This appeal marks the latest chapter in the encyclopedic saga chronicling the Sierra Club’s challenge to Maine’s development efforts on Sears Island, a 940-acre uninhabited land mass in upper Penobscot Bay. We find that the order appealed from — an order altering the conditions upon which a preliminary injunction was predicated but not affecting the operation of the injunction itself — does not fall within the purview *211 of 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1) and is not otherwise immediately appealable. Hence, we leave the chapter largely unread and all but the introductory pages uncut.
I. BACKGROUND
To make a tedious tale tolerably terse, we eschew a lengthy historical narrative describing the trials and tribulations attendant to progress on the Sears Island project, secure in the certain knowledge that sources abound from which interested readers can quench their thirst for further detail.
See, e.g., Sierra Club v. Marsh,
Plaintiff-appellant Sierra Club (Club), a nonprofit interest group concerned with environmental preservation, has fought the planned transformation of Sears Island tooth and nail. Initially, this court concluded that because the project would require the developer, the state of Maine, to dredge the channel, clear the island and build a causeway connecting the island to the mainland, the National Environmental Policy Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321-4347 (1982 & West Supp.1990) (NEPA), required the Federal Highway Administration (FHwA), a provider of project funding, to prepare an environmental impact statement (EIS).
Sierra I,
Plaintiff renewed its objections to continued development, this time asserting that the EIS neither adequately evaluated the environmental effects inherent in choosing the Sears Island site nor adequately explored other alternatives. Plaintiff also contended that a supplemental EIS (SEIS) was mandatory and should have been prepared. On these bases, the Club once again asked the district court to enjoin the work pendente lite.
At first, the district court denied the request for further injunctive relief.
Sierra IV-A,
*212 Complaining that the district court had misapprehended the administrative record, the defendants moved for reconsideration. They also asked permission to supplement the Record. When the court allowed supplementation, the defendants provided additional record citations and supporting affidavits designed to demonstrate that suitable evaluations of all foreseeable secondary impacts and potential alternatives had taken place. See Sierra IV-D, slip op. at 6. The district court accepted the proffer, reconsidered the matter, reversed its field, and granted summary judgment in defendants’ favor on two of the three NEPA claims (the secondary impact requirement and the reasonable alternative requirement). To implement this decision, the court “amended” the June 1 order, leaving the injunction intact but making clear that it thereafter hung by but a single thread: proof of defendants’ compliance with the SEIS requirement. Phrased another way, as of the date of the reconsidered order (November 1, 1989), the injunction was dependent only on FHwA and the Corps assessing the new information anent Sears-port’s onshore acreage requirements and determining whether the new information was sufficiently significant as to demand preparation of an SEIS (and if it was, proceeding to formulate the SEIS). Id. at 26-27.
The Club seeks to appeal from the November 1 order. 1
II. APPEALABILITY
As a general rule, “it has been a marked characteristic of the federal judicial system not to permit an appeal until a litigation has been concluded in the court of first instance.”
Director, O.W.C.P. v. Bath Iron Works Corp.,
Interlocutory orders of the district courts of the United States ... or of the judges thereof, granting, continuing, modifying, refusing or dissolving injunctions, or refusing to dissolve or modify injunctions ....
The Club argues that because the November 1 order abbreviated the steps required to lift the June 1 injunction, the latter “modifpedj” the former within the purview of the statute. Alternatively, the Club argues that the subsequent order “con-tinu[ed]” the earlier one. We treat these asseverations separately.
A. Modification.
The accepted lexigraphic definitions of the verb “modify” are vague and, to some extent, internally inconsistent. See, e.g., Webster’s Third New International Dictionary 1452 (1981) (defining “modify” to mean, inter alia, “to make more temperate and less extreme ... to limit or restrict the meaning of ... [to] alter without transforming ... to make a basic or important change in”); Black’s Law Dictionary 905 (5th ed. 1979) (defining “modify” as meaning “To alter; to change in incidental or subordinate features; enlarge, extend; amend; limit, reduce.”). It seems clear, therefore, that in enacting section 1292(a)(1), Congress used the verb as a term of art.
A modification inquiry under section 1292(a)(1) has two facets: a reviewing court must examine whether there was an underlying decree of an injunctive character, and if so, whether the ruling appealed from can fairly be said to have changed the underlying decree in a jurisdictionally significant way.
See Bradley v. Milliken,
In appraising whether appellate jurisdiction was triggered pursuant to section 1292(a)(1), we believe we should take a functional approach, looking not to the form of the district court’s order but to its actual effect.
See Bradley,
On one level, of course, the November 1 order had an emendatory effect: since the district court, upon inspecting additional materials, thought better of its previous findings, the court “amended” its June 1 injunction to reflect that, as a matter of substantive NEPA law, the defendants had already complied with the first two conditions stated in the injunction. In authoring this recension, however, the district court did not change the command of the earlier injunction, relax its prohibitions, or release any respondent from its grip. Both before and after entry of the November 1 order, all defendants remained “enjoined from permitting, commencing, or continuing” any of the work. Consequently, the November 1 order had no immediate effect; it did not set the bulldozers loose, even though its entry enhanced the prospect that defendants, eventually, would be able to resume construction. Because the district court did not change the nature or scope of the judicially imposed prohibition, the court did not “modify” the injunction within the meaning of section 1292(a)(1).
Cf. Gulfstream Aerospace Corp. v. Mayacamas Corp.,
We offer a common sense parallel which we believe proves the point. Appellant initially sought an injunction due to appellees’ supposed noncompliance with three NEPA requirements. If at that time the district court had rejected two of the grounds (or simply declined to reach them), yet granted complete injunctive relief on the basis of the third, appellant, having prevailed, could not have appealed.
See Little Earth of United Tribes, Inc. v. United States Dept. of HUD,
B. Continuation.
Appellant also asserts that, if the November 1 order cannot be read as “modifying” the June 1 injunction in the section 1292(a)(1) sense, it nevertheless had the effect of “continuing” the injunction and was appealable on that basis. This assertion, too, is flawed.
Consistent with our functional approach, we believe that, to be classified as an “order[ ] ... continuing” an injunction, a ruling must have a direct and demonstrable effect on the duration of a previously-issued injunction. In other words, the'later order must extend or prolong the restraint. An order continues an injunction, for instance, where “without such order, the injunction would stand dissolved by lapse of the time fixed in the original order.” Dreutzer v. Frankfort Land Co., 65 F. *214 642, 644 (6th Cir.1895). There was no such temporal impact here. The June 1 injunction was issued without finite limit of time; when entered, it was to control until the last of three stipulated conditions had been fulfilled. The November 1 order effectively resolved two of the conditions, but left the restraint undisturbed pending fulfillment of the last remaining condition. As before, the injunction would expire when the final barrier erected by the district court was scaled. Hence, the injunction’s longevity was unaffected.
At bottom, the Club seems to be arguing that, because the November 1 order made it more likely that the defendants would be able to doff the injunction's shackles sooner, no more was needed to confer appellate jurisdiction. But section 1292(a)(1), as we interpret it, requires a more direct temporal effect before an order can be said to “continue” an existing injunction.
Cf., e.g., Cohen v. Board of Trustees,
Normally, orders must be “final” before appeals can be taken.
Director, O.W.C.P.,
Against this backdrop, we are unwilling to adopt a more expansive reading of section 1292(a)(1) than is logically required. Multiple appeals in a single litigation are necessarily disruptive and, if freely allowed, subject to abuse. Appellant’s reading of the statute would sanction an interlocutory appeal at every succeeding step after an injunction had been granted, thereby opening Pandora’s jar.
Cf. Spiegel v. Trustees of Tufts College,
Inasmuch as the November 1 order “was a step in controlling the litigation before the trial court,”
Baltimore Contractors,
*215 III. CONCLUSION
To recapitulate, we find that the November 1 order did not affect the operation of the June 1 injunction in a way that triggered appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1). The preliminary injunction remains in place, its command unaltered, its duration unchanged. Construction of the project remains at a standstill pending full NEPA compliance. The November 1 order neither modified nor continued the injunction in any jurisdictionally significant respect.
We need go no further. 3 In the present posture of the case, an interlocutory appeal will not lie. The Club, yearning for the blossom when only the bud is ready, has come to us prematurely.
The appeal is dismissed for want of appellate jurisdiction. Costs in favor of appellees.
APPENDIX
The June 1 order read in material part:
[A]ll of the federal and state defendants ... are hereby restrained and enjoined from permitting, commencing, or continuing, any causeway, roadway, building, pier cell or other improvement relating to the development of a marine cargo terminal and industrial park on Sears Island, pending either further order of this court or compliance by the FHwA and the Corps with: a) the NEPA requirement of an adequate evaluation of all reasonably foreseeable secondary impacts of developing a cargo terminal on Sears Island; b) the NEPA requirement of evaluation of all reasonable alternatives to the proposed project; and c) the NEPA requirement that all new information be assessed with a view to determining whether its environmental significance requires preparation of a supplemental EIS.
The November 1 order amended this language to read:
The federal and state defendants ... are hereby restrained and enjoined from permitting, commencing, or continuing, any causeway, roadway, building, pier cell or other improvement relating to the development of a marine cargo terminal and industrial park on Sears Island, pending either further order of this court or compliance by the FHwA and the Corps with the NEPA requirement that all new information be assessed with a view to determining whether its environmental significance requires preparation of a supplemental EIS.
Notes
. Because the case was not finally resolved by entry of the November 1 order, the district court quite properly abjured the entry of a final judgment pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. Rule 54(b). On the other hand, no party attempted to invoke the intermediate appeal procedure contained in 28 U.S.C. § 1292(b).
. Such a result commends itself to us particularly where, as here, no injustice will stem from the denial of interlocutory review. The district court’s November 1 determination as to defendants’ compliance with the secondary impact and reasonable alternative requirements can effectively be reviewed, along with the court’s conclusions as to the need for an SEIS, at such time as the injunction is dissolved, see 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), or when a final judgment is entered below, see 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
. Because we conclude that the November 1 order was not an order "modifying” or "continuing” an injunction within the intendment of 28 U.S.C. § 1292(a)(1), we need not determine whether it might also lack immediate appeala-bility under the rule of
Stringfellow v. Concerned Neighbors in Action,
