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Doyle, Presiding Judge. JB2018100, LLC, and Chunyen Liu (collectively “Liu”) filed suit against Kennon Peebles, Jr., and Robert O. Kwon (“the Defendants”), among others, alleging several claims based on Liu’s attempt to purchase shares of a restaurant.[1] After the Defendants moved for summary judgment, Liu moved to reopen and extend discovery and filed requests for production of documents from certain non-parties. The Defendants then moved for protective orders related to those non-party discovery requests, which motions the trial court denied, ordering them to sit for depositions and ordering them to comply with discovery requests (the “Discovery Order”). The Defendants filed a notice of appeal from the Discovery Order, and on Liu’s motion to dismiss the appeal after months of waiting for the Defendants to pursue the appeal, transmit the record, and pay costs, the trial court dismissed that notice of appeal. The Defendants then filed this direct appeal from the trial court’s order dismissing their appeal of that court’s Discovery Order. On appeal, Liu filed a motion to dismiss with this Court, which we granted in a December 11, 2023 order, explaining that the Defendants’ appeal from the Discovery Order was not a properly filed direct appeal because the order was interlocutory, and therefore, the trial court’s order dismissing that improperly filed direct appeal also was not subject to direct appeal. Pursuant to the collateral order doctrine, the Defendants moved for reconsideration of our December 11 order, and on January 18, 2024, we granted the motion as it raised a colorable argument that the trial court’s order might be subject to direct appeal. Now, after further review, we again dismiss the appeal, for the reasons that follow. Under the collateral order doctrine, an interlocutory order may be appealed directly if it: “(1) resolves an issue that is substantially separate from the basic issues to be decided at trial, (2) would result in the loss of an important right if review had to await final judgment, and (3) completely and conclusively decides the issue on appeal[.]“[2] “[A] discovery order directed at a disinterested third party is treated as an immediately appealable final order because the third party presumably lacks a sufficient stake in the proceeding to risk contempt by refusing compliance.”[3] The Discovery Order here was directed in part to PNC Bank, National Association, (seeking Kwon’s bank records) and Infinity Accounting, LLC, (seeking Peebles’s office lease and evidence of rent payments), who are not parties to the case. The Defendants contend that because PNC Bank, National Association, and Infinity Accounting, LLC, are disinterested third parties, the Defendants have the right to challenge the Discovery Order on direct appeal under the collateral order doctrine. Nevertheless, the cases cited by the Defendants are cases in which a non-party appeals from an interlocutory discovery order directed to a disinterested third party.[4] Here, the Defendants are parties to the case and are seeking to appeal from the Discovery Order. In Hickey v. RREF BB SBL Acquisitions, LLC, we allowed a direct appeal by a party to the case of an interlocutory discovery order directed to a disinterested third party, but only because the party was joined in their motion by their non-party spouse, who owned interests in the accounts at issue.[5] This Court explained: [T]he Subpoena in dispute requires the production of documents by a disinterested third party, SunTrust Bank, and the Hickeys could not have challenged the Subpoena through a direct appeal of a contempt order. . . . The Subpoena was directed at obtaining documents and information associated with Caroline Hickey, who is not a judgment debtor. She claims a privacy interest in this information, which is an important claim of right substantially separate from, and collateral to, other issues in the case. If her information is not subject to disclosure, it cannot be undisclosed by a later reversal of an erroneous order. An appeal from the order refusing to quash the Subpoena would conclusively resolve that claim of right. Accordingly, we find the order denying the Hickeys’ motion to quash to be directly appealable under the collateral order doctrine and deny SBL Acquisitions’s motion to dismiss the appeal.[6] Unlike the privacy interests of the non-party wife in Hickey, the privacy interests the Defendants seek to protect here are not “substantially separate from, and collateral to, other issues in the case.”[7] Therefore, the Defendants here have not shown that their appeal satisfies the first requirement of the collateral order doctrine. And because the Defendants did not have the right of direct appeal from the Discovery Order, this Court is without jurisdiction to address the trial court’s order dismissing their notice of appeal of the Discovery Order.[8] Accordingly, the appeal is dismissed. Appeal dismissed. Hodges and Watkins, JJ., concur.

 
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