A special master appeals from the award made to him for his services in the action in which he was appointed to ascertain the reasonable value of the defendant’s use of a patent. On July 18, 1941, the district court entered an interlocutory judgment, finding the defendant so liable and on October 2, 1941, it appointed the appellant special master to determine the amount of the liability. The master filed his report on December 21, 1949, recommending a judgment of $940,380.36, and at the same time filed his application for the taxation and settlement of his fee: no judgment has as yet been entered upon his report. On July 28, 1950, the court awarded him a fee of $10,000, and directed the defendant to pay it “forthwith”—the payment to be included in the taxable costs, if the defendant eventually prevailed. Dysart v. Remington Rand, Inc.,
The defendant argues that we must dismiss the appeal because it was taken too late. The order to show cause of August 7, 1950, was a motion, and it was made within ten days after the order of July 28, 1950, which made the award; thus, it was in season under Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. rule 59(e), 28 U.S.C.A., provided it was to “alter or amend” the order of July 28th. The defendant argues that it was not because it only required the plaintiffs to give security for the payment of the fee in case the defendant finally prevailed, and that this is analogous to the requiring security as a stay of execution on a judgment. We cannot agree. The order of July 28, 1950, contained an unconditional direction to pay the award “forthwith”; the motion was to impose the condition of a bond upon that peremptory order. That certainly altered and amended the first order; it was not security to stay its execution; it presupposed its execution, and provided for the possibility that the final event might throw the loss upon the plaintiffs. The appeal from the order of September 18, 1950, was therefore in *308 season, and the only question is whether it was “final.”
Before the amendment of Rule 54(b) it would have been.
1
Indeed, that is a corollary of Newton v. Consolidated Gas Company,
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
. Tuttle v.
Claflin, 2 Cir.,
