The plaintiffs say that they were defrauded by Robert V. Mueller, that the fraud violates the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO), 18 U.S.C. §§ 1961-68, that Robert Mueller used some of the money from the fraud to buy life insurance, and that they are therefore entitled to the proceeds of the policies *301 now that Robert Mueller has died. Shirley Mueller, Robert’s widow and the sole beneficiary of more than $4.5 million in life insurance, also wants the proceeds. The insurers deposited the proceeds in court under 28 U.S.C. § 1335 with a request that the judge decide who gets the money.
Shirley Mueller contests the RICO suit on the merits, but she also wants the money in the interim. She asked the district judge to turn the proceeds (with interest, now more than $5 million) over to her, contending that she had been forced to sell the family home and take up employment as a clerk in a department store “in order to survive and finance her daughters’ education, not to mention her need to defend this novel and complex litigation and its ruinous impact.” In a brief minute order the district judge denied her motion to dismiss the complaint and her motion “for immediate hearing and ruling”. The court also denied her motion to obtain the $5 million. In open court the judge invited her to make a less ambitious motion seeking any funds in excess of the amount claimed by the plaintiffs. As Mrs. Mueller puts it in her memorandum on jurisdiction: “Rather than supplicate herself ... the widow has filed her notice of appeal seeking review by this Court of the district court’s ruling, which she respectfully submits is tantamount to an injunction holding hostage her husband’s death benefits until the district court is satisfied as to the ultimate disposition of all claims.” She also indirectly relies on the “collateral order” doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The order retaining the proceeds in the court’s possession does not finally dispose of the litigation. Much lies ahead — that is the premise of Shirley Mueller’s request to have the money now rather than (if she prevails) at the end of the litigation. Her position is, however, superficially similar to that of the plaintiff in Cohen, who appealed when instructed to post a bond to secure the costs of litigation. The dispute about the bond, like the dispute in this case, concerns who shall hold a sum of money — a party or the court — during the course of the litigation. The Supreme Court termed the order to post a bond an appealable collateral order because the order finally resolved a dispute unrelated to the merits and was effectively unreviewable after a final judgment. (Even if the order to post the bond had been erroneous, this would not have been a good reason to reverse any judgment on the merits.) Perhaps the denial of a motion to pay out the proceeds is collateral in the same sense. Surprisingly, apparently no reported decision addresses the question whether a refusal to turn over the proceeds in an interpleader action is an appealable collateral order.
An order is collateral within the meaning of
Cohen
only if it finally resolves the subject in dispute, is independent of the merits, and is not effectively reviewable on appeal from the final judgment.
Richardson-Merrell, Inc. v. Roller,
— U.S. —,
The third requirement, effective unre-viewability on appeal, also distinguishes this case from Cohen. True, if the judge has erred in refusing to turn the funds over, this will not be a reason to reverse any judgment on the merits, just as in Cohen an error concerning the bond would not have affected the judgment. But if the refusal to turn over the funds was in error, this will not necessarily hurt Shirley Mueller. If she loses on the merits, she is not entitled to all the money now or ever. If she wins she receives the fund, together with interest. The interest compensates her for the delay. The plaintiff in Cohen had to pay a bonding company for the bond; this premium was not recoverable. Mueller argues that she suffers an injury in the interim because she has sold her house and gone to work. This is not different in kind, however, from the hardship many litigants endure during a lawsuit. Ongoing litigation may induce people to sell assets or go to work to pay counsel while meeting life’s other obligations. Many interim orders, especially discovery orders, may have significant effects on the cost of litigation and on parties’ control of their lives. They may be directed to show up for interrogation or to pay to reproduce documents. If this sort of effect were enough to make the order appealable, we would be deluged with interlocutory appeals, each arguing that prompt review could end the litigation (and the sacrifice) sooner.
Every case has housekeeping and discovery orders, many of them costly to the litigants. They are not appealable just because expensive. See
Tenneco Inc. v. Saxony Bar & Tube, Inc.,
It does not help to recharacterize the judge’s decision as the denial of an injunction appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). The order does not compel anyone to do anything, and it is odd to think of the court’s refusal to instruct its clerk to pay money as a “denial of an injunction.” During any litigation someone holds the stakes. Usually that someone is the defendant. The plaintiff in a tort suit could not get immediate appellate review by filing a motion for an order requiring the defendant to pay up immediately. Section 1292(a)(1) is designed to allow prompt appeals of decisions on the merits, and this purpose informs the definition of “injunction.” Only an order effectively on the merits, coupled with an irreparable effect on the merits, amounts to the grant or denial of an interlocutory injunction.
Carson v. American Brands, Inc.,
Mrs. Mueller relies principally on
In re Feit & Drexler, Inc.,
