OPINION OF THE COURT
Andrea Sawka contends the district court erred first by denying her petition to reinstate her action, and second by enforcing the settlement agreement between the parties. Because the district court correctly held that Sawka’s motion to reinstate her ease was untimely, we will affirm that part of its order. However, the district court erred when it enforced the settlement agreement. We will vacate that portion of its order.
I.
This case began as a Title VII/ADEA action in October, 1989. After Sawka’s first counsel withdrew, her second attorney negotiated a settlement agreement. The court dismissed the case with prejudice on February 21, 1991, in accordance with Local Rule 23(b). 1
Later Sawka decided she could not accept certain terms of the settlement contending that certain matters at issue were not addressed in the agreement. Her attorney so notified the court at a conference on April 11, 1991, but did not file a motion to vacate the order dismissing the case. A few months later, her second attorney also withdrew from the case and her third and current attorney, Peter G. Loftus, Esq., entered an appearance.
On February 17, 1992, Attorney Loftus moved on behalf of Sawka to reinstate the case and vacate the settlement agreement. Healtheast filed a brief in opposition and a cross-motion to enforce the settlement agreement. The district court denied the motion to reinstate, and because Attorney Loftus filed no response to Healtheast’s motion to enforce, the court deemed it un *140 contested under Local Rule 20(c) 2 and granted it. Loftus then moved the district court to reconsider its order, which the court denied. Sawka appeals.
II
This case requires that we first resolve a procedural problem: whether Sawka’s “petition to reinstate the case” was timely. The district court found, and we agree, that Sawka’s petition is clearly late under, and not saved by, Local Rule 23(b), which requires that a petition to reinstate be filed within ninety days.
A petition under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) is timely if “made within a reasonable time and for reasons under (1), (2) and (3) not more than one year after the judgment ... was entered.” Although the ninety-day limit of Local Rule 23(b) may properly inform the district court’s evaluation of what is “reasonable,” Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) takes precedence over the local rule.
Lasky v. Continental Products Corp.,
Notwithstanding this analytical error, the district court reached the correct result. Rule 60(b) provides six bases for relief from a judgment. Sawka argues'that only two of these might plausibly apply: (1) “mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect,” and (6) “any other reason justifying relief[.]” We conclude that neither applies.
In her appellate brief, Sawka argues that the settlement agreement “obviously needs clarification.” We think Sawka has waived this argument, because the sole reason Sawka offered in the district court to support her “petition to reinstate the case” was that defendant stopped paying disability payments to her “prior to the agreed upon period,” thus allegedly violating the terms of the settlement agreement. Even if we were to reach this contention, however, Sawka points to nothing in the record indicating any mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect. The lack of sufficiently detailed language in the settlement agreement regarding disability payments may be problematic, but the fact remains that the parties did enter into a settlement agreement. Based on that agreement, the district court entered a judgment of dismissal. Even if we assume there might have been a mistake, inadvertence or neglect in drafting the terms of the agreement, that does not call the validity of the judgment into doubt. Accordingly, Rule 60(b)(1) provides Sawka no basis for relief.
Sawka’s argument under Rule 60(b)(6) fares no better. Assuming
arguendo
that Healtheast breached the terms of the settlement agreement, that is no reason to set the judgment of dismissal
aside,
although it may give rise to a cause of action to
enforce
the agreement. Relief under Rule 60(b)(6) may only be granted under extraordinary circumstances where, without such relief, an extreme and unexpected hardship would occur.
Lasky,
III.
Sawka also contends the district court erred by entering an order enforcing the settlement. The district court dismissed Sawka’s case outright, without prejudice, without incorporating the terms of the settlement, and hence, without specifically retaining jurisdiction to enforce it. Thus the issue Sawka presents is whether a district court has the power to enforce a settlement agreement which is the basis of, but not incorporated into, an order or judgment of the court. We hold it does not.
In
Halderman,
we addressed the issue of whether courts have “inherent jurisdiction to enforce settlement agreements in cases that were once properly before them.”
Here the situation is different. Sawka's second counsel confirmed to the district court that a settlement had been reached. But none of this settlement agreement was made part of the judgment of the court, which simply dismissed the action upon representation by counsel that trial would be unnecessary and the matter was settled.
In
Washington Hospital v. White,
We hold that unless a settlement is part of the record, incorporated into an order of the district court, or the district court has manifested an intent to retain jurisdiction, it has no power beyond the Rules of Civil Procedure to exercise jurisdiction over a petition to enforce a settlement and here its order doing so will be vacated.
See Hins-
*142
dale,
IV.
We are troubled that throughout, plaintiff’s cause appears to have been the victim of shabby stewardship. When Sawka’s second attorney, J. Brian Johnson, Esq., failed to file a motion to vacate the dismissal under Local Rule 23(b), her case was dead. It cannot now be resuscitated by Rule 60(b) when the reasons proffered by counsel do not qualify for consideration under the rule. Moreover, in the district court Attorney Loftus filed no response whatsoever to the motion to enforce the settlement. In that context we can readily understand why the district court deemed the motion uncontested and granted it. The adversary system works well only when each side of an issue is vigorously and competently presented. It is painfully obvious even from the materials presented on appeal that the professional zeal so vital to sharpen the issues of any cause is missing.
V.'
In summary, we will affirm the district court’s order refusing to reinstate the case and vacate that portion of its order of April 6, 1992 enforcing the settlement agreement.
Notes
. "Whenever in any civil action counsel shall notify the clerk or the judge to whom the action is assigned that the issues between the parties have been settled, the clerk shall, upon order of the judge to whom the case is assigned, enter an order dismissing the action with prejudice, without costs, pursuant to the agreement of counsel. Any such order of dismissal may be vacated, modified, or stricken from the record, for cause shown, upon the application of any party served within ninety (90) days of the entry of such order of dismissal." U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Local Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 23(b).
. "Every motion not certified as uncontested shall be accompanied by a brief[.] ... [A]ny party opposing the motion shall serve a brief in opposition, together with such answer or other response as may be appropriate, within ten (10) days after service of the motion and supporting brief.... In the absence of timely response, the motion may be treated as uncontested.” U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Pennsylvania, Local Rules of Civil Procedure, Rule 20(c).
. One case appears to state a contrary rule, but on close examination is distinguishable. In
Kelly
v.
Greer,
.
See also Hobbs & Co. v. American Investors Management, Inc.,
