OPINION
¶ 1 Wе stated thirty years ago that appellate courts should “dismiss for lack of jurisdiction the ease where a litigant attempts to appeal where a motiоn is still pending in the trial court.”
Barassi v. Matison,
I.
¶2 On September 9, 2008, the superior court issuеd a decree dissolving the marriage of Sue Lynn Craig (“Wife”) and Roger Thomas Craig (“Husband”). Husband timely filed a motion for new trial or to amend the decree under Arizona Rules of Family Law Procedure 83 and 84. Before the court ruled on Husband’s motion, however, Wife filed a notice of appeal. Husband then cross-appealed. The superior court later denied Husband’s motion. Neither party filed a new or amended notice of appeal.
¶ 3 Relying on
Barassi,
a divided court of appeals dismissed bоth fully-briefed appeals for lack of jurisdiction.
Craig v. Craig,
¶ 4 Judge Kessler dissented, perceiving “tension” between
Performance Funding
and
Smith,
as the latter did not deal with an appeal filed by a party who had not filed the time-еxtending motion.
Id.
at 509-10 ¶ 7,
¶ 5 We granted Wife’s petition for review because the scope of appellate jurisdiction is a recurrent issue of stаtewide importance. ARCAP 23(c). We have jurisdiction under Article 6, Section 5(3) of the Arizona Constitution and A.R.S. § 12-120.24 (2010).
II.
¶ 6 An appeal may be filed from “a final judgment entered in ... superiоr court.” A.R.S. § 12-2101(B). The dissolution decree in this case was indisputably a final judgment. Appeal also lies from an order granting or denying a new trial. A.R.S. § 12-2101(F)(1). 1
¶ 7 After “the entry of the judgment from which the appeal is taken,” a notice of appeal must be filed within thirty days “unless a different time is provided by law.” ARCAP 9(a). However, if any party files any of a series of specified post-judgment motions— including a motion for a new trial—the “time for appeal for all parties is extended” and does not begin to run until the entry of an order disposing of such motions. ARCAP 9(b).
¶ 8 The interplay of the appeals statute and our procedural rules has periodically required Arizona courts to address aрpellate jurisdiction when a notice of appeal was filed before the entry of an order disposing of a time-extending post-judgment motion. In
Barassi,
the noticе of appeal was filed after the superior court issued a minute entry denying a motion for a new trial, but before the formal entry of that order under Arizona Rule of Civil Procedure 58(a), which requires that all judgments “be in writing ... and signed by a judge.”
¶ 9 In Barassi, we did nоt dismiss the premature appeal. Rather, we reinstated the appeal and noted:
The underlying rationale of requiring a final judgment for appealability is to avoid the constant disruption of the trial process, to prevent appellate courts from considering issues that may be addressed later in trial, and to promote efficiency____ To permit an appeal in the instant case does not circumvent these concepts.
Id.
at 421,
¶ 10 The court of appeals applied this principle in
Baumann v. Tuton,
in which a party moved for a new trial but filed a notice of appeal while the motion was pending.
*107
¶ 11 In
Performance Funding,
however, the court of appeals sustained jurisdiction over an appeal filed by one party while the other party’s time-extending motion was still рending, declining to follow the
Barassi
dictum.
¶ 12 Six years later, we flatly stated that
Barassi
“create [d] only a limited exception to the final judgment rule,” allowing a notice of appeal to be filed “after the trial сourt has made its final decision, but before it has entered a formal judgment,” and that the
Barassi
exception applied only “if no decision of the court could chаnge and the only remaining task is merely ministerial.”
Smith,
III.
¶ 13 The majority below and the unanimous panel in
Engel
had it right. We repeat what we said in
Smith: Barassi
“create[d] only a
limited exception
to the final judgment rule that allows a notice of appeal to be filed after the trial court has made its final decision, but before it has entered a formal judgment, if no decision of the court could change and the only remaining task is merely ministerial.”
¶ 14 We reject Wife’s suggestion that we should resuscitate
Performance Funding,
which turned on which party had filed the time-extending motion. Even the dissenting judge below conceded that this distinction “make[s] little sensе.”
Craig,
¶ 15 We also reject Wife’s suggestion that we today read ARCAP 9(b) as in haec verba with Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(4)(B)(i). The federal rule provides:
If a party files a notice of appeal after the court announces or enters a judgment— but before it disposes of any motion listed in Rule 4(a)(4)(A)—the notice becomes effective to appeal a judgment or order, in whole or in part, when the order disposing of the last such rеmaining motion is entered.
Whatever the conceptual merits of the federal rule, the language of ARCAP 9(b) is different, and Arizona jurisprudence interpreting our rule has tаken a diametrically opposite approach for some thirty years. A dramatic change to Arizona appellate procedure should оccur through rulemaking, not through an opinion effectively rewriting our appellate rules and abandoning settled precedent. See Ariz. R. Sup.Ct. 28(A) (providing for amendment of рrocedural rules).
IV.
¶ 16 At oral argument, Husband did not oppose Wife’s argument that the two appeals should be considered on the merits. Accordingly, Husband and Wife agrеed to file a *108 stipulated request in the superior court under Arizona Rule of Family Law Procedure 85(C)(1)(f), seeking temporary relief from— and immediate reinstatement оf—the dissolution decree and the order denying Husband’s motion for new trial. Because these appeals relate only to the division of property, we are confident that the trial court will grant such a stipulated motion, allowing both parties to file fresh notices of appeal. The court of appeals сan then reinstate the previously dismissed appeals and consider them on the briefing already submitted.
V.
¶ 17 For the reasons above, we affirm the opinion of the court of appeals.
Notes
. Because Arizona Rule of Family Law Procedure 78(A) defines "judgment” as "a decree and an order from which аn appeal lies,” an order granting or denying a new trial is also an appeal-able "judgment" for purposes of Arizona's procedural rules. See also Ariz. R. Civ. P. 54(a) (containing identical definition of "judgment”).
