This case presents an appeal from a district court’s denial of a motion made pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) by a nonparty, Harold J. Gaines. 1 Gaines alleges that the parties to this action committed fraud, both against him and on the district court, and that he must be granted standing under Rule 60(b) to argue these contentions to the district court. We reject his assertion that he has standing under Rule 60(b) and will affirm. 2
I
In July of 1981 Kem Manufacturing Corporation (“Kem”) sued Ray Wilder and RJW, Inc., under various legal theories, including fraud, for allegedly converting Kern’s business opportunities to his own benefit. The parties engaged in extensive discovery and the case was eventually tried over several weeks. The trial docket reflects that Harold J. Gaines was noticed for deposition and that his deposition was taken and used at trial. After trial the district court, with the parties’ agreement, granted a partial mistrial as to a set of unanswered interrogatories and entered judgment to effectuate the remaining portion of the jury’s verdict. The district court scheduled another trial limited to the remaining issues.
Some time later the district court allowed Wilder’s counsel to withdraw from Wilder’s representation (with a limitation not relevant here) and authorized Wilder to defend himself pro se. Kern’s attorneys and Wil *1519 der acting pro se filed several motions on March 27, 1984, the cumulative effect of which, once granted, was to resolve the litigation by means of a confession of judgment in which Wilder in his personal capacity acknowledged that he breached his contractual fiduciary duty to Kem, and that actual damages amounted to $1,643,226.00. The confession of judgment also stated that the judgment entered against Wilder should include 12% interest to run from January 1, 1984. The court entered judgment accordingly on March 27,1985, noting that “the amount contained [in Wilder’s Confession of Judgment] is reasonable and not in excess of what the Plaintiff could reasonably expect to have obtained, under the facts and applicable law, had this case proceeded to trial.”
On December 23, 1985, the appellant Gaines, who was not a party to the action, filed a motion under Rule 60(b) alleging that he was the “person most directly affected by the final judgment” and that the judgment was procured by fraud on the court. Gaines was at that time apparently the defendant in a suit in Alabama state court brought by Kem alleging that Gaines had made an oral agreement with Wilder to indemnify Wilder for any liability Wilder incurred in the case at bar. Gaines argued that Wilder and Kem’s counsel had improperly inflated Wilder’s liability and Kem’s damages, with the intention of obtaining the entire damages from Gaines on the basis of the indemnity agreement. Gaines further argued that Kem’s counsel had promised Wilder that Kem would not seek to collect any damages from Wilder.
The district judge who had entered the final judgment recused himself from the consideration of the motion. The district judge to whom the motion was then assigned denied the motion for relief under Rule 60(b) after extensive briefing. The district court did not reach the allegations of fraud but denied the motion after finding in his accompanying memorandum opinion that “[i]t may be true that the judgment is unenforceable against Gaines for one or more of the reasons he has set forth, but this is not the proper forum in which to litigate that issue.” The district court noted further that
In order to recover in the state court action, plaintiff bears the burden of proving that an indemnification agreement existed, and that the facts and circumstances surrounding the issuance of the March 27, 1985, judgment against Wilder are legally sufficient to allow that judgment to bind Gaines. Each substantive ground Gaines has asserted while attempting to vacate this court’s judgment is, in essence, a potential defense to the state court action. If they are proven to be true, state law may prohibit enforcement of the judgment against the non-party. In short, it may be that although perfectly valid as to Wilder, the judgment may be unenforceable against Gaines.
Gaines appeals from that decision. 3
II
Gaines specifically invokes Rule 60(b)(3) covering allegations of fraud by an adverse party, 60(b)(4) covering void judgments, and 60(b)(6), the residual category allowing relief where justified for reasons not enumerated in the other specific categories. 4 Under the circumstances of this case, however, all of these challenges are barred. Quite simply^ in order to bring a Rule 60(b) motion a person must have standing under that rule. Gaines does not.
Rule 60(b) provides in pertinent part that a “court may relieve
a party or his legal
*1520
representative”
from a final judgment. (Emphasis added.) With the potential exception of claims of fraud on the court, which we discuss below, the general rule is that one must either be a party or a party’s legal representative in order to have standing to bring any Rule 60(b) motion.
In re Lovitt,
The cases make clear that the term legal representative was intended to reach only those individuals who were in a position tantamount to that of a party or whose legal rights were otherwise so intimately bound up with the parties that their rights were directly affected by the final judgment.
See, e.g., Dunlop,
Implicitly realizing the force of these restrictions, Gaines falls back on two wrinkles in the standing requirement under the rule. The first, he asserts, is the rule that in some cases those in some form of privity with the party are granted standing under Rule 60(b).
E.g., Lovitt,
Gaines’s argument must fail. In the first place, the law is unclear regarding whether a party’s indemnitor is in privity with a party to the litigation for the purposes of standing under Rule 60(b), and this alone represents a serious obstacle to Game’s argument. It is not clear that the privity exception does any more than restate in different language the rule that persons tantamount to a party may be allowed standing. But even assuming, without deciding, that such a relationship would be sufficient to invoke the privity exception, Gaines himself denies that he is Wilder’s indemnitor. Gaines cannot be considered an indemnitor. This is especially true where Gaines himself is presumably arguing in another court that there is no indemnity agreement, and where Gaines was quite clearly well apprised of this action during the course of its litigation. The final judgment here did not bind Gaines in any way, and it most particularly did not address, much less decide, the question of whether he is Wilder’s indemnitor. Moreover, those questions are apparently already before an alternative forum well equipped to handle them; Gaines still has available an effective opportunity to raise any of the legal claims he asked to argue in the Rule 60(b) motion. Thus, under the circumstances of this case Gaines is not in privity with Wilder as that term is used in defining standing under Rule 60(b) and therefore has no standing to bring a Rule 60(b) motion.
The second fallback position that Gaines claims authorizes him to bring a Rule 60(b) motion is his assertion that movants arguing fraud on the court do not need to meet Rule 60(b)’s requirement that the movant be a party or his legal representative. There are cases that allow
*1521
standing to nonparties,
e.g., Southerland v. Irons,
In
Southerland,
the case upon which Gaines most heavily relies, a trial court approved a settlement based upon the court’s understanding that a nonparty’s lien would be satisfied from the prevailing counsel’s 50% contigent fee.
Southerland,
In sum, under the facts of this case the district judge was perfectly correct to deny the 60(b) motion without an evidentiary hearing because as a matter of law Gaines did not have standing to bring the Rule 60(b) motion. Gaines chose not to attempt to enter into the earlier litigation despite his knowledge of it, and he has an alternative forum in which to argue that fraud should render the judgment unenforceable against him. As the district judge noted, refusing to hear Gaines’s Rule 60(b) motion does not deprive Gaines of the effective opportunity of making every argument in the ongoing state litigation that he has asked to make in the district court. Rule 60(b) motions exist to allow district courts to “preserve the delicate balance between the sanctity of final judgments and the ‘incessant command of the court’s conscience that justice be done in light of
all
the facts.’ ”
Griffin v. Swim-Tech Corp.,
Ill
In accordance with this opinion, the district court’s order is AFFIRMED.
Notes
. All citations to rules in this opinion are to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, unless otherwise indicated.
. Before this court heard oral argument on the appeal Kem filed a motion to strike portions of Gaines’s brief and asked for other relief, alleging that portions of the brief were "untrue and misleading,” and alleging that the brief and its attachment violated a district court order denying a motion by Gaines to supplement the district court’s record in the action: This court ordered that Kem’s motion to strike and for other relief would be carried with the case. We have reviewed the material in question, as we must in order to decide the motion, and have determined that the material in no way alters our opinion. Thus Kem's motion is dismissed as moot. This dismissal does not, of course, in any way suggest that we condone the behavior of counsel in surreptitiously violating a district court order.
. The district judge’s order denying Gaines’s motion to set aside the verdict also denied a motion by Gaines for a temporary restraining order. Gaines did not appeal from the denial of the temporary restraining order.
. Rule 60(b) provides in pertinent part:
On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or his legal representative from a final judgment, order or proceeding for the following reasons: ... (3) fraud (whether heretofore denominated intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party; (4) the judgment is void; ... or (6) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.
Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b).
