The Soo Line Railroad and the Escanaba & Lake Superior Railroad are locked in a durable struggle attributable to the Connecting Line, some 21 miles of track between Crivitz and Marinette, Wisconsin.
In re Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific R.R.,
Before we decided
Escanaba I,
the Soo and the Escanaba had filed suits in the Eastern District of Wisconsin. The Esca-naba demanded that the Soo arbitrate with it about damages attributable to the delay. The Soo demanded that Escanaba pay about $344,000 in interline freight balances. An “interline balance” is the net payable after two railroads have offset sums due to each other for similar services. When a shipment of freight moves on two or more lines, a single line will collect the whole charge (the originating carrier from the shipper, or the terminating carrier from the consignee). The collecting railroad must reimburse the railroads that carried the freight, according to divisions of revenues filed with the ICC. On the 18th of each month all of the nation’s railroads send each other abstracts of waybills showing which ones moved how much freight; on the 20th they send each other statements of sums cоllected on account of these movements. Each pair of railroads sets off the accounts between them, leaving a balance payable. This interline balance is supposed to be paid promptly. Just how promptly has been a subject of controversy. See
In re Iowa R.R.,
The district court consolidated the two cases. In light of Escanaba I and II, the district court held that the Soo is obliged to arbitrate the Escanaba’s claim for damages as a result of the delay in transferring the Connecting Line. The last paragraph of the opinion deals with the claim for interline balances:
[T]he Escanaba has only weakly challenged the Soo’s claim that it is due $344,481.94 for past services. The Soo, on the other hand, has adequately substantiated its position. The Soo’s motion for summary judgment is therefore GRANTED.
On December 4, 1986, the court inserted this language on the form customarily used for final judgments under Fed.R.Civ.P. 58:
*548 Escanaba’s motion for summary judgment is granted in 85-C-810 and Soo’s motion for summary judgment is granted in 85-C-1695.
This document does not specify the relief to which either party is entitled.
The Soo took its medicine on the arbitration component of the case, although the parties still disagree about where the arbitration should be held. The Soo prefers Minneapolis, which will direct any enforcement proceedings to the Eighth Circuit; the Escanaba prefers Milwaukee, in the hope that a suit to enforce would return to the district judge who ordered the Soo to arbitrate. The Escanaba was not happy about the disposition of the claim for interline balances, however. It filed a motion for reconsideration under Fed.R.Civ.P. 59 or, in the alternative, for a stay of enforcement under Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(h).
The Soo also was unhappy, because it had requested pre-judgment interest. It reminded the district judge that it wаnted that relief. In May 1987 the district court entered an order, the entire operative language of which is:
I find that, considering the rather peculiar circumstances of these cases, the Escanaba is entitled to the relief it seeks. Accordingly, its motion is GRANTED, and the judgment in 85-C-1695 is stayed until the parties’ arbitration proceeding is completed. No bond is required.
This order did not address the pending request for interest, so the Soo sent the district judge a letter seeking clarification and an expliсit resolution of the question. The district court did not respond to this letter. The Soo filed a notice of appeal. It protests the stay and seeks prejudgment interest.
I
This case is shot through with jurisdictional problems.
1. Despite the request in
Ivanov-McPhee v. Washington National Insurance Co.,
The district court entered a single judgment in the two cases, which suggests that they are merged. The Escanaba insists that the arbitration case is alive in the district court because the district judge may entertain one party’s request to enforce (and the other’s request to set aside) any award. This would prevent an appeal concerning the interline balance, if the cases are merged. Under Ivanov-McPhee and Sandwiches, however, we inquire whether cases that have been “consolidated” to an unspecified degree are functionally similar and present overlаpping issues. Until the district judge granted a stay of the interline balance case pending the arbitrators’ award, we would not have supposed that the cases are linked by more than the identity of the parties.
We shall not have to decide whether these cases have been consolidated in the sense of merger, because we believe that the order compelling the parties to arbitrate is independently final. We had a similar problem in
Escanaba I
and observed that an оrder compelling arbitration ordinarily is not final because much remains to be done. But “[tjhrough a ‘fluke in the law’ ... an order to arbitrate is nonetheless appealable if it terminates all proceedings in the district court.”
2. The judgment entered in this case is defective because it does not specify the relief to which the prevailing parties are entitled. The Soo could not execute on a judgment saying that its motion for summary judgment is granted. To be final, a judgment must be self-contained and specify the relief awarded; it is not enough to refer parties to the court’s opinion. See, e.g.,
Foremost Sales Promotions, Inc. v. Director, BATF,
This case, however, contains a final
decision
even if it does not contain a final
judgment.
The statute, 28 U.S.C. § 1291, authorizes appeals from final decisions, and the parties may waive the requirement of a final judgment on a separate paper complying with Rule 58.
Bankers Trust Co. v. Mallis,
3. A judgment awarding a sum of money representing principal is not final if a question concerning pre-judgment interest remains for decision.
Kaszuk v. Bakery and Confectionery Union,
Surely a party is entitled to a decision by а district judge on an important element of damages requested in the complaint and advanced consistently thereafter. Overlooking the request the first time may be chalked up to inadvertence and the press of business, but a demand hammered home calls for explicit treatment. Perhaps the district judge believes that any request not granted is denied. That approach plays hob with appellate jurisdiction, however. And although in December 1986 there was no requirement that district judges give reasons when disposing of motions for summary judgment, Circuit Rule 50— which went into effect in March 1987 — requires a statement of reasons. Both ascertaining appellate jurisdiction and engaging in appellate review are difficult if district judges ignore requests for relief.
If a request for pre-judgment interest is pending in the district court, we lack appellate jurisdiction. We could at most issue a writ of mandamus to compel
*550
the district court to render a decision. It is apparent, howеver, that the district judge is not even considering the possibility of awarding interest. When a district judge ignores an important issue in a case and issues a terminating order, that decision is final even though it would not be if the district judge planned to rule on the same issue. Compare
Hickey v. Duffy,
4. We must consider, too, the effect of the stay of enforcement entered in May 1987. Perhaps this order eliminates the finality of the judgment, on the ground that payment has been linked with the arbitratiоn. The Soo contends that the stay puts it “effectively out of court” and is therefore a final decision on the rationale of
Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Construction Corp.,
This is unimportant, however, if thе stay is itself the terminating order of the case— and it is. Suppose the district court had awarded the Soo $344,000 and allowed the Escanaba to satisfy the judgment with a promissory note payable in 1990. That would have been a final decision. It would have finally adjudicated the Soo’s entitlements and named the relief (a promissory note) to which the Soo was entitled. That the note might be thought inadequate relief would be an argument on appeal rather than an obstacle to appellate jurisdiction. So, too, if the district judge had ordered the Escanaba to satisfy the judgment with a note maturing on the date the arbitrators rendered a decision, and thereafter payable on demand. This also is a form of relief, though perhaps a defective one.
The combination of a decision to award $344,000 plus a stay until the arbitrators render their decision is no different from satisfaction of the judgment by the Escanaba’s note due on that date. In either case thе Soo is the Escanaba’s creditor, but unable to demand immediate payment. The terms of the district court’s order suggest that the stay lifts automatically on the arbitrators’ decision. The decision ends the litigation and leaves nothing but execution, making it final, see
Catlin v. United States,
II
The merits are a lot easier.
1. The Escanaba requested a stay on the authority of Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(h), which says:
When a court has ordered a final judgment under the conditions stated in Rule 54(b), the court may stay enforcement of that judgment until the entering of a subsequent judgment or judgments and may prescribe such conditions as are necessary to secure the benefit thereof to the party in whose favor the judgment is entered.
This rule deals with final judgments on a single claim, made appealable under Rule 54(b) while other claims remain for decision. The paradigm is a case like
Curtiss-Wright Corp. v. General Electric Co.,
446
*551
U.S. 1,
The Escanaba takes the position that district courts have inherent authority to stay the execution of their judgments, even if no rule authorizes a stay. There is something to the proposition. We concluded in
Olympia Equipment Leasing Co. v. Western Union Telegraph Co.,
“Inherent authority” is not a substitute for a good reason, however. “Inherent authority”, like its cousin in criminal law the “supervisory power”, is just another name for the power оf courts to make common law when statutes and rules do not address a particular topic. Cf.
United States v. Widgery,
The district judge did not give a reason for deferring execution of the judgment. The court referred to “the rather peculiar circumstances of these cases” without specifying what circumstances it had in mind, why they are “rather peculiar”, or why the peculiarity calls for a stay. The case involves a standard commercial problem. The Escanaba owes the Soo money on account of one business transaction; the Soo may or may not owe the Escanaba money on account of another; the debtor for the moment wants to hold on to what it has for as long as it can. If the arbitrators award more than $344,000 to the Escanaba, it wants to set off the two debts and collect the balance — improving both its cash flow and its security in the interim. If the arbitrators award the Escanaba less than $344,000, it has delayed payment. If the Soo is getting less interest on the $344,000 than the Escanaba can earn by investing that sum, the difference is gravy. The Escanaba does not contend that the Soo earned the interline balance of $344,000 by violating contractual obligations relating to the Connecting Line. The interline balance and the arbitration are related only in the sense that the two railroads have become antagonists, and each wants money from the other. That is not enough to defer payment of one debt while the arbitrators deliberate about a second.
Courts regularly require the payment of undisputed debts while the parties litigate their genuine disputes. See
Curtiss-Wright
and, e.g.,
Schieffelin & Co. v. Valley Liquors, Inc.,
We are prepared to believe that the Soo has dragged its heels in the arbitration; it has litigated everything to the eyeballs so far and seems likely to continue. It may also be that the arbitrators will award the Escanaba damages exceeding $344,000 in connection with the Connecting Line. As in Escanaba I and II, we stand clear of that dispute, which the parties have assigned by contract to a different forum. The possibility that the Escanaba has a good claim for damages just sets the stage for a setoff and does not resolve the question whether delay in anticipation of setoff should be permitted. This case in fact shоws the trouble with self help.
The payment of interline balances is an essential ingredient of a transportation system in which few lines can handle a long shipment from beginning to end. A shipment can pass over the track of multiple lines only if there is cooperation among railroads. Discharge of interline balances is so important to interstate transportation that the Third Circuit held in Penn Central that the balances are held in trust for the railroads providing the transportation — a position thаt, if adopted in this circuit, would have serious consequences for the Escanaba. There is no polite name for a trustee who holds trust funds hostage on account of unrelated disputes. In Iowa R.R. we held that interline balances in the hands of Class III railroads such as the Escanaba are not trust funds. Although the Escanaba does not hold the interline balances as the Soo’s trustee, it ought to pay them forthwith. The self-help responses open to the Soo — such as declining to interchange traffic with the Escanaba until the debt is paid — are bazookas, too powerful for the problem at hand and too harmful to shippers caught in the middle. The Soo is entitled to be paid now for interline freight balances.
2. The parties did not discuss in the district court which state’s law governs the availability of pre-judgment interest, and they make only passing mention of it here. (The Soo assumes that Wisconsin’s law applies, and the Escanaba by footnote contends that Michigan supplies the law.) A federal court sitting in diversity applies the law of the forum state, including its conflicts rules.
Day & Zimmerman, Inc. v. Challoner,
The interlinе balances are liquidated monthly. Under the law of Wisconsin, pre-judgment interest is due on trade debts and other contractual entitlements that may be computed with reasonable certainty. See
Afram Export Corp. v. Metallurgiki Halyps, S.A.,
The Escanaba replies that Wisconsin requires interest only on the net, when parties are entitled to set off mutual debts, even if one debt is unliquidated. It cites only a Minnesota case,
Knutson v. Lasher,
The Escanaba’s debt arose after the Soo’s. The Soo earned its interline balances in 1984 and 1985; the Escanaba’s damages for delay in transferring the Connecting Line apply to later periods, for only the Milwaukee Road’s offer to sell the Connecting Line to the Soo in 1985 triggered the Escanaba’s contractual right to purchase, and the Escanaba’s damages (if any) do not arise out of the same events that create the Soo’s entitlement to be paid. And the Escanaba may not receive an arbi-tral award. The possibility of some overlap of debts for some of the period the Escanaba has owed these interline balances does not augur against an award of interest to the Soo. The parties havе not drawn to our attention any Wisconsin case qualifying Wisconsin’s presumptive entitlement to interest in the case of trade debts. We conclude that the Escanaba’s arguments would not persuade a Wisconsin court to withhold an award of interest in this case.
This conclusion does not necessarily dictate the way in which these parties’ obligations ultimately will be settled. The arbitrators may choose to give pre-award interest to the Escanaba at the same rate the distriсt court employs for the Soo, so that the time value of money will be a wash for the periods in which each side had an obligation to the other. This question is for the arbitrators, and we express no opinion on it. We conclude only that the Soo is entitled to interest on sums that should have been paid years ago, no matter what happens in the arbitration. The district court shall fix the amount of interest on remand expeditiously, so that the Soo may at last collect interline freight balances due since 1984.
Reversed and Remanded.
