[T1] In this employment law dispute, Appellants Tim Merchant, Dick Blust, Jr., and Stephen Earl Barneski appeal the summary judgment issued against them and in favor of Sweetwater County Sheriff David Gray. We are unable to consider this case on its merits, however, because the Appellants did not file a timely notice of appeal. Accordingly, this Court lacks jurisdiction, and we must dismiss this appeal.
ISSUE
[T2] The single dispositive issue is one first raised by the Sheriff; whether this Court lacks jurisdiction because Appellants' notice of appeal was not timely filed.
FACTS
[13] Because the background facts are not pertinent to this decision, we narrow our focus to the following three events:
e On December 18, 2006, the district court entered its "Order Granting Defendants' Motions for Summary Judgment and Denying Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment."
e On February 1, 2007, the district court entered an "Order of Dismissal with Prejudice and Entry of Judgment."
February 20, 2007, the Appellants filed their Notice of Appeal.
Appellants filed their notice of appeal more than thirty days after the summary judgment order was entered. If that summary judgment order was an appealable order, then the Appellants' notice of appeal was not timely. If the order of dismissal was the appealable order, then the Appellants' notice of appeal was timely.
DISCUSSION
[T4] W.R.AP. 2.01(a) provides that "[aln appeal from a trial court to an appellate court shall be taken by filing the notice of
[15] It is well-established that the denial of a motion for summary judgment is not an appealable order. Schmid v. Schmid,
when the district court grants one party's motion for a summary judgment and denies the opposing party's motion for a summary judgment and the district court's decision completely resolves the case, both the grant and the denial of the motions for a summary judgment are subject to appeal.
Lieberman v. Wyoming.com LLC,
[16] We gleaned the record for any issue left unresolved by the district court's summary judgment order. We found none. Significantly, the Appellants identified none. The first paragraph of the district court's order recited that "Defendants' motions for summary judgment on all Plaintiffs' claims are granted." (Emphasis added.) The Appellants' complaint set forth four separate causes of action, and the district court's order explicitly addressed and rejected each one in turn. The order concluded by granting final judgment: "IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that Defendants' Motions for Summary Judgment are GRANTED. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs' Motion for Partial Summary Judgment is denied." This ruling left nothing for future consideration, and determined the action. It was, therefore, an appealable order.
[T7] After granting summary judgment, the district court took the additional step of entering an order dismissing the case. The record does not explain why the district court entered this superfluous order, and we are unwilling to hazard a guess. Our conclusion is that the second order was unnecessary and unauthorized, and therefore a nullity. Harding v. Glatter,
[18] It does appear that the district court, sua sponte, requested the Sheriff's counsel to prepare the order of dismissal.
1
Under a principle sometimes called equitable tolling, some courts have held that untimely filings may be excused in cireumstances where a party has been prejudiced by reasonable reliance on an erroneous action taken by the trial court. Wyoming jurisprudence has soundly rejected this approach. In Miller v. Murdock,
We recognize that in federal courts a "unique cireumstances" doctrine may operate to permit an appeal where it appears that a party was prejudiced by its reasonable reliance on a district court's mistaken extension of the filing deadline for a new trial motion. Despite our acknowledgement that federal court treatment of parallel federal rules is highly persuasive, we decline to extend the "unique ciream-stances" doctrine to Wyoming cases.
Id. (internal citation omitted). On that basis, we held that Mr. Miller could not properly claim justifiable reliance on the trial court's mistake:
It is difficult to understand how a party may reasonably rely on a court's error in applying rules counsel is charged with knowing. If counsel is aware of the error reliance cannot be reasonable; on the other hand, ignorance of the rules is neither reasonable nor exceusable.... 4A C. Wright & A. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure § 1165 at 479-80 (1987).
Id., n. 2.
[19] Moreover, the federal "unique circumstances" doctrine is less forgiving than the Miller opinion might suggest. It has been applied, for example, where a court gives explicit and wrong instructions to a pro se defendant, Spottsville v. Terry,
[110] For these reasons, we conclude that the district court's summary judgment order was an appealable order; that the district court's second order, dismissing the action, was a nullity; that the Appellants' notice of appeal was therefore untimely; and that the Appellants may not invoke any equitable tolling or unique cireumstances to excuse the late filing. We lack jurisdiction, and hereby dismiss this appeal.
Notes
. The district court's letter request was attached as an appendix to the Sheriff's brief, but that does not make the letter part of the record for our review. However, because the district court's action raises important questions, for purposes of discussion we accept the Sheriff's assertion that the district court requested the order of dismissal.
