Before us is a motion to dismiss an appeal from an order granting postjudgment discovery. Such orders were held unap-pealable in
Rouse Construction Int’l, Inc. v. Rouse Construction Corp.,
Central States had obtained a money judgment from the district court against Express Freight Lines, and in aid of its efforts to collect the judgment requested Mr. Jansen to produce his federal income tax returns. He refused, and after twice being ordered by the court to produce the returns, produced them in redacted form, omitting information that Central States considered material to its collection proceeding. After inspecting the unredacted returns in camera, Judge Zagel ordered Jansen to furnish them to Central States pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 34 and 69(a) — the latter rule expressly authorizing discovery in aid of execution of judgment. It is this order that Jansen seeks to appeal. Central States contends that we have no appellate jurisdiction.
The general rule of course is that interlocutory orders are not appealable till the end of the case. The rule bars appeals from pretrial discovery orders,
Reise v. Board of Regents,
But this analysis goes only part of the way to a conclusion that orders granting postjudgment discovery are not appealable. A final order is appealable
even if the appellant could obtain judicial review by some other route. A post-judgment order might seem final by definition because the judgment is already behind it. But there are judgments and there are judgments. The judgment entered pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 58 ends the proceeding to determine liability and relief, but it begins the collection proceeding if the defendant refuses to pay. A contested collection proceeding will end in a judgment or a series of judgments granting supplementary relief to the plaintiff. The judgment that concludes the collection proceeding is the judgment from which the defendant can appeal.
Transportation Cybernetics, Inc. v. Forest Transit Comm’n,
Appeal Dismissed.
