Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge RANDOLPH.
The District of Columbia’s motion for summary affirmance poses issues with respect to Rules 6(e) and 59(e) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure we have not previously decided.
After proceedings unnecessary to describe and after counsel had been appointed for plaintiff, the district court ruled that plaintiffs allegations about having been stabbed in prison in 1980, and about the inadequate medical attention he received, did not amount to constitutional claims and thus did not satisfy 42 U.S.C. § 1983. The court’s judgment dismissing the complaint was entered on July 1,1993. Plaintiff filed his notice of appeal on June 14, 1994, far beyond the thirty days allowed by Rule 4(a) of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. In the interim, the court had issued two other orders: one on September 23, 1993, denying plaintiffs motion for reconsideration; the other on June 8, 1994, denying plaintiffs motion for reconsideration of the order denying plaintiffs first motion. Plaintiff noted an appeal not only from the judgment dismissing his complaint, but also from the judgments denying his motions.
We would have jurisdiction to review the original judgment only if plaintiffs motions, which stated that they were “[pjursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e),” tolled the time limit for noting an appeal. Rule 59(e) provides:
A motion to alter or amend the judgment shall be served not later than 10 days after entry of the judgment.
If a “timely” Rule 59(e) motion is filed, the time for appeal runs from the “entry of the order disposing of the” motion, rather than the entry of the original judgment. Rule 4(a)(4)(C), Fed.R.App.P. The key word is “timely.” The district court rejected plaintiffs first motion, correctly we conclude, as out of time. Plaintiff served this motion on July 19, 1993. Because motions to alter or amend are due in less than 11 days, Rule 6(a) excluded “intermediate Saturdays, Sundays and legal holidays in the computation” of time. July 1, 1993, when the court’s original judgment was entered, was a Thursday. Monday, July 5, 1993, was a legal holiday. With the holiday and the four weekend days out of the computation, the deadline became Friday, July 16. Plaintiff missed it by serving his motion on July 19, unless — as he argues — Rule 6(e) gave him an additional 3 days.
Rule 6(e) states:
Whenever a party has the right or is required to do some act or take some proceedings within a prescribed period after the service of a notice or other paper upon the party and the notice or paper is served upon the party by mail, 3 days shall be added to the prescribed period.
Mere quotation of Rule 6(e) shows why it is inapplicable to Rule 59(e) motions. The period for filing a Rule 59(e) motion does not — in the words of Rule 6(e) — begin with “service of a notice.” True, the clerk of the district court must “immediately” serve by mail a notice of the entry of a judgment (Fed. R.Civ.P. 77(d)). But the critical point for measuring the timeliness of a Rule 59(e) motion is not the date of service, nor is it the date of the court’s order. The 10 days allowed by Rule 59(e) begin with the clerk’s ministerial act of entering the court’s judgment in a “book” — today, often in the form of an automated system — “known as the ‘civil docket’” (Fed.R.Civ.P. 79(a)). The clerk’s action does more than start the clock. A judgment, which must “be set forth on a separate document,” does not become “effective” until the clerk enters it (Fed.R.Civ.P. 58).
Alerte v. McGinnis,
Since we do not have jurisdiction to review the judgment dismissing the complaint, the next question is whether we have appellate jurisdiction over the court’s order of September 23, 1993, denying plaintiffs first motion. The question may seem to lack any practical significance. As we already said, the district court’s ruling of September 23 correctly rejected the motion as untimely under Rule 59(e). Plaintiffs challenge to this ruling therefore appears doomed even if he could establish appellate jurisdiction. We would end on that note but for the district court’s decision of June 8 denying plaintiffs motion to reconsider this ruling. The court then said it would treat plaintiffs untimely Rule 59(e) motion as if it had been a motion under Rule 60(b) for relief from judgment, a motion not subject to the 10-day limit and without effect on the time for appealing from the original judgment (unless served within 10 days of its entry,
see
Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(4), as amended in 1993).
Compare Hoai v. Vo,
A “timely” appeal from a “ruling on a Rule 60(b) motion” may be taken under Fed.R.App.P. 4(a), although the court of appeals “may review the ruling only for abuse of discretion” and although the appeal “does not bring up the underlying judgment for review.”
Browder v. Director, Illinois Dep’t of Corrections,
As to the court’s refusal to relieve plaintiff from its judgment of September 23, *1227 we see no abuse of discretion. Plaintiff proposed to amend his complaint and supply allegations needed to set forth constitutional claims. But the amended allegations merely restated arguments the district court considered and rejected in its original ruling and, in any event, provided nothing from which the court could have concluded that they had any basis in fact.
Accordingly, plaintiff’s appeal from the judgment of July 1, 1993, is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction; and the judgment of September 23, 1993, is affirmed.
Notes
These opinions stand for the proposition that a motion for reconsideration filed within 10 days of entry of judgment will be treated as a Rule 59(e) motion, rather than a motion under Rule 60(b), for the purpose of calculating the time for noting an appeal — a proposition mooted by a 1993 amendment to the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure adding Rule 4(a)(4)(F). Before the amendment, the Fifth and Seventh Circuits, and perhaps the Ninth, had taken the additional step of requiring district courts to treat untimely Rule 59(e) motions as motions under Rule 60(b).
Lavespere v. Niagara Machine & Tool Works, Inc.,
