1. Plaintiffs brought suit against but one defendant, the Express Company. The order, from which plaintiffs appeal, discharged that sole defendant “from any and all liability” to the plaintiffs. Thus there ended the plaintiffs’ action against the only person they had sued. As the district judge said in his opinion, the effect of the order is that, “for all practical purposes,” the Express Company has become “merely an indifferent bystander.”
1
[
Aside from Rule 54(b), Fed.Rules Civ.Proc. 28 U.S.C.A., which we shall discuss later, support for that argument must be found in the doctrine of Hohorst v. Hamburg-American Packet Co.,
As Judge Sanborn put it in Standley v. Roberts, 8 Cir.,
The following kinds of orders have thus been held appealable: (a) An order dismissing claims of some only of several plaintiffs in a trust accounting action, where the divers claims are not joint. 4 (b) An order dismissing a claim of a creditor in a receivership proceeding, although the several claims of other creditors remain undetermined. 5 (c) An order denying the title of but one of several claimants in a condemnation suit, the claims not being joint. 6 (d) An order denying intervention when it is a matter of right. 7
In Dickinson v. Petroleum Conversion Corp.,
The precise question of the appealability of an order discharging an interpleading “stakeholder” is new in this Circuit. The Third and Eighth Circuits have held such an order appealable. See Bank of Taiwan v. Gorgas-Pierie Mfg. Co., 3 Cir.,
Opposed to our conclusion is Credit Bureau of San Diego v. Petrasich, 9 Cir.,
As above noted, Standley v. Roberts, 8 Cir.,
2. However, thanks to Rule 54 (b) as amended in 1948, the order is not final and appealable because here there are multiple claims, and because the trial judge did not “direct the entry of a final judgment * * * upon an express determination that there is no just reason for delay and upon an express direction for the entry of judgment.” We interpret the Rule as meaning no more than this: Before the Rule, an order of the kind described therein, even if it would otherwise have been final, was nevertheless interlocutory when the trial judge stated that he was reserving the power to alter it, for then it was but a provisional or tentative order. As, by his explicit reservation, he left the order revocable, he kept it in suspense, and therefore truly interlocutory, hence not appealable. 15 The only effect of Rule 54(b) is that it requires us to *339 treat the trial judge’s silence concerning an order covered by that Rule as the equivalent of such an explicit reservation; in failing to utter a “determination,” he is deemed to have made his order subject to his own recall at any time before the end of the entire litigation ; 16 so interpreted, there is no question of the Rule’s validity, as there might be if it diminished the statutory jurisdiction of the upper courts under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. 17
Our experience indicates that at least some trial judges are not aware that orders within Rule 54(b), although they would otherwise be final, are not appealable without such “determinations,” so that at times the withholding of the requisite formula has apparently been inadvertent; in several cases, in each of which we said we would entertain an appeal if the trial judge supplied the “determination,” he has done so. 18 In the instant case, it is difficult to believe that the trial judge, by his silence, intended to render his discharge order not final. For pretty obviously he intended that, if the plaintiffs elsewhere sued the Express Company, or if the impleaded defendants sued that Company, his discharge order would be available to the Express Company by way of res judicata. Yet, as that order, absent a “determination,” is not now final, it can have no res judicata effect. 19
In all probability, the Express Company will deplore that result and will therefore join the plaintiffs in a request to the trial *340 judge to enter a “determination,” and in all likelihood he will comply with that request. Accordingly, we need not consider whether, in any circumstances, mandamus will issue, 20 and whether, if so, this would be a proper case for the use of that writ.
Following our previous decisions, 21 we hold as follows: If the plaintiffs procure from the trial judge the prescribed action, they may file a new appeal; and if all parties file a consent to such a course, we will decide' the questions raised upon the present appeal record as thus supplemented.
Appeal dismissed.
Notes
. According to the record of the district eourt, the Express Company, since the entry of the order, has deposited the money in the registry of the district court. That fact is not a part of the record before this court. We could direct that it be made part of the appellate record. But that seems an idle ceremony, as the fact is incontrovertible. Cf. Dunham v. Townshend,
. In the Hohorst case itself, the court specifically emphasized the fact of al
*336
leged joint liability; see
In the following eases which, either before or after Hohorst, applied the Hohorst doctrine, the joint element was present and, usually, was pointed out: Frow v. De La Vega,
. “Jointness” is present where one of the parties is secondarily or derivatively liable, — see the Hohorst case; Oneida Nav. Corp. v. W. & S. Job & Co.,
. See Crutcher v. Joyce, 10 Cir.,
. See, e. g., Yorkshire Inv. & American Mortg. Co. v. Fowler, 2 Cir.,
. State of Texas v. Chuoke, 5 Cir.,
. See, e. g., Dickinson v. Petroleum Corp.,
. See Dickinson v. Mulligan, 2 Cir.,
The Dickinson case arose under Rule 54(b) as it stood before its amendment in 1948.
. Reversed on other grounds,
. Moore, Federal Practice (2d ed. 1948) 3047.
. Here he cites and quotes from Turman Oil Co. v. Lathrop, D.C.,
. In Hunter v. Federal Life Ins. Co., 8 Cir.,
. See also Railway Express Agency v. Jones, 7 Cir.,
. Cf. the sauce-for-the-gander doctrine enunciated in Hovey v. McDonald,
. City of Covington v. Covington First National Bank,
. We have held that, despite the fact of multiple claims, the Rule is inapplicable to an order denying an interlocutory injunction, because the statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1292, provides that such an order is appealable. See Cutting Room Appliances Corp. v. Empire Cutting M. Co., 2 Cir.,
. The Supreme Court has said that the 1934 statute which empowered it to promulgate procedural rules for “the district courts” gave it no authority to affect the statutory jurisdiction of any of the courts and particularly of the appellate courts. In Sibbach v. Wilson,
. In such a case, the time for taking an appeal begins to run with the filing of the “determination.”
. Joseph T. Ryerson & Son v. Bullard Mch. Tool Co., 2 Cir.,
. See Moore, Commentary On the United States Judicial Code (1949) 518.
. Tobin Packing Co. v. North American Car Corp., 2 Cir.,
