The bankruptcy court allowed a claim against X-Cel, Inc., filed by A. Eicoff & Co., a creditor. The district court affirmed most of the bankruptcy court’s decision but remanded for a recalculation of interest.
Rule 8015 permits a disappointed litigant to seek rehearing within 10 days but omits language, comparable to that in Fed.R. App.P. 4(a)(4), suspending the finality of the order while the district court acts on the request. This does not matter, however.
United States v. Dieter,
What was true in Dieter and Healy is true here as well. This case illustrates both the operation and the wisdom of Dieter and Healy. After X-Cel filed its notice of appeal, the district court granted rehearing and affirmed the bankruptcy court in full. It could not have done this if the notice of appeal transferred jurisdiction to this court, and we would have been left to review a decision the district court believes incorrect.
The only obstacle to concluding that a motion under Rule 8015 suspends the finality of the judgment is the Advisory Committee’s comment that “[t]he filing of a motion for rehearing does not toll the time for taking an appeal to the court of appeals”. The Advisory Committee did not cite any authority for this proposition. A court of appeals has jurisdiction only if the judgment is final, and if a motion for rehearing suspends that finality appeal is impossible. Part of the comment is directed to the way Rule 8015 differs from Fed. R.App.P. 4(a)(4), which not only makes the judgment non-final but also vitiates any earlier notice of appeal. The Advisory Committee may have wanted to ensure that a premature notice of appeal under Rule 8015 would take effect once the district court entered a judgment. Cf. Rule 4(a)(2), which provides for this when the notice is filed after announcement of a judgment but before its entry. See also
United States v. Hansen,
The amendment to Rule 8015 that becomes effective August 1, 1987, suggests something along these lines. The amendment adds the sentence: “If a timely motion for rehearing is filed, the time for appeal to the court of appeals ... shall run from the entry of the order denying rehearing or the entry of a subsequent judgment.” The Advisory Committee’s note to this revision states that the language “ciar-
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ifies the effect of the filing of a timely motion for rehearing.”
X-Cel has not asked us to treat its notice of appeal as a challenge to the district court’s order on rehearing, so we need not decide whether that would be appropriate. The appeal is dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
