ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
In a previous unpublished opinion,
On rehearing, we withdraw our previous opinion. An extension of the “unique circumstances” exception to apply to the present facts conflicts with
Harcon Barge Co., Inc. v. D & G Boat Rentals, Inc.,
Cruz states that a motion for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 is properly treated as a motion for costs under Rule 54(d). A Rule 54(d) motion is not constrained by Rule 59(e)’s ten-day service limit. Neither does a Rule 54(d) motion for costs vitiate a previously filed notice of appeal. Thus, the State’s notice of appeal was effective, and this court has jurisdiction. We therefore reach the merits of the State’s appeal.
*797 I. The Facts
In 1986, after an unsuccessful attempt to effect changes in the local government of Sunflower, Mississippi by persuasion, Echols and four other plaintiffs participated in the peaceful boycott and picketing of a Sunflower pharmacy. The owner of the pharmacy, Parker, was mayor of Sunflower. Parker contacted the county attorney for Sunflower County, Ben Saucier, to ask if the picketers could be prosecuted for their activities. Saucier discussed the problem with the district attorney for the Fourth Circuit District of Mississippi, Frank Carlton, and then instituted criminal proceedings against Echols in Sunflower County Justice Court under Miss.Code Ann. § 97-23-85 (1972), an anti-boycott statute.
The plaintiffs were arrested, bond was set, and they were bound over to the grand jury for possible indictment. Subsequently, the plaintiffs brought this civil action under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 against Parker, the District Attorney, the County Attorney, the Justice Court Judge, and Sunflower County seeking a declaratory judgment that the statute was unconstitutional. The district court granted summary judgment for Parker and Sunflower County. The remaining defendants entered a settlement agreement which stated that the statute was unconstitutional and agreed that they would no longer attempt to enforce the statute against the plaintiffs.
In accordance with the settlement, the district court on June 10, 1986 entered a declaratory judgment stating that the statute was unconstitutional. On March 7, 1988, the district court awarded attorney’s fees to the plaintiffs under 42 U.S.C. § 1988. In this judgment, the court also directed the State of Mississippi to pay the plaintiffs’ attorney’s fees since the local officials involved had been sued in their official capacity for enforcing an unconstitutional State policy. The State, although not a named party to the suit, represented the public defendants through the Mississippi Attorney General’s office. The district court reserved determination of the amount of attorney’s fees. No appeal was taken from this judgment.
Eleven months later, the district court entered an order awarding plaintiffs’ attorney’s fees of $11,773.36 to be paid by the State. The State filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied. Following this denial, the district court made an additional award to the plaintiffs of $450 for fees incurred in responding to the State’s motion for reconsideration. The plaintiffs subsequently filed a “Motion to Alter or Amend Judgment of April 14, 1989 or in the Alternative Motion for Award of Fees” to add $3,735 to the attorney’s fees award for the fees incurred in responding to the State’s motion to reconsider. Notice of this supplemental attorney’s fees motion did not reach the State Attorney General within the ten day period allowed by Rule 59(e). That ten day period expired on May 1, 1989. On the next day, the State filed its first notice of appeal from the initial judgment awarding attorney’s fees (No. 89-4349). Formal notice of the plaintiffs’ supplemental attorney’s fees motion reached the Attorney General on May 8 or 9, 1989.
On Echols’ motion, the district court awarded the requested additional attorney’s fees. The court ruled that although Echols’ rule 59(e) motion had not been served on the State in a timely manner, the motion was properly before the court because a motion for attorney’s fees is not limited by the time restrictions of Rule 59(e). Alternatively, the court held it had the authority to award additional attorney’s fees under the “unique circumstances” exception to the Rule 59(e) ten-day deadline recognized in
Fairley v. Jones,
II. The State’s First Appeal
A. Notice of Appeal
Echols asserts that the State’s first notice of appeal was untimely and, therefore, that this court lacks jurisdiction over the State’s appeal from the' initial attorney’s fees award. The district court’s judgment holding the State liable for attorney’s fees but deferring the decision on the amount of fees owed was entered March 7, 1988. Echols asserts that under
Budinich v. Becton Dickinson and Co.,
The first question on this issue is whether the State was required under FRAP 4(a) to file its notice of appeal within thirty days of the adjudication of liability for attorney’s fees or could wait to file an appeal within thirty days of the court’s determination of the amount of the fee award.
Budinich
does not answer this question. The Supreme Court there created “a uniform rule that an unresolved issue of attorney’s fees for the litigation in question does not prevent judgment on the merits from being final.”
It is clear that a judgment on the merits determining both liability and damages is final even though the attorney’s fee issue has been left open. Additionally, attorney’s fees are considered collateral to the merits, so that final judgments as to attorney’s fees can be appealed separately from the “merits” judgment. Because a judgment is not final until both liability and damages are determined, a judgment awarding an unspecified amount of attorney’s fees is interlocutory in nature.
The State, however, faces another jurisdictional hurdle. The State’s notice of appeal regarding the initial award of attorney’s fees was filed on May 1, 1989. Four days earlier, on April 27, Echols had filed a Motion to Alter or Amend the April 14, 1989 Judgment (the fee award judgment) to increase the award of attorney’s fees by $3735.00. The district court treated this motion, at least alternatively, as a Rule 59(e) motion which was properly before the court despite Echols’ clerical error in serving the motion on the State. Under FRAP 4(a)(4), the May 1 notice of appeal filed by the State would be ineffective if it were filed before the disposition of a pending Rule 59(e) motion. Thus, if this provision of Rule 4(a)(4) applied, we would lack jurisdiction over the State’s appeal from the March 7, 1988 attorney’s fee award.
*799
The district court erred in treating Echols’ motion as a Rule 59(e) motion. Because the motion was not served within the ten-day time limit of Rule 59(e), the motion could not be considered a Rule 59(e) motion. Furthermore, a motion for attorney’s fees under 42 U.S.C. § 1988 is not a Rule 59(e) motion.
White v. New Hampshire Dept. of Employment Security,
B. The Merits of the Appeal
The State contends that the district court • erred in ordering the State to pay Echols’ attorney’s fees. The contention is not that Echols is not entitled to attorney^ fees under § 1988, but rather that the State is not liable for those fees. The district court assessed fees against the State because in the court’s view, the officials who attempted to enforce Mississippi’s anti-boycott statute were acting as officials of the State rather than as agents of Sunflower County. Relying on
Hutto
and
Folsom Inv. Co., Inc. v. Moore,
1. The Applicability of Nash v. Chandler
The State argues that the officials involved here were not state officials and that the district court’s determination is contrary to
Nash v. Chandler,
A state official must be sued in his official capacity for the State to be held liable for § 1988 attorney’s fees under the Hutto doctrine. This distinction renders Nash inapplicable in the present case where the county prosecutor, district attorney, and justice court judge were sued in their official capacity as the enforcing agents of an unconstitutional state statute. Nash does not affect a State’s liability under Hutto.
2. The “State Official” Status of the County Officers
We also agree with Echols that the officials involved here were acting as State agents when they enforced the Mississippi anti-boycott statute. The facts here are analogous to those in
Familias Unidas v. Briscoe,
We do not, however, believe that Judge Decker’s compliance with the school board request ... similarly represented the official policy of Medina County ... The narrow authority delegated to the county judge in section 4.28, however, bears no relation to his traditional role in the administration of county government or to the discretionary powers delegated to him by state statute in aid of that role. Instead, his duty in implementing section 4.28, much like that of a county sheriff in enforcing a state law, may more fairly be characterized as the effectuation of the policy of the State of Texas embodied in that statute, for which the citizens of a particular county should not bear singular responsibility.
The actions taken by the county officials in Echols’ case are more comparable to “the duty of a county sheriff in enforcing a state law” than to any county administrative decision or policy implementation. As county attorney Saucier stated during depositions:
As county attorney, look, I don’t have any type of guidelines on me by the County. I don’t have any type of little book of ordinances that I follow or anything like that. I follow the Mississippi Code, State Code. I follow what I think is good law and what I thought was good law.
>}: % s}s * % si:
[Y]ou can’t expect a county attorney, looking at a statute that obviously fits a situation, to ignore it. I can’t do that. I’ve got an oath I’ve got to follow. If I look at a statute and it says, In cases of this, do that, if I ignore that, then I really am going against my duty as a state — you know, following the state law.
The State argues that under
Crane v. State of Texas,
*801 In Familias Unidas we stated that the statute in question, to which defendants had conformed their conduct, “obviously represents the official policy of the State.”619 F.2d at 404 . The same may be said of the statutes involved in this case. The conduct at issue here, however, violated rather than conformed to those statutes; it would be anomalous indeed to regard as official State policy actions taken by County officials in violation of State law.
III. The State’s Second Appeal
The State’s second appeal (No. 89-4633) is from the supplemental award of attorney's fees granted Echols on August 1, 1989. The district court raised the amount of the attorney’s fees award for work done from February 1, 1989 to April 14, 1989 from $450 to $1,950. The court awarded an additional $1,787.05 as fees for obtaining the supplemental award. The State contends on appeal that the district court was without jurisdiction to decide Echols’ Rule 59(e) motion for supplemental fees because the 59(e) motion was not served on the State within ten days of the district court’s previous judgment and because district court jurisdiction had been divested by the first notice of appeal filed by the State.
We have determined that Echols' motion for supplemental § 1988 attorney’s fees was not a Rule 59(e) motion, but was governed by Rules 54(d) and 58. As such, the motion was not subject to the ten-day time limitation of Rule 59(e).
The contention that the district court was divested of jurisdiction by the State’s notice of appeal is more troublesome. The notice of appeal was filed on May 2, 1989. The district court did not enter the supplemental fee award until August 1, 1989. We have stated:
“that a valid and timely notice of appeal transfers jurisdiction to the appellate court, and that although the trial court may thereafter act in aid of the appellate court’s jurisdiction, as by denying a Rule 60(b) motion, or may grant relief under Rule 60(a), it may not grant Rule 60(b) relief without remand for such purpose or possibly other permission from the appellate court.”
Brown v. United Ins. Co. of America,
Other circuits-have cited
Knighton v. Watkins,
Indeed, the Fifth Circuit rule on the shift in jurisdiction effected by the filing of a notice of appeal has been rigidly applied in favor of requiring a remand or permission from the appellate court before the district court can amend an earlier order.
See Willie v. Continental Oil Co.,
We have conceded, however, that within a narrow range of circumstances judicial economy and common sense are best served by proceeding with the appeal on the merits and allowing the movant in the district court to refile his motion on remand after appellate judgment.
Beliz,
Unlike the “motion to amend” filed in Willie, which sought to reduce the amount awarded against a particular defendant to comport with a pretrial stipulation between the parties, the “Motion to Supplement Judgment and Pleadings” filed here did not attack the amount of the judgment or otherwise bear on the liabilities of the parties or the merits of the case.
Although Echols’ § 1988 motion did increase the amount of attorney’s fees payable by the State, the amount of fees awarded by the district court is not an issue in the current appeal. Whether the district court awarded $1 or $1000 in its August 1, 1989 order has no effect on the merits of this appeal. Rather, liability for the § 1988 fees and jurisdiction over the motion for fees are at issue here.
In accord with Beliz, we hold that the district court did not have jurisdiction to consider Echols’ motion for supplemental attorney’s fees. In the interest of justice, we dispose of the merits of the current consolidated appeals and remand to the district court for its consideration of the supplemental attorney’s fees motion. 28 U.S.C. § 2106. Our affirmance of the State’s liability to pay attorneys fees is without prejudice to full consideration of the amount to be awarded. If, after disposition of that motion, the State is aggrieved, it may appeal the district court’s decision as to the amount of that award.
IV. Conclusion
The case is REMANDED to the district court for consideration of Echols’ supplemental attorney’s fee motion. In all other respects, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
