Tests are run unordered, including tests across classes. See this blog post:
https://learn.microsoft.com/archive/blogs/ploeh/classcleanup-may-run-later-than-you-think
To quote:
In any case, here's the result from my Output Window:
AssemblyInitialize
TestClass1: ClassInitialize
TestClass1: TestInitialize
TestClass1: MyTestCase1
TestClass1: TestCleanup
TestClass2: ClassInitialize
TestClass2: TestInitialize
TestClass2: MyTestCase2
TestClass2: TestCleanup
TestClass1: ClassCleanup
TestClass2: ClassCleanup
AssemblyCleanup
...this doesn't mean that TestClass1's ClassCleanup executes immediately after the last test case in the class! In fact, it waits until all test cases are executed, and the executes
together with TestClass2's ClassCleanup.
This surprised me at first, but that was obviously only because I
hadn't really thought it through: Since tests are, in principle,
unordered, there's not guarantee that all tests in TestClass1 are
executed in immediate succession. Theoretically, the execution engine
may pick a test case from TestClass1, then one from TestClass2, then
another from TestClass1, etc. Since that is the case, there's no
guarantee that all tests from one test class have been executed before
a new test class is initialized, and thusly, all ClassCleanup methods
may as well be deferred until all test cases have been executed.
Unfortunately, you'll have to look at ordered tests or at a different unit testing framework if this doesn't work for you.