OPINION
¶ 1 Appellee moved to dismiss this appeal for untimeliness. It argued that the notice of appeal was defective because appellants filed it during the pendency of a time-extending order. Appellants responded that the notice of appeal was only premature, and hence not defective. We denied appellee’s motion, with an opinion to follow. This is that opinion.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
¶2 Appellants sued appellee to reclaim money and equipment. After appellants obtained an ex parte provisional replevin order, the sheriff seized the subject equipment. Appellee then filed a redelivery bond and requested a probable cause hearing. The trial court eventually quashed the replevin order and awarded fees and costs to appellee. In the same order, the trial court exonerated bonds filed by both parties.
¶ 3 Appellee then moved, pursuant to Rule 59®, Arizona Rules of Civil Procedure, to amend the order by deleting the exoneration of appellants’ bond. Thirty-four days after the trial court’s order and twenty-four days after appellee’s motion to amend, appellants filed their notice of appeal. Twenty days later, the trial court granted appellee’s motion. Appellants did not file an amended notice of appeal.
DISCUSSION
¶ 4 Appellee moves to dismiss the appeal, arguing that the notice of appeal was a nullity because appellants filed it during the pendency of a time-extending order. 1 *288 Appellants counter that the appeal was merely premature, thereby not affecting this court’s jurisdiction. 2 We agree with appellants.
¶ 5 On appeal, courts strive to dispose of cases on their merits rather than on harmless technical errors.
See Hill v. City of Phoenix,
¶ 6 Appellee rests its argument upon two cases,
Barassi
and
Baumann v. Tuton,
¶ 7 However, while so holding, the supreme court noted in dictum that Arizona appellate courts lack jurisdiction when “a litigant attempts to appeal where a motion is
still pending
in the trial court or where there is no final judgment.”
Id.
at 422,
¶8 First, appellee’s time-extending motion is no longer pending. The trial court here, much like the trial court in
Barassi
entered its final judgment shortly after appellants filed their notice of appeal. Second, as dictum, the supreme court’s language is not controlling.
See Arizona Dep’t of Econ. Security v. Superior Court,
¶ 9 Appellee next argues that
Baumann
requires the dismissal of the instant appeal. In
Baumann,
the plaintiff filed his notice of appeal during the pendency of his motion for a new trial after the trial court had granted summary judgment to the defendant.
See
¶ 10 We conclude that
Baumann
does not control here. While
Baumann
held that a notice of appeal filed during the pendency of a time-extending motion was a “nullity,” the party there filed a notice of appeal while his
own
time-extending motion was pending.
See id.
at 371,
¶ 11 Accordingly, we find the present case to be more akin to
Barassi
than
Baumann;
and, as the supreme court instructed in
Bar-assi,
we will not punish appellants “for being too diligent.”
¶ 12 Of course, even though their notice of appeal was merely premature, appellants would still lose the right to appeal if their premature appeal resulted in prejudice to appellee.
See Hill,
CONCLUSION
¶ 13 For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that appellants’ premature appeal did not divest this court of jurisdiction. Appel-lee’s motion to dismiss is therefore denied.
Notes
. In the alternative, appellee argues that the notice of appeal was late because appellants filed it 34 days after the trial court entered their order.
But appellee’s motion to amend the trial court’s judgment extended appellants’ time to appeal until thirty days after the trial court ruled on it.
*288 See Rule 9(a), Arizona Rules of Civil Appellate Procedure. Because appellants filed their notice of appeal twenty days before that ruling, their notice of appeal was not late.
. Appellants also argue that, if the appeal must be dismissed, it should be dismissed because the trial court's order did not contain Rule 54(b) language. We reject this argument because an interlocutory order such as this, which is made appealable by statute, does not require an express determination of finality pursuant to Rule 54(b).
See Bulova Watch Co. v. Super City Dep't Stores of Arizona, Inc., 4
Ariz.App. 553, 555,
. This is not to suggest that appellants pursued the most efficient course of action. The better procedure would have been to file a notice of appeal after the trial court ruled on the time-extending motion.
