Opinion PER CURIAM.
ORDER
Upon consideration of appellants’ Petition for Rehearing it is
ORDERED, by the court, that the petition is denied, as is more fully set forth in the opinion of the Court filed herein this date.
Plaintiff-appellants, Arlene B. Singer and Joel D. Joseph, have petitioned for rehearing of our order granting Shannon & Luchs’s motion for attorneys’ fees. Their objection is that Shannon & Luchs’s motion was filed nearly a year after our unpublished judgment in its favor and was therefore in violation of Fed.R.App.P. 39’s requirement that a bill of costs thereunder be filed within 14 days of entry of judgment. We write briefly to explain that our order was based upon Fed.R.App.P. 38 and that, under its terms and in the absence of any rule of this court to the contrary, there is no time limit for motions under Rule 38 other than the principles of laches.
Rule 38 states in its entirety:
If a court of appeals shall determine that an appeal is frivolous, it may award just damages and single or double costs to the appellee.
Plainly its language imposes no time limit on the filing of a bill of costs. Indeed, some courts regard the interest in discouraging frivolous appeals as so compelling that no motion is necessary, and they award Rule 38 costs sua sponte. See, e.g.,
Hill v. Norfolk & Western Ry.,
Other circuit courts have held that while the term “costs” in Rule 39 excludes attorneys’ fees, the reference in Rule 38 to “just damages and single or double costs” comprises them. See, e.g.,
Sun Ship, Inc. v. Matson Navigation Co.,
There is a dictum to the contrary in
Montgomery & Associates, Inc. v. CFTC,
Montgomery & Associates
cannot be said to establish a general rule of the circuit that it is impermissible to allow fee requests limited (in time of application) only by laches. Such a notion would be inconsistent with prior circuit law. See
Alabama Power Co. v. Gorsuch,
The allowance of an application under Rule 38 long after the time will have expired for a bill of costs under Rule 39 is justified by the special purpose of the former rule. It seeks to deter and punish frivolous appeals. The social interest in so doing, and the standard of egregiously objectionable conduct that triggers its application, justify imposing fewer technical restrictions.
The appeal in this case was frivolous. Whatever the limit implicit in laches, the delay in this case does not reach it.
We conclude with the following dictum of our own, offered in the hopes of forestalling further litigation: in light of the brevity of our previous order, and the relative length of this opinion, the latest petition for rehearing was not itself frivolous.
REHEARING DENIED.
