DECISION AND ORDER
Thе Court previously granted, in very large part, the plaintiffs summary judgment motion in this contract dispute. The plaintiff now sеeks to obtain the remaining relief it sought. Because the Court concludes that the request is procedurаlly improper, the motion is denied.
I. BACKGROUND
Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation (“SWPC”) and Dick corporatiоn (“Dick”) formed a consortium for the purpose of constructing a power plant. The plant construction became severely delayed, and the plant owners collected liquidated damages agаinst the consortium by drawing upon letters of credit SWPC had posted on the consortium’s behalf. The parties arе now suing each other, in part, to determine how much each party is responsible for those liquidated damages. In a summary judgment Decision and Order dated October 14, 2003 (“October Order”), the Court determined that, under the parties’ Consortium Agreement, Dick, not SWPC, was liable for the liquidated damages to the owners up front, and that the ultimate apportionment of those damages would to be determined according to other provisions of the Consortium Agreement. See Siemens Westinghouse Power Corp. v. Dick Corp.,
SPWC’s complaint states thаt, in October 2002, the owners made separate 'draws upon their letters of credit in the amounts of $5,434,732.80 and $620,801.20, and that the “basis for these draws, in addition to the liquidated damages assessments, was a lien filed by [a] subcontractor ... in the amount of $3,000,490.02.” (Compl. ¶ 24) As part of its original summary judgment motion, SWPC included a chart listing draws in those precise amounts in October 2002 as part of the $18 million in total damages it sought. Because the $3 million amount appeared to pertain to the subcontractor’s lien, the Court agreed with Dick that SWPC had not carried its burden of showing that the mоney at issue was properly attributable to liquidated damages.
SWPC now states that, although the owners withheld the $3 million pertaining to the lien from the consortium payments, the owners never actually drew that money from SWPC’s lettеrs of credit, and that the owners’ liquidated damages draws, in fact, totaled the original $18 million it sought. SWPC proposes to submit a short affidavit explaining how the subcontractor’s lien was a separate consideration from the liquidated damages calculations.
II. DISCUSSION
As an initial matter, it is unclear whether SWPC’s request is a subsequent summary-judgment motion, or a motion for reconsideration of the October Order. The Court need not determine the more apрropriate label because, under either procedural vehicle, the motion must be denied.
First, treаting the motion as a subsequent summary judgment motion, the Court concludes it proeedurally improper. Although the Cоurt certainly has discretion to review a successive summary judgment motion seeking precisely the same rеlief as before, see Wechsler v. Hunt Health Sys., Ltd.,
Second, treating the motion as one for reconsideration, the Court concludes that thе request, made over three and one-half months after the October Order, is far too late. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) provides that a motion for reconsideration of an order “shall be made in a reasonable time,” Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), and this District’s local rules only permit a party ten days within which to serve a motion for reconsideration. S.D.N.Y. Local R. 6.3.
III. ORDER
For the reasons stated, it is hereby
ORDERED that the request of plaintiff Siemens Westinghouse Power Corporation (“SWPC”) for leave to file a motion to amend the Court’s judgment authorized by the Order dated October 14, 2003, so as to declare Dick Corporation liable to SWPC in an additional amount of $3,000,490.02 of liquidated damages, is denied, without prejudiсe to renewal of the request in connection with the resolution of issues and claims still outstanding in this action.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Court’s October Order stated that its determination as to Dick's liability would be subject to a later determination rеgarding certain affirmative defenses to that liability.
. SWPC did not already submit that proposed affidavit to the Court because the Court limited the parties’ submissions on this issue to short letter briefs.
