In Briggs v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 2 Cir.,
The nature of the suit and the reasons for our reversal of the former judgment are stated in our previous opinion, with which familiarity will be assumed, and only what is needed to present the present issues will be repeated. During the trial a motion to dismiss the suit for lack of jurisdiction was made by the defendant. The court reserved decision on the motion and submitted the cause to the jury which, on February 15, 1945, returned a plaintiff’s verdict. The -motion to dismiss was granted, however, on April 19, 1945 and judgment for the defendant whs duly entered. We reversed that judgment on January 7, 1946 and by mandate of January 23, 1946 directed that judgment on the verdict for the plaintiff be entered. We neither did, nor were requested to, give any directions as to interest. On January 28, 1946 the judgment on our mandate was entered for the amount of the verdict and for interest from the date of the verdict as above stated.
Some modification of this judgment is required. The relevant federal statute, 28 U.S.C.A. § 811, provides that interest on judgments “shall be calculated from the date of the judgment, * * *.”
1
The action is based solely upon the Federal Employers’ Liability Act, 45 U.S.C.A. § 51 et seq., and, being a suit to enforce liability under a federal statute, federal law controls. Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. Co. v. Kuhn,
The remaining question is whether interest should be allowed from the date a judgment for the plaintiff on the verdict would, in the absence of error in decision, have been entered, viz., the date when the original judgment for the defendant was entered by order of court; or from January 28, 1946, the date when judgment for the plaintiff was actually entered after our mandaie went down. And if the latter date is the correct one, we must decide whether we now have any power to amend that mandate to make the judgment date nunc pro tunc that of the original judgment and, if so, whether that power ought to be exercised.
*23 It is true that subsequent events have shown that on the date of the original judgment the plaintiff was entitled to have a judgment entered on the verdict and that this judgment would have borne interest •until it was paid. But from a practical ■standpoint it is equally true that the plaintiff then was “entitled” only to have the trial judge decide the pending motions and ¡direct the entry of such judgment as he fairly determined to be lawful and just. That is exactly what the trial judge did. Thereafter the plaintiff was “entitled” only to take whatever action by way of appellate review the law afforded her. The delay in the entry of the proper judgment was necessary in the sense that time for appellate review was required; it was only after the ordinary appellate proceedings had been completed that the plaintiffs’ cause of action had reached the point where her right to a judgment on the verdict was judicially established. That judgment was then •promptly entered. The date of its entry 'became the judgment day from which interest is to be computed under the statute. It was, under the circumstances, the first day when the judgment could have been .entered. See Murphy v. Lehigh Valley R. «Co., supra.
The only judgment which could -fhen lawfully have been entered was, how,ever, one which conformed to the mandate ,of this court. That directed judgment in -the amount of the verdict but made no di-rec.tion whatever as to interest. When our ¡mandate specifically directs th'e entry of judgment for a designated amount, the ¡District Court is without power to enter 'judgment for a different sum. In re Washington & Georgetown R. Co.,
For present purposes we will assume .that we could, and had the matter been timely called to our attention, would ¡have directed by our mandate the entry <of judgment for the plaintiff nunc pro tunc as of the day on which the original judgment for the defendant was entered. See Ireland v. Connecticut Co.,
The judgment is modified to exclude all interest upon the amount of the verdict up to the date judgment was entered and, as so modified, it is affirmed.
Notes
Louisiana & Arkansas Ry. Co. v. Pratt, supra, does not necessarily have to be read to the contrary, since it may ■well be that the date of the verdict there coincided with that of the judgment for the defendant.
