court entered a written order denying the motion to withdraw, stating simply that “[f]or the reasons stated at the [August 8, 2019] hearing, the motion is hereby denied.” On the same date, the trial court issued a certificate of immediate review under OCGA § 5-6-34 (b).[5] Defendants filed an application for interlocutory review in the Court of Appeals on September 3, 2019, seeking permission to appeal the trial court’s order denying the motion to withdraw under OCGA § 5-6-34 (b). Before the Court of Appeals ruled on Defendants’ application, Defendants also filed a direct appeal of the trial court’s order on September 20, 2019, asserting that the order was directly appealable under the collateral order doctrine. The Court of Appeals denied Defendants’ application for interlocutory review on September 25, 2019.[6] On June 29, 2021, in a split decision issued by the whole court, the Court of Appeals also dismissed Defendants’ direct appeal for lack of jurisdiction, concluding that the collateral order doctrine did not apply to the trial court’s order denying the motion to withdraw as counsel. See Buckner-Webb, 360 Ga. App. at 331. Defendants then filed a second petition for a writ of certiorari in this Court, which we granted on December 14, 2021, to decide the first-impression legal question set forth above. II. Analysis (a) Legal Backdrop Our General Assembly has established a statutory framework governing appeals in Georgia. See Rivera v. Washington, 298 Ga. 770, 780 (784 SE2d 775) (2016). See also OCGA § 5-6-34. OCGA § 5-6-34 governs what trial court orders may be reviewed immediately by an appellate court. Specifically, subsection (a) of the statute lists the trial court judgments and orders that may be appealed immediately. This list includes all final judgments where the case is no longer pending in the court below [except as provided in OCGA § 5-6-35]. Duke, 306 Ga. at 172 (1). This list also includes “specific types of trial court rulings that the General Assembly has deemed important enough to the case, or dispositive enough of the case, to warrant an immediate appeal, even though such rulings are often interlocutory rather than final judgments.” Rivera, 298 Ga. at 773 (citing OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (2)-(13)). See also In re Paul, 270 Ga. 680, 682 (513 SE2d 219) (1999) (OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (2)-(13) allows direct appeals of “judgments or orders that may have an irreparable effect on the rights of the parties, such as rulings in contempt, injunctions, and mandamus actions[.]“). Other cases can be appealed immediately only with permission from both the trial court and the appellate court. OCGA § 5-6-34 (b). When a trial court enters an order, decision, or judgment not otherwise subject to immediate appeal under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a), appeal from that order may be had only where the trial judge certifies within ten days of entry thereof that the order, decision, or judgment is of such importance to the case that immediate review should be had. Upon such certification, the Supreme Court or the Court of Appeals may thereupon, in their respective discretions, permit an appeal to be taken from the order, decision or judgment. Duke, 306 Ga. at 172 (1) (citing OCGA § 5-6-34 (b)) (punctuation omitted). Accordingly, as a general rule, when a party seeks to appeal a non-final order issued by a trial court before the case is fully adjudicated below, Georgia courts require adherence to the interlocutory procedures of OCGA § 5-6-34 (b) for appellate review. See Rivera, 298 Ga. at 780. Although the framework for appellate review has been statutorily mandated by the General Assembly, our appellate courts have nonetheless created an exception by allowing immediate appeals of a very small class of interlocutory rulings [that] are effectively final in that they 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. Duke, 306 Ga. at 172-173 (1) (citation and punctuation omitted). To qualify for immediate appeal under this “collateral order doctrine,”[7] an interlocutory order must be “effectively final”—a status we assess by examining whether the order “resolves an issue that is substantially separate from the basic issues to be decided at trial;” would “result in the loss of an important right if review had to await final judgment;” and “completely and conclusively decides the issue on appeal such that nothing in the underlying action can affect it.” Id. at 172, 174 (1) (citation and punctuation omitted). See also Settendown Public Utility, LLC v. Waterscape Utility, LLC, 324 Ga. App. 652, 656 (751 SE2d 463) (2013) (“In determining whether a matter is subject to effective appellate review, we ask whether the relief sought would be barred by the entry of final judgment in the trial court.”). As part of this review, we evaluate the entire class to which the claim belongs to determine whether this category of claims is potentially appealable under the collateral order doctrine. See Roberts v. State, 309 Ga. 639, 640 (1) (847 SE2d 541) (2020). See also Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter, 558 U.S. 100, 107 (II) (A) (130 SCt 599, 175 LEd2d 458) (2009) (holding that, to determine the applicability of the collateral order doctrine, the inquiry should focus on “the entire category to which a claim belongs”). For example, in Roberts, we asked whether “the denial of a statutory double jeopardy claim is appealable under the collateral order doctrine,” ultimately concluding that an order denying such a claim is appealable under this legal doctrine. Roberts, 309 Ga. at 640-641 (1). We have also allowed review of appeals under the collateral order doctrine when, for example, the order at issue permitted the State to involuntarily medicate a defendant to render him competent for trial or compelled a non-party newspaper reporter to disclose information regarding his confidential sources in a murder case.[8] But we have also concluded that certain interlocutory orders—including an order denying a motion to dismiss based on a defense of sovereign or quasi-judicial immunity and an order denying the State’s motion to recuse a trial judge, among others—did not meet the requirements of the collateral order doctrine, and thus, we did not undertake review in those cases.[9] (b) Application In the present case, the Court of Appeals majority concluded that the interlocutory order here—an order denying counsel’s motion to withdraw based on an alleged conflict of interest—was not immediately appealable under the collateral order doctrine because “[Defendants] would not lose an important right” by “waiting until the proper time for a direct appeal.” Buckner-Webb, 360 Ga. App. at 329, 330. We agree with that aspect of the Court of Appeals’ analysis and conclusion. However, the Court of Appeals majority opinion considered this question only with respect to Defendants’ interest[10] in being represented by conflict-free counsel.[11] See Buckner-Webb, 360 Ga. App. at 330. The Court of Appeals was also presented with—but declined to consider—whether counsel’s interest in avoiding a potential ethical conflict that could violate a client’s constitutional rights warrants collateral-order review[12]—an issue we now consider on certiorari review. We conclude that, even considering counsel’s interest in this case, this category of orders—i.e., orders denying a counsel’s motion to withdraw based on a conflict of interest—is not among the “very small class” of interlocutory rulings that can bypass the ordinary statutory procedures for appellate review. Duke, 306 Ga. at 172 (1). We reach this conclusion because orders denying a counsel’s motion to withdraw based on an alleged conflict of interest are not “effectively final,” even as to counsel’s interest, in the sense needed to justify application of the collateral order doctrine. Duke, 306 Ga. at 172 (1). Indeed, counsel will still have ways to obtain review of the interest at issue in such orders—that is, counsel’s interest in avoiding a potential ethical violation arising from conflicted representation. See Johnson & Johnson v. Kaufman, 226 Ga. App. 77, 82 (485 SE2d 525) (1997) (concluding that there are other means of obtaining direct appellate review, including being held in contempt, when an order is not “directly appealable” under the collateral order doctrine). See also Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 107 (II) (A) (holding that if this “class of claims, taken as a whole, can be adequately vindicated by other means,” the collateral order doctrine will not apply). First, an attorney who is denied permission to withdraw as counsel based upon an alleged conflict of interest can seek to immediately appeal that order through the interlocutory appeal procedures established by OCGA § 5-6-34 (b). See Sosniak v. State, 292 Ga. 35, 44 (734 SE2d 362) (2012) (Nahmias, J., concurring) (noting that, although the collateral order doctrine did not apply, the defendants could “still obtain relief [] through the interlocutory appeal procedures provided by statute, see OCGA § 5-6-34 (b)”). We acknowledge that, in this particular case, this avenue of review has been exhausted, but it was nonetheless available and will be available to similarly situated attorneys in future cases.[13] “Another long-recognized option,” while not the most favorable, is for an attorney to disobey the order and potentially be held in contempt of court. Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 111 (II) (B). If an attorney’s motion to withdraw is denied and the attorney feels strongly enough that he or she is being compelled to violate the applicable rules of professional conduct, or otherwise imperil a client’s constitutional rights, the attorney can refuse to comply with the trial court’s order denying the motion to withdraw as counsel and potentially be held in contempt for violating that order. The attorney can then appeal directly from any resulting contempt ruling under OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (2). Cf. Johnson & Johnson, 226 Ga. App. at 82 (citing Cobbledick v. United States, 309 U.S. 323, 327 (60 SCt 540, 84 LE 783) (1940), and adopting, in a civil case, “the United States Supreme Court’s rationale that in the rare case when appeal after final judgment will not cure an erroneous [interlocutory] order, a party may defy the order, permit a contempt citation to be entered against him, and challenge the order on direct appeal of the contempt ruling”).[14] See also Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 111 (II) (B) (noting that “when the circumstances warrant it, a district court may hold a noncomplying party in contempt,” and “[t]he party can then appeal directly from that ruling”). We recognize that this avenue for appellate review places the attorney in a very difficult position, but it is a means of obtaining direct appellate review set forth in Georgia statutory law that lifts the issue presented in this case out of the realm of non-reviewability. See OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (2).[15] Lastly, we acknowledge Scarborough’s specific argument that he may face disciplinary action from the State Bar for violation of Rule 1.7 if he is required to continue the joint representation of Defendants, but we conclude that any such discipline is speculative at this point.[16] And, given our conclusion in this case, we need not address that issue at this time. We recognize that federal and other state courts have reached different conclusions in evaluating whether to allow an appeal of an order denying a motion to withdraw as counsel due to alleged conflicts of interest under the collateral order doctrine.[17] However, these cases are distinguishable from the present case, and unlike Georgia’s appellate courts, none of these courts examined whether a governing appellate statute exists in their respective states. Even if such statutory schemes do exist, these cases speak nothing about the “statutory scheme for appellate review of interlocutory orders set out by our General Assembly in OCGA § 5-6-34″—or how the collateral order doctrine that Georgia courts have applied fits into that procedural framework.[18] Rivera, 298 Ga. at 776. See also American Gen. Financial Svcs. v. Jape, 291 Ga. 637, 644-645 (732 SE2d 743) (2012) (Nahmias, J., concurring) (holding that OCGA § 5-6-34 “is not a run-of-the-mill procedural provision,” but “a jurisdictional law by which the General Assembly has limited the authority of Georgia’s appellate courts to hear certain cases” (emphasis in original)). III. Conclusion Accordingly, we conclude that a trial court’s order denying a motion to withdraw as counsel based upon alleged conflicts of interest does not fall within the “very small class” of cases that are directly appealable under the collateral order doctrine, Duke, 306 Ga. at 174 (1), and we affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals. Because the “scheme for appellate interlocutory review is legislative in nature,” should “the General Assembly determine[] that the established framework does not adequately safeguard the interests” at stake here, “it is for that body to change it.” Rivera, 268 Ga. at 777-778. Judgment affirmed. All the Justices concur, except Peterson, P.J., not participating, and Colvin, J., disqualified. Pinson, Justice, concurring. I concur fully in the Court’s opinion because it correctly applies our collateral-order doctrine. I write separately to highlight the doubtful legal footing of that doctrine, which, in my view, adds another reason to not expand its reach here. 1. As the Court explains, our collateral-order doctrine allows a party to appeal certain categories of interlocutory rulings before final judgment without having to use the statutory procedure for interlocutory appeals, see OCGA § 5-6-34 (b). We applied this doctrine for the first time in Patterson v. State, 248 Ga. 875 (287 SE2d 7) (1982), where we held that an interlocutory order denying a plea of double jeopardy was immediately appealable “without resort to” our interlocutory-appeal statute.[19] Id. at 875. And later that year, in Scroggins v. Edmondson, 250 Ga. 430 (297 SE2d 469) (1982), we decided that the doctrine could be applied in both criminal and civil cases. In these cases, our Court imported the collateral-order doctrine from federal law. In Patterson, we quoted at length and with approval the U.S. Supreme Court’s application of the federal collateral-order doctrine in Abney v. United States, 431 U.S. 651 (97 SCt 2034, 52 LE2d 651) (1977), which approved immediate appeals of denials of pleas of double jeopardy, and we rested our holding on those “considerations.” Patterson, 248 Ga. at 876. And in Scroggins, we described our holding in Patterson as “adopt[ing] the ‘collateral order’ exception to the final judgment rule announced in Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp., 337 U.S. 541 (69 SCt 1221, 93 LEd 1528) (1949),” and offered no further justification for adding that doctrine to Georgia law. Scroggins, 250 Ga. at 431 (1) (c). We have flagged before the problems with “simply recit[ing] holdings of the United States Supreme Court . . . and uncritically import[ing] them into” Georgia law. Elliott v. State, 305 Ga. 179, 188 (II) (C) (824 SE2d 265) (2019). See also Black Voters Matter Fund, Inc. v. Kemp, 313 Ga. 375, 391-93 (870 SE2d 430) (2022) (Peterson, J., concurring) (calling into question our “frequent[]” practice of relying on federal case law interpreting Article III of the U.S. Constitution or adopting it “ wholesale” as Georgia law “without actually explaining why” it matters “for the different question of Georgia standing”). The meaning of legal text—constitutional, statutory, or otherwise—is determined “primar[ily]” by its “ context, which includes the structure and history of the text and the broader context in which that text was enacted, including statutory and decisional law that forms the legal background of the written text.” City of Guyton v. Barrow, 305 Ga. 799, 805 (3) (828 SE2d 366) (2019). So, when we need to figure out the meaning of Georgia law, decisions of federal courts—even the U.S. Supreme Court—are helpful “only to the extent that the Court’s decisions actually were guided by th[e] same language, history, and context” of the Georgia law in question. Elliott, 305 Ga. at 188 (II) (C). When we rely on such federal decisions without making sure the relevant text and context match up, we risk giving an “interpretation” of Georgia law that is arbitrary, wrong, or both. Unfortunately, our collateral-order doctrine could be the poster child for this mistake. To see why, compare the relevant statutory language and context under federal and Georgia law. In federal law, the collateral-order doctrine is rooted in 28 USC § 1291, which grants federal courts of appeals “jurisdiction of appeals from all final decisions of the district courts.” Id. (emphasis added). The U.S. Supreme Court has explained that the doctrine represents a “practical rather than a technical construction” of that “final decisions” language. Mohawk Indus., Inc. v. Carpenter, 558 U.S. 100, 106 (II) (A) (130 SCt 599, 175 LE2d 458) (2009) (citing Cohen, 337 U.S. at 546). Under that construction, “the statute encompasses not only judgments that ‘terminate an action,’ but also a ‘small class’ of collateral rulings that, although they do not end the litigation, are appropriately deemed ‘final’” because they are conclusive, effectively unreviewable, and separate from the underlying merits of the case. Mohawk Indus., Inc., 558 U.S. at 106 (II) (A) (quoting Cohen, 337 U.S. at 546). Reasonable jurists can disagree on whether that doctrine fits comfortably within the phrase “final decisions,” but that language at least allows a case to be made that it encompasses more than just final judgments that leave no claims pending below. The same cannot be said for Georgia law. It is true that our Court pitched the collateral-order doctrine as a “broader construction” of Georgia’s own appellate-jurisdiction statute when we imported the doctrine from federal law. Patterson, 248 Ga. at 876 (citing former Ga. Code Ann. § 6-701 (a), which is now OCGA § 5-6­34 (a)). But when we imported the doctrine, we didn’t do any actual “construction” of that statute. If we had, the problem with that move would have quickly become clear. At that time, our appellate- jurisdiction statute authorized an appeal “[w]here the judgment is final—that is to say—where the cause is no longer pending in the court below.” Ga. Code Ann. § 6-701 (a) (1). The current version is similar: it authorizes an appeal from “[a]ll final judgments, that is to say, where the case is no longer pending in the court below.” OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) (1). It is hard to think of a clearer way to reject a doctrine that allows appeals under this provision of orders in cases that are still pending in the court below. And indeed, for around 140 years, our Court and the Court of Appeals have consistently held that this language (and materially identical language in the prior and current versions of the statute) means a judgment is not “final” and appealable under this provision if any portion of the case remains pending below. See Seals v. State, 311 Ga. 739, 741-42 (2) (a) (860 SE2d 419) (2021) (tracing statutory history of OCGA § 5-6­34 (a) and collecting cases confirming that interpretation).[20] Unlike 28 USC § 1291 (a)’s “final decisions” language, OCGA § 5-6-34 (a) leaves no wiggle room for a doctrine that allows appeals when any part of the case is still pending in the trial court. If that language were not a clear enough rejection of a federal- style collateral-order doctrine, the statutory structure around OCGA § 5-6-34 (a)’s final-judgment rule is telling, too. That structure tells us in at least two ways that our jurisdictional statutes don’t contemplate that doctrine. First, our statute lists 12 further categories of “judgments or orders” that can be appealed whether or not they are “final.” OCGA § 5-6-34 (a). Including this kind of list in our statute, which the General Assembly updates with some regularity,[21] suggests (quite strongly, I think) that the role the collateral-order doctrine plays in federal law—identifying categories of orders that deserve appeals before final judgment—has been reserved by and for the General Assembly.[22] Second, our statute allows parties to seek interlocutory review of a ruling if the trial court certifies that the ruling is “of such importance to the case that immediate review should be had.” OCGA § 5-6-34 (b). So Georgia law provides a statutory mechanism for seeking immediate review when important rights would be lost without it—again displacing a basic role of the federal collateral-order doctrine.[23] In short, the language, context, and history of our appellate- jurisdiction statutes are not the same as those that underpin the federal collateral-order doctrine, and none supported importing it into our law. 2. I do not point all of this out to suggest that we should abandon the collateral-order doctrine—either in this case, or even in another down the road. No one here has asked us to reconsider the doctrine. And stare decisis may well warrant retaining the existing decisions that apply the doctrine to allow appeals of certain categories of interlocutory orders, which span four decades of our case law. But I do think the doubtful authority for importing the doctrine at all cements the case against expanding its reach here. It is an especially troubling kind of error to arrogate to ourselves as appellate courts the authority to bend the limits of our own power to review cases. See Duke v. State, 306 Ga. 171, 182 (3) (c), 186-87 (4)  (829 SE2d 348) (2019) (acknowledging “core separation of powers principle” that prevents courts from claiming authority to allow appeals outside of statutory scheme); Gable v. State, 290 Ga. 81, 85 (2) (b) (720 SE2d 170) (2011) (“[C]ourts have no authority to create equitable exceptions to jurisdictional requirements imposed by statute.” (citation and punctuation omitted)). See also Cook v. State, 313 Ga. 471, 479 (2) (a) (870 SE2d 758) (2022) (overruling “judicially creat[ed]” trial court out-of-time appeal procedure). Nor does the error seem harmless as a practical matter. When it applies, the collateral-order doctrine allows litigants to bypass the process for interlocutory review that the General Assembly chose to start with trial courts, see OCGA § 5-6-34 (b), thus “ divest[ing] trial courts of one of their essential tools for controlling litigation before them.” Duke, 306 Ga. at 186 (4) (“By requiring the prompt, affirmative assent of the trial court before an interlocutory appeal can proceed, OCGA § 5-6-34 (b) allows the trial court to manage litigation before it to a conclusion except in those circumstances in which the trial court believes that the issues presented by a litigant need clarification by an appellate court before the case proceeds.”). And because the doctrine allows litigants to argue for review of categories of nonfinal orders in court, it pulls many if not most of those arguments away from the legislature, which is generally supposed to make categorical policy judgments and already does make these particular judgments on a regular basis. See OCGA § 5-6-34 (a). By resisting the call in this case to recognize another non-statutory exception to our statutory final-judgment rule, the Court’s opinion avoids perpetuating these problems. With these things in mind, I concur fully in the Court’s opinion. I am authorized to state that Justice Warren and Justice Bethel join in this concurrence.

 
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