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Rule 83.1.Appeal by permission from interlocutory orders of magistrate judges

Title X: Special Proceedings · Last amended July 1, 2024 · Last verified July 14, 2026

In one sentenceRule 83.1 lets a party ask permission to appeal a magistrate court's non-final order to the district court before the case ends, but only when the order turns on a debatable controlling question of law and an early ruling would meaningfully move the case forward.

Full Text of Rule 83.1

Text sizeJump to: (a) (b) (c) (d) (e)

(a) Criteria for permission to appeal. Permission may be granted by the district court to appeal from an interlocutory order or judgment of a magistrate court in a civil action, which is not otherwise appealable under these rules, but which involves a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial grounds for difference of opinion and in which an immediate appeal from the order or decree may materially advance the orderly resolution of the litigation.
(b) Motion to magistrate court -- Order. A motion for permission to appeal from an interlocutory order or judgment, upon the grounds set forth in subdivision (a) of this rule, shall be filed with the magistrate court within fourteen (14) days from date of entry of the order or judgment. The motion shall be filed, served, noticed for hearing and processed in the same manner as any other motion, and hearing of the motion shall be expedited. The magistrate court shall, within fourteen (14) days after the hearing, enter an order setting forth its reasoning for approving or disapproving the motion.
(c) Motion to district court for permission to appeal.
(1) Motion of a party. Within fourteen (14) days from entry by the magistrate court of an order approving or disapproving a motion for permission to appeal under subdivision (b) of this rule, any party may file a motion with the district court requesting acceptance of the appeal by permission. A copy of the interlocutory order or judgment being appealed shall be attached to the motion, along with a copy of the order of the magistrate court approving or disapproving the request for permission to appeal. If the magistrate court fails to rule upon a motion for permission to appeal within twenty-one (21) days from the date of the filing of the motion, any party may file a motion with the district court for permission to appeal without any order of the magistrate court.
(2) Motion by order of court. A magistrate court may enter, on its own initiative, an order recommending permission to appeal from an interlocutory order or judgment. The magistrate court shall file a certified copy of its order with the district court and serve copies on all parties. The order recommending permission to appeal shall constitute and be treated as a motion for permission to appeal from the interlocutory order or decree under this rule.
(3) Procedure. A motion to the district court for permission to appeal under this rule shall be filed, served, and processed in the same manner as any other motion under Rule 7 of these rules.
(d) Acceptance by district court. Any appeal by permission of an interlocutory order or judgment under this rule shall not be valid and effective unless and until the district court shall enter an order accepting such interlocutory order or decree as appealable and granting leave to a party to file a notice of appeal within a time certain. Unless otherwise ordered by the district court in its order of acceptance, such appeal shall thereafter proceed in the same manner as an appeal as a matter of right to the district court. The clerk of the district court shall serve a copy of the order granting permission to appeal on the magistrate court and on all parties to the action or proceeding.
(e) Denial by district court. An order of the district court denying permission to appeal from an interlocutory order or judgment entered by the magistrate court shall be final. Except as expressly provided in Rule 83(a) of these rules and Rule 12.1 of the Idaho Appellate Rules, no request for permission to appeal from a magistrate court decision may be made to the Supreme Court.

Amendment History

(Adopted May 1, 2024, effective July 1, 2024.)

Plain-English Summary

Ordinarily an appeal has to wait until the case is over and a final judgment is entered. Rule 83.1 creates a narrow exception for interlocutory orders — rulings made along the way that don't end the case — when three things are true: the order turns on a controlling question of law, reasonable judges could disagree about the answer, and getting an appellate ruling now, rather than after trial, would materially speed up the case's resolution. It is not a shortcut for appealing every ruling a party dislikes; it is reserved for the rare order where an early answer from a higher court saves everyone time.

Getting permission is a two-step process. The party first asks the magistrate court itself, within 14 days of the order, and the magistrate must rule within 14 days of the hearing, explaining its reasoning either way. If the magistrate approves, disapproves, or never rules within 21 days, any party can then ask the district court to accept the appeal, attaching copies of the underlying order and the magistrate's ruling if there is one. A magistrate can also recommend permission on its own initiative, which is treated as a motion for permission to appeal. The district court's acceptance — including the deadline it sets for filing the notice of appeal — is what makes the appeal valid; without it, nothing proceeds. If the district court denies permission, that denial is final, and except in the limited circumstances Rule 83(a) and Idaho Appellate Rule 12.1 allow, there is no further avenue to ask the Supreme Court to step in.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is an interlocutory appeal?

It is an appeal of a court order issued while the case is still pending, before a final judgment. Rule 83.1 governs the limited circumstances in which a party can pursue one from a magistrate court order to the district court.

What do I have to show to get permission for an interlocutory appeal?

That the order involves a controlling question of law, that there are substantial grounds for disagreement about how that question should be answered, and that an immediate appeal could materially advance the case toward resolution. All three elements matter.

Does the magistrate judge decide whether the appeal happens, or does the district court?

Both play a role. The magistrate first rules on whether to approve or disapprove the request. The district court then has to independently accept the appeal before it can proceed — magistrate approval alone is not enough.

What happens if the magistrate court never rules on my motion for permission to appeal?

If 21 days pass from filing the motion without a ruling, any party can go directly to the district court and ask for permission to appeal, without waiting any longer for the magistrate's decision.

If the district court denies permission to appeal, can I still take it to the Idaho Supreme Court?

Generally no. A district court's denial of permission is final, and Rule 83.1 does not allow a further request to the Supreme Court except in the narrow situations addressed in Rule 83(a) and Idaho Appellate Rule 12.1.

Source & verification. Rule text are reproduced verbatim from the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure, adopted by the Supreme Court of Idaho. Last verified July 14, 2026. · Official source
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