This is an interlocutory appeal from a sanctions order compelling attorney Jack Leavitt (“Leavitt”) to pay attorney’s fees under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 and the district court’s inherent powers. The Magistrate Judge sanctioned Leavitt for violating, twice and in bad faith, the Magistrate Judge’s order barring further appearances on behalf of a California prisoner in capital habeas corpus proceedings under .28
*1062
U.S.C. § 2254. District Judge Damrell affirmed, and Leavitt immediately appeals. We are called on to decide whether, after the Supreme Court’s unanimous opinion in
Cunningham v. Hamilton
County,
I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
On January 14, 2002, Leavitt filed papers seeking to disqualify appointed counsel for capital habeas corpus petitioner Gerald F. Stanley (“Stanley”) and to substitute himself as counsel of record. This was Leavitt’s second attempt to substitute himself in federal court; the first was denied in 1998. Multiple similar requests during state habeas proceedings were denied by the California Supreme Court in 2001.
On October 22, 2002, the Magistrate Judge rejected the substitution, finding that on July 29, 2002, Stanley had in writing authorized his counsel to pursue habe-as relief by filing an amended petition. The court found that “petitioner Stanley has no present credibility on the issue of whether he authorized the most recent federal amended petition to be filed.” Over a seven-year period, Stanley did “nothing but change his mind back and forth” regarding his desire to pursue habe-as proceedings. The Magistrate Judge concluded that Stanley “learned from his state trial court proceedings that expressing conflicting viewpoints on his competency, or in his instructions to his lawyers, could tie the courts in knots.”
The same tactic of repeatedly withdrawing and restating petitions worked in federal court for a time, proving disruptive. Because the Magistrate Judge found Stanley’s appointed counsel credible in his statements that Stanley did in fact desire to proceed, the Magistrate Judge ruled that the court would take Stanley’s most recent authorization as the final word and entertain no further requests to withdraw the petition. Accordingly, the Magistrate Judge’s October 22, 2002 order prohibited Leavitt from entering any further appearances in the case on Stanley’s behalf. The Magistrate Judge warned that further filings would result in sanctions. Leavitt moved for reconsideration, which District Judge Damrell denied on November 4, 2002.
Notwithstanding the District Court’s order, Leavitt filed two appearances in the case in May and October of 2003. On May 20, 2003, Leavitt wrote a letter to District Judge Damrell in which he identified himself as Stanley’s “retained (pro bono) attorney since 1998,” and asked for the same relief he had been denied in the October 22 order. Leavitt wrote a second letter to District Judge Damrell on October 23, 2003 requesting recognition as Stanley’s attorney and, once again, seeking the relief previously denied. The Magistrate Judge issued an order to show cause why sanctions should not be imposed. Leavitt admitted in his written response to willfully violating the October 22, 2002 order to provoke further litigation over the matters decided therein. Under 28 U.S.C. § 1927 and the court’s inherent authority, the Magistrate Judge found Leavitt liable, not for either civil or criminal contempt, but for sanctions in the amount of $10,356.00— the cost of approximately eighty percent of the hours invested by the Federal Defender in responding to Leavitt’s filings.
*1063 On May 7, 2004, District Judge Damrell denied reconsideration, refused Leavitt’s request for certification of the sanctions order for immediate appeal, and declined to stay the order pending appeal. Notwithstanding the ongoing habeas proceedings in the district court, Leavitt undertook this immediate appeal.
II. JURISDICTION
A.
The jurisdiction of this court is ordinarily limited to appeals from “final decisions of the district courts.” 28 U.S.C. § 1291. District Judge Damrell’s May 7, 2004 affirmance of sanctions against Leavitt is not a final decision. It “neither ended the litigation nor left the court only to execute its judgment.”
Cunningham,
B.
In
Cunningham,
the district court adopted a discovery sanction recommended by the Magistrate Judge under Rule 37(a) and disqualified counsel because she was a material witness in the case.
C.
There can be no doubt that Cunningham overruled cases addressing the immediate appealability of Rule 37(a) sanctions. The Ninth Circuit has yet to apply Cunningham to sanctions entered pursuant to § 1927 or the court’s inherent authority. However, the policies undergirding Rule 37(a) sanctions are not relevantly different from those justifying sanctions under § 1927 or a court’s inherent powers. Indeed, the Ninth Circuit has already expanded Cunningham beyond Rule 37(a).
In
Cato v. Fresno City,
Cases from the First, Second, Third, and Fifth Circuits further support interpreting
Cunningham
as applying more broadly than to Rule 37(a) sanctions alone. The First Circuit recognized in
Empresas Omajede, Inc. v. Bennazar-Zequeira,
The law in the Second Circuit prior to
Cunningham
had been that an attorney may immediately appeal an order imposing sanctions under the collateral order exception. However, in
New Pacific Overseas Group (U.S.A.) Inc. v. Excal Int’l Dev. Corp.,
Like the Second Circuit, the Third Circuit extended the application of
Cunningham,
holding in
Comuso v. Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp.,
In
Williams v. Midivest Employers Cas. Co.,
III. CONCLUSION
The precedential effect of Cunningham is clear. We now expressly interpret Cunningham as extending to sanctions under § 1927 and a district court’s inherent powers, and overrule prior conflicting cases. Accordingly, this court lacks jurisdiction to entertain Leavitt’s interlocutory appeal.
DISMISSED for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. We have treated interlocutory orders imposing sanctions pursuant to other authorities similarly.
See, e.g., Telluride Mgmt. Solutions, Inc. v. Telluride Inv. Group,
