A notice of appeal filed on January 19, 1981, as later amended, purported to appeal from (1) an order entered April 17, 1980 dismissing the claims of one plaintiff at the close of plaintiff’s case; (2) a judgment entered July 14, 1980 against both plaintiffs; (3) an order entered September 23, 1980 awarding attorney’s fees to defendant, subject to later determination of amount; (4) a judgment entered December 19, 1980 for recovery by defendant of attorneys’ fees in a specified amount.
A notice of appeal in a civil case where the United States Government is not a party must be filed within thirty days from entry of final judgment. Fed.R. App.P. 4(a)(1). Timely filing or a notice of appeal is mandatory and jurisdictional.
Browder v. Director, Illinois Department of Corrections,
Appellee has moved for dismissal of the appeal as to all the orders except the judgment entered December 19. We conclude that the order entered September 23 awarding attorneys’ fees, but not determining the amount, is an interlocutory order incidental to and a predicate for the December 19 judgment and is brought here by the appeal from that judgment. The appeal must be dismissed as to the order entered April 17 which became merged in the judgment of July 14.
The rule in this circuit is that the reservation of the issue of attorneys’ fees at the time of a judgment deciding all other issues does not impede the finality of that judgment.
Swanson v. American Consumer Industries, Inc.,
Obin v. District 9, Machinists,
We see no reason why fees should be characterized as incidental or non-incidental to a judgment on the merits based on the nature of the suit. Nor do we think that the decisions in either
Obin
or
Richerson,
which happened to be Title VII cases, were based on such a theory. We do note, however, that both
Obin
and
Richerson
involved fee awards to prevailing plaintiffs rather than prevailing defendants as in the instant
*789
case. Fee awards to prevailing defendants under Title VII are the exception rather than the rule.
Christianburg Garment Co. v. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission,
In conclusion, the court orders this appeal dismissed as to all orders other than the judgment of December 19, 1980. The order of September 23, 1980 may be reviewed as an interlocutory order in the proceeding disposed of by the December 19, 1980 judgment. The court further orders that this appeal be consolidated with Appeal Number 81-1148, defendant’s cross-appeal.
Notes
. The thirtieth day after December 19, 1980 was actually Saturday, January 17, 1981, but a filing due on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday is timely if filed the next day which is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday. Fed.R. Civ.P. 6(a).
