Plaintiffs-appellants Joseph and Elaine Adrian and Adrian Family Partners I, L.P. sued the Town of Yorktown (the “Town”) pursuant to 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and New York State law, alleging that the Town, through its Town Supervisor, Linda Cooper, and other policy-making officials, maintained an official policy under which the plaintiffs were denied the right to develop their property, and subsequently retaliated against for their exercise of their First Amendment rights.
This is the third time this case has been before us. We dismissed plaintiffs’ first appeal because we lacked appellate jurisdiction over their challenge to the district court’s entry of partial summary judgment.
See Adrian v. Town of Yorktown,
We then ordered that the case be “REMANDED for proceedings consistent with [the summary] order, including reinstatement of the jury award of $150,000.”
Id.
Three weeks later, the mandate issued. Neither the remand order nor the mandate made any mention of interest. The plaintiffs, believing they were entitled to interest, then moved to recall the mandate and reinstate the appeal. That motion
On remand, the district court awarded pre-verdict interest to the plaintiffs, but declined to award post-verdict interest, holding that “where the mandate of the court of appeals makes no provision for interest from the date of the verdict to the date of entry of the judgment directed by the mandate, the district court is ‘powerless' to award such interest.” Order,
Adrian v. Town of Yorktown,
No. 03-cv-06604, at 3 (S.D.N.Y. Nov. 4, 2009) (quoting
Westinghouse Credit Corp. v. D’Urso,
On this appeal, plaintiffs challenge that holding, contending that where, as here, a mandate reinstating a jury verdict does not order entry of a judgment in a specific dollar amount, and also makes no mention of interest, the district court retains the power to award post-verdict interest on remand. We agree.
Defendants rely on Rule 37(b) and
Briggs v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co.,
In
Westinghouse,
thus, we clarified the applicability of
Briggs
and Rule 37, holding that they did not apply where our mandate “did not direct the district court to enter a money judgment” and instead “simply vacated” the judgment and “remanded for further proceedings.”
Id.
(internal quotation marks omitted). We explained that although it was “clear that the effect of the mandate and opinion was to ensure that the district court would ultimately enter a money judgment in favor of Westinghouse, neither document suggested what the amount of the judgment should be or that the judgment could be entered by the district court without further proceedings.”
Id.
at 104. Accordingly, the purpose of
Briggs
— to ensure that district courts are
There is no meaningful distinction between Westinghouse and the case before us. In both cases, we remanded for “further proceedings.” Although here, unlike in Westinghouse, we specified the dollar amount of a reinstated jury verdict ($150,-000), we did not order that a money judgment be entered in that amount. Where, as here, we do not specify that a money judgment be entered in any specific amount, and instead remand for further proceedings including reinstatement of a jury verdict, the district court is free to award post-verdict interest.
On this appeal, plaintiffs are specifically seeking post-verdict prejudgment interest on their breach-of-contract claim. Because that claim was brought under New York State law, and because prejudgment interest is a matter of substantive law, the New York interest rate applies to the interest sought.
See Marfia v. T.C. Ziraat Bankasi,
Plaintiffs contend that they are entitled to the New York post-verdict prejudgment interest rate — which is higher than the federal postjudgment interest rate — -for the time period between the jury’s January 15, 2008 verdict and the entry of the November 5, 2009 judgment on remand following our reinstatement of the verdict. However, neither party addressed on appeal the question of which date represents the “final judgment” in this case: the date of the judgment entered immediately following the jury’s original verdict (January 16, 2008, one day after the verdict), or the date of the entry of judgment on remand. This question is significant. If the judgment entered immediately after the jury’s verdict represents the final judgment, then plaintiffs are entitled to post-verdict prejudgment interest at the New York rate for only one day, and should receive postjudgment interest at the federal rate thereafter pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1961.
See Schipani
Thankfully, our case law provides a clear answer to this question. “[T]he judgment contemplated by section 1961 is one that is ascertained in a meaningful way and supported by the evidence.”
Andrulonis v. United States,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we hereby VACATE the District Court’s November 5, 2009 Judgment, and REMAND to the district court so that it can calculate and award, in addition to the pre-verdict interest through January 15, 2006 already properly calculated in that Judgment, (1) the nine per centum per annum interest due to plaintiffs under New York law for the period from January 15, 2008, until January 16, 2008, and (2) the postjudgment interest due to plaintiffs under federal law beginning January 16, 2008.
Notes
. Plaintiffs were awarded $2 for their federal malicious prosecution claim. In the instant appeal, they are not seeking interest in connection with those two dollars.
