Harold Daniels is the maker of a $4.5 million note, which his wife Irene Daniels guaranteed. The Danielses (the Borrowers) have a cattle business in New Mexico. They borrowed the money from Exchange National Bank (the Bank) over several years. They used the money to finance that business — and, as it turns out, a joint venture in which they were partners with the two employees of the Bank who negotiated and supervised the loan.
When the Borrowers did not pay, the Bank filed this diversity action to collect. The Borrowers replied that the Bank’s employees had promised them that the employees would repay portions of the loan devoted to the joint venture and that the Borrowers need not repay personally. The district court rejected this defense under state law and entered summary judgment for the Bank on the issue of liability. The award, including interest, was approximately $6 million. Some months later, the court awarded attorneys’ fees to the Bank, as the note provided. We first must decide whether an appeal from the award of fees, the “final decision” in the case, brings up the disposition of the merits too. We conclude that it does not. We decide on the merits only the challenge to the award of fees, which we affirm.
I
The district court’s opinion awarding summary judgment to the Bank was rendered on April 25, 1984. On May 10 the court entered a judgment, and it entered an order on May 17 to correct a mistake in adding principal and interest to derive the full award. The judgment does not mention Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(b), but it includes, in the language of that rule, a “finding that there is no just reason for delay.” In three places the document refers to itself as a “final judgment.” It was not final in the sense of winding up the case, though. It declared that the Bank was entitled to attorneys’ fees in an amount still to be determined.
On May 30 the Borrowers sought reconsideration under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). On June 18 they filed both a notice of appeal (No. 84-2037) from the judgment and a motion to enlarge the time within which to file an appeal. The motion contended that there is a conflict among the circuits on the *289 question whether the entry of judgment on the merits is an appealable order when questions of fees remain to be decided; the Borrowers asked the district court to enlarge the time for appeal so that the merits and the questions about fees could be presented in a single appeal.
On June 28 the district court denied the Rule 59 motion as untimely. It “granted” the motion to extend the time for appeal, writing: “Said defendants’ time for filing notice of appeal is extended ten (10) days from May 10, 1984.” Because the Borrowers had had 30 days from May 10 without this “extension,” this was the equivalent of denial. The Borrowers filed a new appeal (No. 84-2232) on July 24.
Finally, on September 26 the district court entered an opinion and order awarding fees and expenses of about $108,000. On October 11 the Borrowers filed a notice of appeal (No. 84-2737) directed to the order awarding fees. The Bank maintains that this is the only effective notice of appeal, and that it presents for our review only issues concerning fees and costs. We agree.
The appeal filed on June 18 (No. 84-2037) is either too late or too early, depending on the effect of the motion for reconsideration. If the motion for reconsideration was timely, then the notice on June 18 was ineffective because the motion suspended the finality of the judgment, making appeal impossible until the court had acted on the motion.
Griggs v. Provident Consumer Discount Co.,
The appeal filed on July 24 (No. 84-2232) is timely only if the motion for reconsideration was timely or the district court was required to grant an extension of time. The Borrowers do not argue that the district court was required to give them more time; the disposition of requests for extensions is entrusted to the district court’s discretion. It is conceivable that the district judge meant to extend the time until 10 days after its order of June 28, as Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(5) permits, or to grant the Borrowers an additional ten days to appeal the May 10 order. But the order does not say either thing. The Borrowers did not seek clarification from the district court or discuss the interpretation of the order in their briefs here (they mention it only at page 12 of their reply brief, without elaboration); they did not file a new notice within ten days after June 28. We therefore treat the order as ineffectual.
The motion for reconsideration also does not help the Borrowers. Rule 59(e) provides that the motion must be filed within 10 days. The Borrowers missed the time; they did not even file the motion within 10 days of the corrected judgment entered on May 17. The Borrowers say that the motion was timely because the judgment of May 10 was not “final.” If the judgment was not “final,” though, there was nothing to alter or amend. The time to appeal had not begun to run, the motion of May 30 would not affect the time, the notice of appeal filed on July 24 would be irrelevant, and the appeal filed on October 11 would be sufficient to preserve all issues. The Borrowers’ appeal therefore stands or falls on the notice filed October 11.
II
The parties have devoted a great deal of attention to the question whether an ag
*290
grieved party
always
may appeal from an order disposing of the merits but reserving the amount of fees. The Bank says that it may, citing
White v. New Hampshire Department of Employment Security,
This exchange misses an essential point. Suppose for the moment that the merits and the fees are sufficiently independent to allow independent appeals. It does not follow that the failure to appeal from whichever order is entered first forecloses the aggrieved party from raising all of the issues on appeal from the final judgment at the end of the case.
Many orders during the course of a case might be sufficiently independent to be deemed “final decisions” under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, immediately appealable under the “collateral order” doctrine of
Cohen v. Beneficial Industrial Loan Corp.,
The question whether a particular order in a ease is sufficiently “final” to be appealable under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 can pose questions of great subtlety. The rule that only a separate document starts the running of the time for appeal gives the parties the notice they need. A rule that required people to appeal from potentially “final” decisions not embodied in separate documents would lead to a blizzard of protective appeals as litigants tried to ensure their rights to review; many times the rule also would lead to pointless forfeitures as litigants inadvertently overlooked the possibility that a particular order might be characterized as a “final decision.” The separate document rule protects the parties from forfeitures and the appellate courts from a torrent of appeals. Under Rule 58 it is never necessary to file more than one appeal per final judgment.
The district court entered a separate document, labeled a “final judgment,” on May 10. We must decide whether this is the sort of decision that triggers the need to appeal. If the document set off the time for appeal as from a final judgment, then 28 U.S.C. § 2107 and Fed.R.App.P. 4(a) mean that a failure to appeal precludes further review of the merits. If, on the other hand, this judgment just permits review in the same sense that a collateral order, deemed a “final decision” under Cohen, permits review, then the failure to appeal within 30 days does not foreclose review of all issues on appeal from the final final judgment.
If we were writing on a clean slate, we would doubt the propriety of characterizing the May 10 document as a “final judgment.” Rule 54(b), like other principles allowing more than one appeal per
*291
case, is designed to alleviate a problem created by modern rules of pleading, which allow the joinder of multiple parties and claims. This joinder can create “hardship and denial of justice through delay if each issue must await the determination of all issues as to all parties before a final judgment can be had.”
Dickinson v. Petroleum Conversion Corp.,
This is not only the ordinary course but also the preferable one. Multiple appeals occupy in the aggregate more time of counsel and appellate courts than single appeals raising multiple issues. The final decision rule implemented by 28 U.S.C. § 1291 makes one appeal per case the norm. The requirement of finality “is the dominant rule in federal appellate practice”.
Flanagan v. United States,
Often an appeal under Rule 54(b) presents nice questions of appealability. E. g.,
Liberty Mutual Insurance Co. v. Wetzel,
We are not free to pursue this reasoning to its conclusion, however.
Swanson v. American Consumer Industries, Inc.,
The first characteristic of a good jurisdictional rule is predictability and uniform application. If we indulged our preferences at this late date, we would create an unpredictable situation in which jurisdiction would depend on the circuit in which the case arose, and maybe even on the type of order entered. The approach of Swanson has some other advantages, too. It avoids the need to identify “the” final order in a case — which itself might be a bootless task. If the time for appeal on any Rule 58 document runs, the parties may conduct or settle the remainder of the litigation on the assumption that the rights covered by the first judgment are fixed. We therefore follow Swanson and hold that once the district court properly enters an appealable judgment on a separate document, the aggrieved party must appeal at once even if other issues remain for decision.
Ill
This leaves only the question whether the judgment of May 10 was appealable at the time. If it was not, the fact that it was labeled “final” would not cause the Borrowers to forfeit their right to an appeal.
Page v. Preisser,
We have expressed qualms about the use of Rule 54(b) to sever questions of entitlement to fees for immediate appeal, because the Rule covers only separate
claims,
and the amount of fees is not a “claim” separate from the entitlement to fees.
Mulay Plastics, Inc. v. Grand Trunk Western R.R.,
It may be that the Court did not mean in White to make the decision on the merits appealable independently of the fees; the case nominally held only that fees were so separate that they need not be raised under Rule 59(e) within 10 days. But the rationale leading to this result — that fees have little or nothing to do with the merits — also produces an appealable final decision, which in turn sets the outer limit within which the notice of appeal must be filed. As a result, the Court’s effort in White to prevent forfeitures of fees (which could occur if litigants did not act in the 10 days provided by Rule 59(e)) now can create forfeitures of challenges to the decision on the merits (if litigants do not act in the 30 days provided by Rule 4(a)). The approach we discussed at pages 290-291 above might prevent this forfeiture, but we have elected to follow Swanson and five other courts instead.
The Borrowers press the point that fees provided by statute are different from fees provided by contract. White dealt with fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. We *293 conclude, however, that the source of the power to award fees does not matter. The finality of a decision depends on the kinds of issues the court determines, not on the source of authority for the court’s decision. White, Swanson, and Bittner establish that a disposition of all claims on the merits is appealable, even though questions about fees remain. If that disposition on the merits is embodied in a separate document within the meaning of Rule 58 — as it was in Swanson and is here — then the losing party must appeal. If it is not so embodied, the losing party may appeal but may also elect to wait. This rule has the virtues of generality and certainty, which a good jurisdictional rule should. A rule turning on the source of the entitlement to fees would be far too uncertain.
We recognize that several courts have answered this question the other way. For example,
C.I.T. Corp. v. Nelson,
We reject as altogether too metaphysical the distinction between fees that are “compensation for injury” and those that are not. All awards of fees make the prevailing party better off. Whether this benefit is “really” a way to compensate for the underlying hurt or instead a way to reduce the cost of litigation, thus making redress of the underlying hurt more likely and leaving the prevailing party with a greater net award, is a question of semantics rather than substance. Resolution of this question would depend on the legislative (or bargaining) history of a given statute or contract — if indeed such a question ever has a sensible answer. Jurisdictional rules should be framed to avoid such case-by-case decisions.
United States v. MacDonald,
The only case in this circuit that even colorably supports a rule that makes appealability turn on the source of authority to grant fees is
Hairline Creations, Inc. v. Kefalas,
The decision in
Hairline
depended on a peculiarity of the statute at hand, which restricted fees to exceptional cases. Fees served to increase the recovery in egregious cases, thus increasing the effective damages in such cases. They could be characterized as a separate penalty for certain offenses.
Hairline
was decided before the Supreme Court held in
White
that requests for fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 need not be presented under Rule 59(e). We distinguished
Hairline
on razor-thin grounds in
Spray-Rite Service Corp. v. Monsanto Co.,
White, Swanson,
and
Bittner
were decided before the district court’s judgment in this case and gave the Borrowers ample notice of the path we would follow. The Borrowers knew the problem; their motion to extend the time for appeal pointed to the disagreement among the circuits on the finality of decisions such as the order of May 10. The Borrowers had only to file a notice of appeal by June 9 or a Rule 59(e) motion by May 20. We can do nothing for them now. “A court lacks discretion to consider the merits of a case over which it is without jurisdiction, and thus, by definition, a jurisdictional ruling may never be made prospective only.”
Firestone Tire & Rubber Co. v. Risjord,
IV
The only issue properly before us is the award of some $108,000 in legal fees and costs. The district court awarded to the Bank the exact amount it paid to its lawyers for the conduct of the litigation. The Borrowers maintain that they should not pay for time spent defending against their counterclaims in Illinois and two independent suits filed in other states, time they call unnecessary, and expenses not appropriately taxed as “costs.” The district court considered and rejected these arguments in a careful and thoughtful opinion.
The Borrowers rely on
Kaiser v. Olson,
The Borrowers' attack on the amount of time counsel spent, some 890 hours, was considered fully by the district court. The Borrowers not only initiated two other suits but also defended this one by arguing that the Bank’s officers committed fraud, that the note was not supported by consideration, that the Bank’s officers ratified two employees’ oral representations that the Bank would not collect the debt, and that the note violated 12 U.S.C. § 1972 because it “tied” an extension of credit to other transactions with the Bank. Given the nature of the defenses, the fact that discovery had to be taken in several states, and the fact that this is a $6 million case, the district court was entitled to conclude that 890 hours of work leading to a total bill of about $100,000 was not excessive.
Finally, we agree with the district court that it is immaterial whether all of the expenses sought in this case would be taxed as “costs” under Fed.R.Civ.P. 54(d). The note and guaranty allow the recovery of “all expenses” and “all costs of collec *295 tion.” The principal expense in question is $2,606.86, the cost of travel to New Mexico to take the Borrowers’ depositions. (The Bank represents that they refused to be deposed anywhere else.) This is a legitimate expense of collecting on the note, which the Bank must recover if it is to be made whole. The district court was entitled to award this and the other contested items.
Appeals No. 84-2037 and 84-2232 are dismissed for want of jurisdiction. The award of attorneys’ fees, the only question properly presented by appeal No. 84-2737, is affirmed.
