BOEHM, S.J.
Western Reserve responded by intervening in the underlying suit by Forman, seeking a declaratory judgment that it had no duty to provide a defense to Forman’s complaint. Western Reserve moved for summary judgment, arguing as to both [defendant] Penn and [defendant] Bradley that Forman’s claim was excluded from the liability coverage under its policy by an explicit exclusion for claims “arising out of the use, sale, manufacture, delivery, transfer or possession by any person of [a Schedule II Controlled Substance].” . . . The trial court agreed with Western Reserve on the exclusion issue and entered summary judgment for Western Reserve declaring that there was no coverage for either Penn or Bradley, and therefore no duty to defend.
Penn and Bradley filed a Motion To Correct Error, treating the trial court’s ruling as a final judgment, and Western Reserve responded, also citing Trial Rule 59 authority. After forty-five days without a ruling on that motion, Penn and Bradley appealed the grant of the summary judgment to Western Reserve, treating the passage of time as a denial of their motion pursuant to Trial Rule 53.3.
As a threshold matter, the parties do not address the question of whether the trial court’s ruling on Western Reserve’s summary judgment motion is an appealable order. Of course it would be appealable as a final judgment if Western Reserve had filed a separate suit for declaratory judgment as is sometimes done by insurers who deny coverage. See Sans v. Monticello Insurance Co., 718 N.E.2d 814, 818 (Ind. Ct. App. 1999), trans denied; Indiana Farmers Mutual Insurance Co. v. Ellison, 679 N.E.2d 1378, 1380 (Ind. Ct. App. 1997), trans. denied. In that case the summary judgment order entered here would dispose of all issues in a separate lawsuit in which the only issue was coverage under the policy. Here, however, Western Reserve successfully intervened as a third party plaintiff in the underlying case and this appeal is by two of the four defendants in the original complaint while the claims asserted in the underlying case remain unresolved by the trial court. This appeal is not from an order appealable as of right pursuant to Appellate Rule 14(A) and there was no request that the trial court certify its ruling for discretionary interlocutory appeal pursuant to Appellate Rule 14(B). Trial Rule 54(B) permits appeals from orders disposing of less than all claims in a lawsuit “only upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay and upon an express direction for the entry of judgment.” The rule by its terms applies to all claims “whether as a claim, counterclaim, cross-claim or third-party claim.” The trial court’s rulings presented to this Court do not include the “no just reason for delay” language required by Trial Rule 54(B) to make a ruling that adjudicates less than all claims in a lawsuit appealable as of right as a final judgment.
We recognize that the questions of Western Reserve’s obligation to provide a defense and its potential exposure to liability present issues that are at least in part distinct from the issues presented in the underlying lawsuit. In this respect the coverage dispute may be viewed as separate from Forman’s claims against the defendants. On the other hand, it would seem that some of Western Reserve’s arguments supporting the application of the exemption to these facts presuppose Forman’s version of the disputed circumstances under which he obtained the methadone. In any event, in Martin v. Amoco Oil Co., 696 N.E.2d 383, 385 (Ind. 1998), the Indiana Supreme Court established a “bright line” rule enforcing the requirement of compliance with Trial Rule 54(B) before an appeal may be taken as of right from a trial court ruling that does not dispose of all claims. The Supreme Court specifically rejected the “separate branch” doctrine developed in some cases in this Court that permitted appeals of orders disposing of portions of lawsuits deemed sufficiently independent of the remaining issues to warrant a direct appeal. Id. We are bound by that precedent.
To be sure, the interests of justice may well suggest that the trial court in this case should provide the necessary “magic language” required by Trial Rule 54(B). Without a ruling that a defense must be supplied and some clarity as to what, if any, of the plaintiff’s claims would be insured, both the plaintiff’s prospects of recovery and the defendants’ ability to present a case may be severely jeopardized. And refusal to permit an appeal of a denial of coverage gives the insurer an incentive to intervene in the underlying suit in hopes of getting an unreviewable trial court ruling that may terminate the proceeding as a practical matter. But Trial Rule 54(B) leaves that decision in the hands of the trial court in the interest of certainty as to whether an appeal lies or not. The parties should not be left to guess whether an order is appealable. Inclusion of the language required by Trial Rule 54(B) not only confers the right to appeal, it starts the clock running on the time within which an appeal must be taken. Uncertainty encourages attempts to appeal a ruling as to a potentially “separate branch” to avoid the risk of forfeiting the right to appeal if it is found, after the time to appeal has run, that an order was indeed subject to a direct appeal. Cf. Rayle v. Bolin, 769 N.E.2d 636 (Ind. Ct. App. 2002).
This appeal is dismissed. As in Rayle, the parties are free to seek an amendment of the trial court’s order if they wish to pursue an appeal at this stage of the proceedings.
BAKER, C.J., and BARNES, J., concur.