This is the tail end of
Diamond v. Charles,
— U.S. -,
The order of October 1, 1984, awarded fees but did not say who was to pay them. The accompanying opinion said that the “defendants” would pay, but the opinion also referred to the three intervenor-defendants as “intervenors.” On one reading of the order the intervening defendants had become jointly and severally liable for $200,000. On another they were not liable at all. On October 9, 1984, the intervenors filed a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e) asking both for clarification of the order and, if they were included as “defendants”, for alteration. This timely motion suspended the finality of the judgment and precluded appeal.
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.,
On April 22, 1985, the district court entered an order stating: “The intervenor-de-fendants’ motion to clarify and amend the Memorandum Opinion [sic] issued September 28, 1984 is denied. Plaintiffs [sic] fees and costs will be borne equally by the *345 defendants: half by the State defendants and half by the intervenors.” This contradictory order both “denied” the motion and amended the judgment. Moreover, an accompanying opinion stated that the court viewed the Americans United for Life Legal Defense Fund as one of the intervening defendants. The Fund is a law firm, which represented the three intervenors and had not itself intervened as a party (although some of the documents in the district court erroneously showed it to be one).
The order of April 22, read in conjunction with the opinion, was the first award of fees against the Fund, and it probably made the three actual intervenors worse off too. They might plausibly have supposed that the plaintiffs would collect the $200,000 from the government of Illinois, whose pockets are deeper than those of two physicians and a putative father. The amendment to the judgment ensured that the intervenors would pay at least $100,-000. On May 2, 1985, the Fund served a document styled “Motion to Amend the Judgment Pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e).” The Fund asked the district court to make it a full-fledged defendant and to relieve the three intervenors of liability. The Fund represented that it had solicited the three intervenors to participate and that it would therefore be unjust to require them to pay fees. It also .represented that it was “prepared to accept financial responsibility for any award of attorney’s fees which is ultimately assessed against it by this or any other court on the basis of its status as an Intervening Defendant.”
This was the Fund’s first effort to seek relief from anything. The Fund had not been identified as a defendant in the order of October 1, 1984, for the plausible reason that the Fund was not one. But the three individual intervenors did not complain of the alteration of the judgment that arguably injured them; they simply recited (as they had back in October 1984) that they should not pay anything. Theirs was a successive request for the same relief. And the Fund’s request was most curious. It could have “accepted] financial responsibility” without an alteration of the judgment. All it had to do was tender payment to the plaintiffs, thereby discharging the intervenors’ liability. If the plaintiffs would not accept the Fund’s check, preferring to hector the intervenors, the Fund was free to reimburse whichever inter-venor was called on to pay. So the Fund’s request did not seek from the court anything — for itself or for the intervenors— that the court alone was in a position to provide.
The only thing to be said for the motion is that the Fund at least asked the court to “alter or amend” the judgment, the operative words in Rule 59(e). The plaintiffs complicated things still further by opposing the Fund’s motion. They contended in open court on May 9 that the intervenors were the only parties and that the Fund should be confined to its role as law firm. Counsel for the plaintiffs asked the court for 21 days to file a written opposition to the motion; the court granted the time. This led counsel for the intervenors to express concern about the effect of further deliberations on appellate jurisdiction:
[Counsel for the intervenors]: ____ Since this could technically be considered the second clarification of your original order ... on the attorneys’ fees, I just wanted to ask if it is clear to everybody here — including your Honor — that the time for filing a Notice of Appeal, that may or may not be filed from your ultimate decision, is stayed until you have ruled on this motion — until we are clear who the parties are.
THE COURT: I suppose it would. I do not see why it should not await a final, final resolution; although, I suppose, you have to quit coming in to amend the matter____ I think that it would be a fair conclusion to be drawn ... that any appeal clock does not run until we finally dispose of this particular motion. That is my sense of the matter.
The district judge took the Fund’s motion under advisement. In July 1985, before the court had acted, the Fund tried to file still another motion to alter the judgment.
*346
The new motion called the court’s attention to
Kentucky v. Graham,
— U.S. -,
Here is what we will do. I do not think I am going to give you leave to file this motion. There is not any additional briefing necessary. All it is, is for me to evaluate Kentucky vs. Graham and see if, indeed, its holding applies here of it it is inopposite [sic], as counsel has argued, and that is all we need to do. No briefing is necessary.
The judge later changed his mind. A minute order dated October 21, 1985, and entered the next day, states: “The Court clarifies the order of April 22, 1985. The [sic] sets a briefing schedule on intervenors’ motion to amend in light of Kentucky v. Graham.... The Court will rule by mail.” An accompanying opinion explained that the Fund had not intervened and that any earlier papers naming it as a party had been clerical errors. The Fund could not intervene, the court held, because as a law firm it had no interest in the outcome of the case. Fed.R.Civ.P. 24, which governs intervention, would not allow the Fund to be a party given its lack of interest in the merits. The court then stated that it would correct earlier papers under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(a), which allows the correction of clerical errors at any time, and that the order of April 22 also would be corrected under Rule 60(a) to read: “Plaintiffs’ fees and costs will be borne equally by the defendants: half by the State defendants and half by the intervenors — Williams, Diamond, and Campbell.” As for the Fund’s willingness to cover the intervenors’ liability, the court wrote: “The intervenors and their counsel may make whatever private arrangements they wish to satisfy the judgment.”
This was the second alteration of the order. (The first apportioned the fees; the second deleted the Fund as a party and explicitly named the three intervenors.) But the alteration was not embodied in a separate document under Fed.R.Civ.P. 58. The minute order referred to the opinion, but judgments must be self-contained. More, the court asked for briefs on the application of Kentucky v. Graham. So as of October 1985 the court had not finally disposed of the Fund’s motion. It had moved on to a new issue — an issue that we must treat as introduced by the court on its own motion, because it denied the Fund’s motion for leave to file a third motion under Rule 59.
On March 6, 1986, the district judge held that Graham does not relieve the inter-venors of liability for attorneys’ fees. The intervenors filed an appeal on April 4. The plaintiffs ask us to dismiss the appeal on the ground that it is untimely. The plaintiffs say that the time started to run on April 22, 1985, when the judge acted on the first Rule 59 motion. The successive motion did not toll the time — both because it was really a motion under Rule 60(a) and because only the first motion under Rule 59 stops the clock. The district judge’s statement to the contrary was ineffectual, plaintiffs say, but if it did suspend the finality of the judgment the time began to run on October 22, 1985, when the court decided the Fund’s pending motion. The invitation to file further briefs in November, according to the plaintiffs, did not contain a new promise that the intervenors were safe in not appealing.
As we see it, if the Fund’s motion in May 1985 stopped the clock, the appeal is timely. The district judge did not enter an order in October 1985 altering the judgment, and until one was entered on a separate document, the time did not restart. See
United States v. Indrelunas,
The Fund’s motion of May 2 suspended the finality of the judgment, however, only if it complied with Rule 59(e). The plaintiffs say that it did not, because it was really a motion under Rule 60(a) to correct a clerical error. This is how the district court ultimately treated it. The characterization of post-judgment motions has been a vexing one, because the selection of the rule on which the motion is based determines appellate jurisdiction. We have wrestled in a series of cases with nettlesome problems of characterization, have implored counsel to be clearer, and have made little headway. E.g.,
Bank of California N.A. v. Arthur Andersen & Co.,
The motion of May 2, 1985, was substantive. Rule 60(a) is designed to correct scriveners’ errors, to make the judgment carry out the original plan. See
United States v. Griffin,
This leaves the question whether a Rule 59 motion filed on May 2 suspended the finality of the judgment. A timely motion filed under Rule 59 does this, see Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(4), but successive motions do not affect the finality of the judgment. E.g.,
American Security Bank N.A. v. John Y. Harrison Realty Co.,
Dieter,
although a criminal case, supports this conclusion. A district court first refused to suppress evidence and then, on the defendant's motion for reconsideration, reversed ground. The prosecutor filed a motion for reconsideration, the second in the case. The Supreme Court held that this motion tolled the time to appeal. It pointed out that the district court should have the opportunity to hear the arguments of the party aggrieved by the change, in order to correct its own judgments to the extent possible. Several courts have applied this approach to Rule 59, holding that when the district court alters a judgment in response to one Rule 59 motion a successive petition is timely. E.g.,
Harrell v. Dixon Bay Transportation Co.,
The plaintiffs distinguish these cases on the ground that they, like
Dieter,
involve Rule 59 motions by the party that had prevailed the first time around; here the same parties filed successive motions. This is not quite right. The intervenors filed the first motion, and the Fund filed the second. However that may be, it is a distinction without a difference. The timeliness of the successive motion comes from the alteration of the judgment. A significant change in a judgment starts all time periods anew, whether the district court alters the judgment at the request of a party or on its own motion. See
FTC v. Minneapolis-Honeywell Co.,
The sort of alteration that restarts all periods of time is one that “changes matters of substance, or resolves a genuine ambiguity, in a judgment previously rendered”.
Minneapolis-Honeywell,
The motion to dismiss the appeal is denied. The case will proceed to briefing and decision on the merits.
