The cross-appeals in this diversity suit present issues of fraud (under the common law of Illinois) and arbitrability and a request by the defendants for sanctions for *729 the filing of a frivolous suit, along with jurisdictional issues. The district. court dismissed the suit for failure to state a claim, enjoined arbitration, but denied sanctions. The only sources of facts are the complaint and contracts appended to it.
Fogel is a former member of the Chicago law firm of Gordon & Glickson, a professional corporation until 1999 when it was converted for tax reasons to a limited liability company. At that point Fogel, an employee and shareholder of the PC, became an employee and member of the LLC. Despite the conversion, the PC was not dissolved. It had bought stock and stock options with money that would otherwise have been income to its shareholders, and it retained a portion of those assets after the conversion in order to provide deferred compensation to the shareholders.
Fogel continued to work for the law firm until September 1999, when he announced his resignation and hence, pursuant to contracts that he had signed at the time of the conversion, from the PC as well as the LLC. Pursuant to still another contract, governing the disposition of the assets retained by the PC, he became a creditor of the PC for his share of those assets, some $468,000, which was to be paid to him over a three-year period beginning in 2001. Oddly, given his charge of fraud, had he not — -at the firm’s suggestion — postponed his resignation to the beginning of the following year, he would have had a smaller entitlement because; the PC’s assets were revalued upward at the end of 1999.
The firm decided to sell some of the PC’s assets and distribute the proceeds to the shareholders in the form of cash. Since Fogel was no longer a shareholder, he was not entitled to share in the proceeds of the sale. The firm, however, offered to treat him as if he were still a shareholder and thus to let him share in the proceeds of the sale — further paradoxical behavior for a defrauder. He declined, preferring to remain a general creditor. The sale took place and was profitable, and despite the distribution of the proceeds the PC’s remaining assets had sufficient value to cover the debt to Fogel. But shortly afterwards, and before the payments to him were due to begin* the dot-com bubble burst, the PC’s remaining securities tanked, and the value of the PC’s assets fell to a level at which it was able to pay Fogel only 60 percent of what it owed him, precipitating this lawsuit.
Fogel alleges that when the firm gave him a choice whether to be treated as a shareholder of the PC and thus participate in the sale of some of its assets, it failed to warn him that if he didn’t go along but instead stood on his rights as a creditor there mightn’t be enough assets left to pay him the full amount of the PC’s debt to him. But it isn’t fraud even for a fiduciary to fail to tell his principal something that is obvious. “A party cannot close its eyes to obvious facts and then charge that it has been deceived.”
Modern Track Machinery, Inc. v. Bry-Lon, Ltd.,
A sale of a corporation’s assets followed by the distribution of the proceeds to the owners
might
be a fraud against the corporation’s creditors, such as Fogel (apparently the PC’s only creditor). 740 ILCS 160/5(a), 6(a);
Cannon v. Whitman Corp.,
He is left to argue only that the firm falsely assured him that there would be value enough remaining in the PC to pay his claim in full. But he could not have believed any such assurance. He knew what the remaining assets were; he knew they were stocks and stock options rather than Treasury bills; he knew the law firm did not control the stock market; and so he knew that the firm’s representation to him concerning the future value of the PC’s remaining assets was a prediction, rather than a promise on which a reasonable person could rely.
Lidecker v. Kendall College,
If Fogel wanted to minimize the risk to him of stock market fluctuations, he should either have accepted the offer to be treated as a participant in the sale of assets, and thus have received a portion of the proceeds (and therefore advance payment of a part of his entitlement), which were in cash, or have objected to the distribution of the proceeds, which reduced the assets available to pay the PC’s debt to him. He did neither. He gave knowing consent to the chain of events that resulted in the PC’s inability to honor its debt to him. So the claim of fraud was rightly dismissed, although we do not think the claim was so frivolous that the district judge can be said to have abused her discretion in declining to award sanctions.
After filing his suit in the district court, Fogel served a demand for arbitration on the LLC, contending that it had violated a contractual obligation to pay him, when he withdrew from the firm, both deferred compensation and the value of his equity interest in the firm. His contracts with the PC and the LLC contain an identical, broadly worded, “mandatory arbitration” clause, which provides that “any dispute, claim, question or disagreement ...
*731
aris[ing] as a result of or in connection with this Agreement, or the breach thereof, ... shall be resolved through arbitration.” Although the clause was broad enough to encompass Fogel’s fraud claim against the PC,
Prima Paint Corp. v. Flood
&
Conklin Mfg. Co.,
There is a jurisdictional hiccup. The district court dismissed the fraud suit while the motion to enjoin arbitration was pending. When Fogel filed his notice of appeal from that dismissal we ordered the appeal stayed pending disposition of the motion to enjoin, which would end the proceedings in the district court, thus enabling us to exercise jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 (appeal from final decision). When we received notice that the district court had amended its judgment to include the injunction, we set a briefing schedule for the appeal, but Fogel failed to file a new notice of appeal.
Had we dismissed the appeal, back when the notice of appeal was filed, for want of appellate jurisdiction, on the ground that there was then no final judgment in the district court and the appeal was therefore premature,
Katerinos v. United States Department of the Treasury,
The cases we have just cited are ones interpreting the unhelpfully named “unique circumstances” doctrine, which is actually a form of equitable tolling that relieves against the consequences of an untimely filing of a notice of appeal if the appellant relied on a “specific assurance by a judicial officer.”
Osterneck v. Ernst & Whinney,
The two cases on which Fogel places particular weight are not on point. In
Allen v. Transamerica Ins. Co.,
A more interesting jurisdictional issue has to do with the fraud suit itself. A premature notice of appeal becomes effective on the denial of a pending motion only if the motion is one enumerated in Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(4)(A), see Fed. R.App. P. 4(a)(4)(B)®, such as a motion to alter or amend judgment under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e). The defendants did file a motion to amend the judgment to include an injunction against Fogel’s seeking arbitration. But it was not a Rule 59(e) motion because it was filed more than 10 days after the judgment sought to be amended — that is, the judgment dismissing the fraud suit. So it did not extend Fogel’s deadline for filing his notice of appeal from that judgment.
But Fogel’s appeal from that judgment is saved by the following sentence in the district judge’s minute order directing the entry of judgment: “All pending motions are terminated.” One of those motions was the defendants’ motion to bar arbitration. That motion was denied by the language we just quoted. A Rule 58 judgment was entered, pursuant to the minute order. That was a final and ap-pealable judgment because nothing remained pending in the district court (all motions having been terminated, remember), and the defendants’ subsequently filed motion to amend the judgnent was a nullity, as the district judge failed to realize in granting it. Cf.
Salton, Inc. v. Phil
*733
ips Domestic Appliances & Personal Care B.V.,
The motion cited no rule that authorizes a district judge to revise a final judgment; cited, in fact, no rule at all. The logical rule to cite would have been Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), the deadline for filing a Rule 59(e) motion having passed. Instead of citing Rule 60(b) or any other rule or doctrine governing postjudgment motions, the defendants invoked
Nelson v. Adams, USA Inc.,
