Plaintiff-appellant Frederick Feinstein appeals a Massachusetts district court order that dismissed his pro se complaint on the ground that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction over the defendants. Although neither party raises the issue, we are duty bound to assess the propriety of our own jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Spiegel v. Trustees of Tufts College,
*18 I.
On March 14, 1990, Feinstein filed a complaint for injunctive relief and damages arising from the defendants’ alleged breach of contract and infringement of Feinstein’s patent to a fluid sprayforming showerhead device. Feinstein claimed that the defendants sold these devices under a contract with him and that the defendants owed him over $100,000 under the terms of the contract. Feinstein further claimed that the defendants were manufacturing аnd selling counterfeit showerheads in violation of his patent rights.
The defendants moved to dismiss Fein-stein’s complaint on two grounds. They said (1) that the district court lacked personal jurisdiction over them and (2) that Feinstein had a prior action pending against them in a California superior court. 1 The defendants’ motion to dismiss was buttressed by affidavits from defense counsel and from Joyce Moses, a defendant. Feinstein filed an opposition to the motion to dismiss, along with affidavits and a supporting memorandum.
On October 12, 1990, the district court issued an order granting the motion to dismiss. The court determined that the defendants’ business, Sun-Cal Products, was, in effect, no more than a “passive purchaser” of Feinstein’s products. As such, the defendants lacked sufficient contacts with Massachusetts to allow the court to exercise personal jurisdiction ovеr them.
See Whittaker Corp. v. United Aircraft Corp.,
On November 8, 1990, plaintiff filed a motion to enlarge the time for filing a motion for reconsideration. The district court granted this motion a week later. 2 On November 21, Feinstein filed a “Petition to Reconsider Dismissal.” On November 29, the district court endorsed a photocopy of the front page of this petition “Denied for reasons stated in [the] order of dismissal.” This order was entered on the docket on December 4, 1990. On January 3, 1991, exactly thirty days from the entry of the December 4,1990 order, the plaintiff filed his notice of aрpeal seeking to appeal from both the October 16, judgment and the December 4 order.
II.
Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 4(a)(1) provides that in a civil case in which the United States (or an officer or agency thereof) is not a party, a notiсe of appeal “shall be filed with the clerk of the district court within 30 days after the date of entry of the judgment or order appealed from_” The judgment dismissing Fein-stein’s action was entered on October 16, 1990. Thus, his notice of appeal was due to be filed by November 15, 1990, unless the filing thereof was tolled for some reason.
While the timely service of a motion for reconsideration will toll the time in which an aggrieved litigant must file a notice of appeal,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e), an untimely motion for reconsideration will not.
See Browder v. Director, Dept. of Corrections,
*19
Rule 59(e) gives an aggrieved party ten days within which to accomplish this task. Since intermediate weekends are excluded in calculating this ten-day period,
see Roque-Rodriguez v. Lema Moya,
In retrospect, the minute order allowing Feinstein’s motion to enlarge was clear error. It is well established that district courts lack power to enlarge the time for filing post-judgment motions for a new trial or motions to alter or amend the judgment (often referred to as motions for reconsideration).
See Rivera v. M/T Fossarina,
The Supreme Court has recognized that an appellate court may relax the application of the aforementioned rules where an аppellant has filed a belated motion for reconsideration and relied on the district court’s statement that the motion was timely in forgoing the timeous filing of a notice of appeal.
See Thompson v. INS,
Courts applying the unique circumstances exception “ ‘will permit an appellant to maintain an otherwise untimely aрpeal in unique circumstances in which the appellant reasonably and in good faith relied upon judicial action that indicated to the appellant that his assertion of his right to appeal would be timely, so long as the judicial action occurred prior tо the expiration of the official time period
such that the appellant could have given timely notice had he not been lulled into inactivity.’
”
Pinion v. Dow Chemical, U.S.A.,
In the instant case, we do not think that Feinstein could reasonably have relied on the district court’s order granting his motion to enlarge in foregoing the timely filing of his notice of apрeal. In the first place, the motion to enlarge was not accompanied by the petition for reconsideration. The latter was not filed until six days after the motion to enlarge was allowed. Hence, the district court could not conceivably have known whethеr Feinstein’s motion for reconsideration would solicit relief under Rule 59 (which has a mandatory ten-day filing limit) or under Rule 60(b) (which sets more elastic parameters for filing motions for relief from judgments).
4
Inasmuch as motions for relief from judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) do not toll the time for appeal,
see Lopez v. Corporacion Azucarera de Puerto Rico,
We also note that the order allowing Feinstein’s motion to enlarge was not issued until November 15,1990, the very last day on which Feinstein could have filed a timely notice of appeal. While the record does not indicate when Feinstein was notified of the court’s ruling, the most plausible assumption is that Feinstein received notice through the mail in the ordinary course of business. If that were so, he would not have learned of the ruling until the appeal period had expired. By that time, Feinstein was no longer in a position to file a timely notice of appeal. In other words, there could have been no room for reliance. The plaintiff’s late notice of appeal thus appears to be the product of his own ignorance of the law and the fact that the sands of time had run out, rather than the prоduct of any affirmatively misleading acts of the district court. Accordingly, there were no sufficiently unique circumstances to bring Feinstein’s case within the narrow exception to the general rule.
Cf., e.g., Kraus v. Consolidated Rail Corp.,
Even if we assume Feinstein learned on November 15th that his motion was granted and, based on that order, optеd to forgo filing his notice of appeal at the last minute, application of the unique circumstances exception would still be unwarranted. A district court’s allowance of such a motion, without more, is simply not the sort of “specific assurance” required to justify the аpplication of this exception.
Accord Green v. Bisby,
Withal, our task is not ended. The plaintiff’s notice of appeal, while untimely with respect to the underlying judgment, was timely with respect to the order denying reconsideration. Nevertheless, as the petition prayed for relief which could only properly be sought under Rule 59(e), the district court was without jurisdiction to grant it because, as we have explained, it was untimely.
Browder v. Director, Dept. of Corrections,
We need go no further. Insofar as Fein-stein’s appeal seeks to challenge the October 16, 1990 judgment of dismissal, it is dismissed for want of appellate jurisdiction. Insofаr as it seeks to challenge the December 4, 1990 order denying the plaintiff’s motion for reconsideration, the order is affirmed.
It is so ordered.
Notes
. The defendants moved in the alternative to transfer venue to California under 28 U.S.C. § 1400(b). While the defendants raise the venue argument on appeal, we, likе the district court, need not reach it.
. We note that the docket reflects two rulings on this motion. The first entry indicates that the motion was allowed on November 15, 1990. A photocopy of the motion is so endorsed. The second entry indicates that on December 4, 1990, the court ruled that the motion to enlarge was moot because Feinstein's motion for reconsideration had been denied on the merits. The original motion bears this second endorsement. We assume that the first ruling controls, and that Feinstein received notice on or after November 15, 1990 that his motion to enlarge was granted.
.
We note that Feinstein’s petition for reconsideration, when ultimately filed, did not specifically invoke Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). Moreover, the petition included several exhibits that had not previously been submitted to the district court. "[W]e subscribe to the mаjority view that 'a motion which ask[s] the court to modify its earlier disposition of a case because of an allegedly erroneous legal result is brought under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e).”
Lopez v. Corporacion Azucarera de Puerto Rico,
. The motion could also, of course, have been brought under Fed.R.Civ.P. 52 (which, like Rule 59(e), has a mandatory ten-day limit).
. Even if we give the plaintiff the benefit of every doubt and examine the petition for reconsideration under Rule 60(b), it was still properly denied. The petition and its attachments essentially reiterate the arguments Feinstein made in opposing the defendants’ motion to dismiss. Relief under Rule 60(b) is "to be dispensed only in 'exceptional circumstances.’ ”
Rodriguez-Antuna v. Chase Manhattan Bank Corp.,
. We are, of course, free to affirm judgments on any reason supported by the record.
See, e.g., Rodriguez-Antuna v. Chase Manhattan Bank Corp.,
