Before the notice of appeal by Offshore Logistics, Inc., and before a cross-appeal by Steve Willie from an October 20,1983 judgment, the co-defendant Booker Drilling Company filed a motion on October 25, 1983 to amend the original judgment of the district court in order that the judgment would be in accordance with the pretrial stipulations of the parties. The district court, without leave of this court, granted the motion, and amended the original judgment on December 2, 1983. The question before us is whether Booker’s Motion to Amend suspended the finality of the October 20, 1983 judgment; if it did, then there is no appeal before this court. We hold that the Booker Drilling Company motion did not suspend the finality of the judgment, since it was brought pursuant to Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b)(1). The district court, however, was divested of jurisdiction to act on the motion to amend the judgment once the notice of appeal had been filed. The December 2, 1983 judgment is therefore a nullity. We grant leave to the district court to enter validly Booker’s motion to amend.
I.
Steve Willie was injured while working aboard an oil production platform owned by Continental Oil Company (Conoco) located in the Gulf of Mexico. Pursuant to the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act, 43 U.S.C. § 1331, et seq., Willie filed suit against Conoco, Danos and Curóle Marine Contractors, Inc. (Danos and Curóle), Offshore Logistics, Inc. (Offshore) and Booker Drilling Company (Booker). Prior to trial, Willie settled with Danos and Curóle, Conoco, and Booker. This left to be tried only Willie’s suit against Offshore and Offshore’s cross-claim against Booker. Offshore’s cross-claim against Booker was the subject of a pretrial stipulation which provided that Offshore would only be held responsible for the percentage of fault, if any, found against it.
The trial court, sitting without a jury, conducted a trial and entered judgment in favor of Willie in the amount of $300,183.94 against Offshore. The judgment also provided that Offshore could recover fifty percent of the judgment amount from Booker on its cross-claim. In providing for contribution by Booker to Offshore, rather than providing that the sum of damages awarded against Offshore be reduced to reflect Offshore’s proportionate fault, the judgment of September 8, 1983 was contrary to the stipulation entered into among all counsel prior to trial.
An amended judgment entered on October 20, 1983, changed only the date from which interest was to run and did not correct the judgment to reflect accurately the terms of the stipulation. On October 28, 1983, Offshore filed its Notice of Appeal from the October 20, 1983 judgment, and on November 2, 1983, Willie cross-appealed from this same judgment. The appeal was docketed on November 3, 1983.
On October 25, 1983, Booker filed a motion entitled “Motion to Amend Judgment” which sought to change the court’s amended judgment to reflect the terms of the stipulation entered into prior to trial regarding Offshore’s cross-claim. The hearing on the second motion to amend the judgment was set for November 23, 1983. On December 2, 1983, the district court entered the amended judgment. The appellate briefs of the parties were filed in this court, but addressed the correctness of the December 2,1983 judgment rather than the October 20, 1983 judgment appealed from. The court, sua sponte, noted the procedural and jurisdictional problems on appeal presented by the entry of the amended judgment after notice of appeal had been filed. The parties were called upon to brief these questions, which we now decide.
II.
The initial question which must be addressed is whether Booker’s Motion to Amend the Judgment was brought under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e), 60(a), or 60(b). A timely and proper motion brought under Rule 59(e) to alter or amend a judgment suspends the finality of the
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district court judgment.
Williams v. Bolger,
Booker’s Motion to Amend Judgment did not stipulate the rule under which it was proceeding to amend the judgment. Booker’s failure to designate the rule is not significant, however, since neither the courts nor the parties are bound by the title given to the motion.
Huey v. Teledyne, Inc.,
Booker’s motion was not brought under Rule 59(e), since a motion brought under Rule 59(e) questions the substantive correctness of a judgment.
Miller v. Leavenworth-Jefferson Electric Cooperative, Inc.,
Similarly, Booker’s motion to amend cannot be maintained pursuant to Rule 60(a), since that rule permits only the correction of errors which are created by mistake, oversight or omission, and are clerical in nature.
Warner III v. City of Bay St. Louis,
Booker’s motion to amend the judgment to reflect the stipulation of the parties is properly maintainable under Rule 60(b)(1). This rule permits the district court to correct a judgment which is erroneous, and caused by mistake, inadvertence, surprise or excusable neglect. This case is analogous to
West Virginia Oil & Gas Co. v. George E. Breece Lumber Co.,
Having decided that Booker’s motion was made pursuant to Rule 60(b)(1), we must next address the consequences of filing a 60(b)(1) motion in the district court
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while an appeal from the judgment is pending in the appeals court. The filing of a timely and sufficient notice of appeal transfers jurisdiction over matters involved in the appeal from the district court to the court of appeals.
Alvestad v. Monsanto Co.,
When a Rule 60(b) motion is filed while an appeal is pending, this circuit, along with other circuits and the commentators, has expressly recognized the power of the district court to consider on the merits and deny a 60(b) motion filed after a notice of appeal, because the district court’s action is in furtherance of the appeal.
Lairsey v. Advance Abrasive Co.,
Our analysis leads to the conclusion that there is an appeal from the final judgment entered on October 20, 1983 pending before this court. The second amended judgment, however, was entered by the district court at a time when it did not have jurisdiction.
See Huey v. Teledyne, Inc.,
LEAVE is granted to the district court for reentry of the judgment previously entered December 2, 1983.
REMANDED for entry of order.
Notes
. We fully recognize that our opinion may be criticized as overtechnical. We are conscious of the senseless appearance of what we feel required to do. Nevertheless for uniform and consistent application of our own procedural and jurisdictional rules, we believe this to be the only route to follow. A short cut here could someday haunt us and others as bad precedent difficult to avoid.
