On December 1, 1980, a panel of arbitrators awarded Merit Insurance Company $10,675,000 in a dispute with Leatherby Insurance Company. The district judge confirmed this award by order of November 19, 1981, and incorporated in that order an award of interest on the $10,675,000 at the rate оf 8 percent per annum from December 1, 1980. On September 2, 1982, however, on Leatherby’s motion under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), the district judge set aside the arbitrators’ award. Merit appealed to us, and on July 12, 1983, we reversed and directed the district judge “to reinstate the previous judgment,” i.е., the judgment of November 19 confirming the arbitrators’ award and adding to it interest to that date at 8 percent per annum.
With respect to pre-judgment interest, the parties agreed in the district court that New Jersey law gоverned and that 8 percent was the applicable rate under that law; but Merit has belatedly discovered that, effectivе September 14, 1981, two months before the district court issued the judgment that we have ordered reinstated, New Jersey had raised the interеst rate to 12 percent. The proper route for amending a judgment to correct an error is by motion under Rule 59(e) (within 10 days) or 60(b)(1) (within one year). Although no such motion has been made, we could treat the present motion as a Rule 60(b)(1) motion to correct thе judgment that we have ordered the district court to reinstate, a motion based on a mistake in the judgment, and we could grant the motion ourselves, without remand to the district court,
Byrd v. Hunt Tool Shipyards, Inc.,
In any еvent, the one-year deadline for Rule 60(b)(1) motions is just an outside limit; the interior limit is reasonableness. See, e.g.,
Bank of California v. Arthur Andersen & Co.,
With regard to post-judgment interest, 28 U.S.C. § 1961 (in its pre-1982 form) and the cases construing it make clear that the law of the forum state, in this case Illinois, determines the interest rate. Inexplicably, and no doubt inadvertently, Illinois has long had two otherwise identical statutes governing post-judgment interest, both of which, until recently, prеscribed the same rate of interest, 8 percent. See Ill. Rev.Stat., 1982 Supp., ch. 110, §§ 2-1303, 12-109. Paragraph 2-1303 was amended, effective January 1,1980, to raise the interest rate to 9 percent. See P.A. 81-874. Paragraph 12 — 109 has not been changed. The parties are unable to furnish us with either reason or authority that might enable us to decide which statute should be applied here; both in their terms apply, and they are hopelessly in conflict. But apart from the fact that Leatherby, the wrongdoer, should not get the benefit of the doubt, we think it fаirly apparent that if the Illinois legislature were to address the question it would want the interest rate to be 9 percent. The amendment to paragraph 2-1303 obviously was motivated by recognition that inflation (which was raging at a high rate in 1980) had made 8 percent an unrealistic interest rate. The legislature probably did not realize that there was another statute on the books, identical in all relevant particulars to paragraph 2-1303; it just neglected to amend (or repeal) the other statute to bring it into confоrmity with the amended paragraph 2-1303. We cannot think of any reason other than understandable inadvertence — for who would suspect there were two identical statutes in different parts of the statute book? —for the failure to amend paragraph 12-109 as well.
Finally, Leatherby asks us to suspend the award of post-judgment interest for the period between the district court’s order setting aside its рrevious confirmation of the arbitration award and our reversal of that order. But as between Merit, whose position on the merits we have vindicated, and Leatherby, the adjudicated wrongdoer, it is more just that Merit should receive interest for the entire pоst-judgment period than that Leatherby should be allowed for even part of this period to enjoy, interest free, money that rightfully belоnged to Merit.
To summarize, our mandate is hereby amended to make clear that the district court shall (1) reinstate its judgment of Novembеr 19, 1981, including the interest awarded therein, and (2) order Leatherby to pay interest to Merit on the amount of the November 19 judgment (i.e., the arbitrators’ award plus pre-judgment interest to November 19) for the period since November 19 and until the judgment is satisfied in full, at the rate of nine (9) percent per annum.
