ORDER
On February 27, 1985, we filed an unpublished opinion in this case holding that the district court had improperly granted judgment n.o.v. in favor of defendant-appellee Maurice E. Burton,
Judgment was entered on the jury verdict on March 2, 1984, with prejudgment interest being awarded at the rate of 6%. The district court entered judgment n.o.v. on May 3, 1984, and our mandate reversing the judgment n.o.v. was issued on May 6, 1985. Buck requests that our instructions provide for “post-judgment interest from the date the original judgment was first entered” while Burton suggests that if Buck is entitled to post-judgment interest at all, interest should run from the date of entry of judgment on this court’s mandate reversing the judgment n.o.v. We conclude that Buck is entitled to interest running from the date of entry of judgment on the original jury verdict.
Title 28, section 1961 of the United States Code provides that interest “shall be allowed on any money judgment in a civil case recovered in a district court,” to “be calculated from the date of the entry of the judgment.” It is unclear under the circumstances of this case whether the “date of the entry of the judgment” referred to in section 1961 is as Buck contends, the date of entry of judgment on the original verdict, or as Burton contends, the date of entry of judgment on this court’s mandate reversing the judgment n.o.v.
Our circuit has not specifically ruled on this issue. While the Second Circuit has interpreted section 1961 to permit allowance of interest only from the date of entry of judgment on the appellate court mandate,
Powers v. New York Central Railroad,
In Turner v. Japan Lines, Ltd., the Ninth Circuit recognized that “[t]he purpose of awarding interest to a party recovering a money judgment is, of course, to compensate the wronged person for being deprived of the monetary value of the loss from the time of the loss to the payment of the money judgment.” Id. at 756 (citations omitted). “Where judgment is entered promptly on the verdict, section 1961 ensures that the plaintiff is * * * compensated for being deprived of the monetary value of the loss from the date of ascertainment of damages until payment by defendant.” Id. When the initial ascertainment of damages is upheld, as in this case, by the reversal of a judgment n.o.v., “but a delay occurs between the date of that *287 ascertainment and the date of the eventual entry of judgment based on that ascertainment, the result [under section 1961] should not differ.” Id. The equities of the situation dictate that the successful plaintiff receive interest on the loss of the use of the money judgment from the date damages were ascertained — that is, the date upon which plaintiffs original judgment should have been entered had the district court not erroneously granted judgment n.o.v. See id.
We adopt the analysis of the Ninth Circuit in Turner, and conclude that Buck is entitled to post-judgment interest running from March 2, 1984, the date of entry of judgment on the original jury verdict. Accordingly, we grant Buck’s petition to recall our mandate and direct issuance of an amended mandate containing an additional provision for post-judgment interest running from March 2, 1984, to the date of payment of the money judgment.
