This trademark case was filed in late 1984 and settled shortly thereafter. The settlement agreement is contained in a series of oral undertakings before Judge Rov-ner, who dismissed the case on the basis of these undertakings but retained jurisdiction to enforce the settlement.
Kapco Mfg. Co. returned to court a few months later, complaining that the defendants had not honored the settlement. Kap-co requested the court to put the settlement aside and restore the case to the docket as a pending matter. On March 29, 1985,
Thirty-four days later Kapco requested the court to reconsider this order. Judge Rovner denied this request the day it was filed. Thirty days after that Kapco filed a notice of appeal. Meanwhile both parties continue to file motions in the district court. Motions for discovery relating to the settlement and for disqualification of counsel are pending there.
We dismiss the appeal for want of jurisdiction. The order of March 29, 1985, is interlocutory. It is a procedural step on the way to a final judgment. It invites further action (the creation of a formal settlement, discovery, and proceedings concerning damages). Under
Switzerland Cheese Ass’n v. E. Horne’s Market, Inc.,
Orders postponing decision, as opposed to denying the request, ordinarily are not appealable even when the postponement defers the day on which injunctive relief may be entered. See
Switzerland Cheese, supra; Donovan v. Robbins,
Kapco argues that it may appeal the denial of its motion to set aside the order of March 29. It characterizes this as a motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), which, it says, may be appealed as a final order. See
Inryco, Inc. v. Metropolitan Engineering Co.,
The denial of a motion under Rule 60(b) is a final and appealable order, and this could be so in rare cases even when the underlying order is interlocutory. For example, an order remanding a case to an administrative agency for reconsideration almost always is interlocutory.
In re Riggsby,
The assumption of this example is that the district court has disposed of everything before it, and the denial of relief under Rule 60(b) therefore leaves nothing unsettled. The Rule applies only to a “final judgment, order, or proceeding____”
*154
It is a method of reopening a closed case. See 7 J. Moore & J. Lucas,
Moore’s Federal Practice
1160.20 (1983);
Chrysler Credit Corp. v. Macino,
A moment’s thought shows why Rule 60(b) must be limited to review of orders that are independently “final decisions” under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. A party should not get immediate review of an order for discovery, or one denying summary judgment and setting the case for trial, just by filing a Rule 60(b) motion to set aside the order and then appealing the denial of this motion. Yet that is essentially what Kapco tried to do here — what it might be able to do if the Rule applied.
The order of March 29 is an interim order in what may prove to be extended litigation. It is therefore not the sort of order for which relief under Rule 60(b) may be sought. The motion to alter the order of March 29 is just another intermediate step, too, and the denial of the motion is interlocutory. Although the appeal from the denial is timely, the denial is itself interlocutory. There is no final decision here within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 1291, and the appeal is dismissed.
