After determining that the United States Postal Service (the Service) wrongfully discharged Thomas Lussier because of his post-traumatic stress disorder, the district court made an award that included future damages, sometimes called “front pay.” Both parties consider the award to be a dead letter. Their cross-appeals pose two kinds of questions. The principal inquiry implicates the collateral source rule and requires us to decide whether a district court may tailor a front pay award, stemming from a finding of disability discrimination under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, Pub.L. No. 93-112, 87 Stat. 355 (codified as amended at 29 U.S.C. §§ 701-796Í), to account for an increase in Veterans Administration (VA) benefits occasioned by the adverse employment action. The second inquiry also touches upon the collateral source rule, but turns on a determination of when, and under what circumstances, a district court, after the parties have rested, may solicit and consider factual information germane to an issue in the case without formally reopening the record.
On the first issue, we hold that it is within the trial court’s discretion to tailor a front pay award to take account of collateral benefits in a discrimination case, and that the court acted within the realm of this discretion in the case at bar. On the second issue, we hold that once the record is closed, a district court, absent waiver or consent, ordinarily may not receive additional factual information of a kind not susceptible to judicial notice unless it fully reopens the record and animates the panoply of evidentiary rules *1106 and procedural safeguards customarily available to litigants. Finding, as we do, that the district court transgressed this rule, we cancel the award and stamp the matter “returned to sender.”
I. BACKGROUND
Lussier sued his quondam employer in Maine’s federal district court alleging, inter alia, that his discharge from the Service on March 4, 1992, amounted to disability discrimination in violation of section 501 of the Rehabilitation Act of 1973, 29 U.S.C. § 791. 1 A bench trial ensued. Since these appeals focus exclusively on the front pay award and do not concern either the antecedent question of liability or the propriety of other remedies, we discuss only the evidence relating to the form and amount of front pay.
The plaintiffs expert, Dr. Allan McCaus-land, testified that, had Lussier not been fired, his future earnings and fringe benefits over a projected 25-year work expectancy would have aggregated between $790,805 and $1,067,193 when reduced to present value. The Service did not directly contradict these estimates, but introduced evidence that Lus-sier’s cloud had a small silver lining; he had been receiving VA benefits for a military-service-related disability, and the circumstances surrounding his ouster from the post office exacerbated this disability and triggered an increase in those benefits. Moreover — it is said, after all, that the postman always rings twice — Patricia Asdourian, a Postal Service human resources specialist, testified that Lussier would also be receiving disability benefits through the Civil Service Retirement System (CSRS) as an incident of his discharge. Lussier had applied for CSRS benefits only a few weeks before trial and the precise benefit level was, therefore, unknown. Nonetheless, Asdourian predicted that Lussier’s CSRS benefits would be in the neighborhood of $1185 per month. The Service argued that the present value of both the increase in VA benefits (calculated to be $358,401) and the CSRS disability payments should be deducted from any front pay.
On November 9, 1993, the parties rested and the district court took the case under advisement. In due course, it found that the Service had discriminated against Lussier on account of his disability in violation of 29 U.S.C. § 791.
See Lussier v. Runyon,
No. 92-397-P-H,
The court adopted essentially the same reasoning in respect to CSRS benefits, concluding that these benefits, like the VA benefits, should be factored into Lussier’s front pay award to prevent overcompensation. See id. at *11 n. 7. But there was a rub: declaring itself “unable to determine Lussier’s net economic loss without knowing the outcome of his CSRS application,” id. at *11, the court deferred entry of final judgment and ordered the parties to file reports within 30 days concerning the outcome or status of Lussier’s application for CSRS benefits.
Though objecting to the court’s request, Lussier complied under protest. He submitted status reports (the last dated May 2, 1994) disclosing that he was receiving $390 per month in CSRS benefits on an interim basis “pending determination of his final entitlement.”
Lussier v. Runyon,
No. 92-397-P-H,
Three days later, the Service moved to alter or amend the judgment, Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e), “to reflect the fact that a final calculation of the plaintiffs [CSRS] disability retirement annuity has now been made, resulting in a monthly payment effective March 1, 1994, in the amount of $1,111.” The district court denied the motion, writing that:
The defendant has already had more generosity than it deserves from my initial reopening of the trial record and extensions thereafter. Although the plaintiff may realize somewhat of a “windfall” as a result, awarding the defendant relief would make a mockery of all judicial deadlines and the closing of a trial record.
Both parties appeal.
II. COLLATERAL BENEFITS
These appeals pose an important question: In what manner, if any, does the collateral source rule—which bars resort to collateral benefits in connection with the calculation of pecuniary damage awards, see 1 Dan B. Dobbs, Law of Remedies § 3.8(1), at 372-73 (2d ed. 1993) (describing the collateral source rule as providing “that benefits received by the plaintiff from a source collateral to the defendant may not be used to reduce that defendant’s liability for damages”)—apply to awards of front pay? We respond by holding that insofar as front pay is concerned, the effect to be given to collateral benefits—whatever their source—is within the equitable discretion of the district court. 2 Applying this general principle, we rule that the court below acted within the proper sphere of its discretion in tailoring the plaintiff’s front pay award to account for collateral benefits received by the plaintiff as a traceable consequence of the defendant’s statutory violation.
A. The Letter of the Law.
The Rehabilitation Act makes available in disability discrimination cases the remedies authorized by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964,
see
29 U.S.C. § 794a(a)(l), and Title VII, in turn, provides that a court may order “affirmative action ... which may include, but is not limited to, reinstatement or hiring of employees, with or without back pay ..., or any other equitable relief as the court deems appropriate,” 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5(g). Under this generous language, courts commonly have recognized front pay as a condign remedy.
See, e.g., Saulpaugh v. Monroe Community Hosp., 4
F.3d 134, 145 (2d Cir.1993),
cert. denied,
— U.S. -,
These precedents illuminate our path. In light of them, we hold that front pay is an available equitable remedy under Title VII *1108 and, hence, under the Rehabilitation Act. Nevertheless, confirming the propriety of the remedy merely takes us to a way station, not to our destination. A further expedition must be mounted if we are to plot the terrain where the collateral source rule and the tenets that inform the computation of front pay intersect.
We start along this route by acknowledging that front pay, within the employment discrimination universe, is generally equitable in nature.
See, e.g., Shore v. Federal Express Corp.,
We think it follows from this premise that the logically derivative question of whether a front pay award, if granted, may be tailored to take collateral benefits into account is also within the court’s equitable discretion. This conclusion is supported not only by the brute force of logic,
see United States v. O’Neil,
1.
Precedent.
The weight of authority unquestionably favors the view that decisions about whether to consider the plaintiffs receipt of collateral benefits in gauging the appropriateness and amount of front pay, and if so, how to calibrate the scales, lie within the equitable discretion of the trial court.
See, e.g., Hukkanen v. International Union of Operating Eng’rs,
Our conviction that the majority rule is the better rule is not weakened by the debate that has rent the circuits in regard to whether collateral benefits should be subtracted from back pay awards in employment discrimination cases.
4
According to our rough
*1109
count, courts of appeals have divided four-to-three on this issue.
Compare EEOC v. Wyoming Retirement Sys.,
While we tend to agree with those courts that have held the interplay between collateral benefits and back pay to be a matter within the district court’s discretion,
6
we need not decide that precise question today. Even if we assume,
arguendo,
that granting discretion to district courts to deduct collateral benefits from back pay awards is problematic, front pay presents an easier call. After all, the dispensation of front pay — if only because of its relatively speculative nature,
see Wildman,
2. The Nature of Equity. Beyond the relevant case law, our decision is informed by the nature of equity itself. In particular, the abstract imposition of a blaek-or-white rule regarding the relevance of collateral benefits, even if otherwise desirable, would simply not comport with the essential character and function of equitable discretion. And, though modern civil practice for the most part merges equity with law, equitable discretion remains a salient part of our legal system. See Ralph A. Newman, Equity and Law: A Comparative Study 50-53 (1961); see also Roscoe Pound, Introduction to Newman, supra, at 10 (suggesting heightened importance of principles of equitable discretion “in applying legal precepts and remedies”).
Historically, equity powers emerged in response to the rigidity of the common law, especially the impersonal generality of the remedies it afforded. See, e.g., Harold J. Berman, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition 518-19 (1983); Peter C. Hoffer, The Law’s Conscience: Equitable Constitutionalism in America 8-16 (1990). As Lord Ellesmere put it: “The Cause why there is a Chancery is, for that Mens Actions are so divers and infinite, That it is impossible to make any general Law which may aptly meet with every particular Act, and not fail in some Circumstances.” Earl of Oxford’s Case, 21 Eng. Rep. 485, 486 (1615). Hence, “[t]he Office of the Chancellor is ... to soften and mollify the Extremity of the Law_” Id. Because the hallmarks of equity have long been flexibility and particularity, the imposition of a rigid rule, pro or con, concerning the interrelationship between collateral benefits and front pay (an equitable remedy) would be ineongruent with the historic and essential conception of equity. In contrast, a rule that confers latitude upon the district court to handle the interface between collateral benefits and front pay differently in different cases is fully consistent with this storied heritage.
For these reasons, we conclude that the decision as to whether to tailor a front pay award to take into account collateral benefits is, and must be, within the equitable discretion of the nisi prius court.
On much the same basis, we do not believe that this discretion is rigidly circumscribed by the source of the collateral benefits. 8 We consider the source of a collateral benefit to be informative, but not dispositive. That is to say, because the district court’s decision about whether it should or should not tailor a front pay award to dovetail with certain collateral benefits is discretionary, we think it follows that the defendant’s status as the source (or not) of the collateral benefit comprises, at the most, one factor of many within the mailbag of discretionary considerations. Here, too, the nature and function of equity jurisprudence guide our reasoning.
To be sure, equity is not blind to the reality of events. The fact that the payer of damages and the dispenser of a collateral benefit are one and the same, or that they are linked in some economically meaningful sense, tends to make the deployment of the collateral source rule less attractive.
See Smith v. OPM, 778
F.2d 258, 263 (5th Cir.1985) (suggesting that the collateral source rule may lack force “when the collateral source is the defendant”),
cert. denied,
B. Application of the Law.
Having surveyed the legal landscape, we now turn to the decision below. Though we review a district court’s factual findings in a bench trial only for clear error,
see, e.g., Reilly v. United States,
In employment discrimination eases, the abuse-of-discretion standard is necessarily informed by the statutory purposes at stake.
See, e.g., Albemarle Paper Co. v. Moody,
When addressed to the district court’s front pay award, these queries yield no sign of discretion misused. Taking the inquiries in reverse order, the fit between the district court’s action and the second of the two statutory objects — compensation—cannot be gainsaid. The root purpose of the challenged offset is to prevent overcompensation and, thus, the district court’s decision faithfully serves the goal of making the plaintiff whole. No more is exigible in this respect.
See, e.g., Wyoming Retirement Sys.,
*1112
The district court’s decision is also sufficiently in service to the first of the two statutory objects: deterrence. While any consideration that holds down the amount of a monetary judgment can be said to lessen the deterrent effect of that judgment, we believe that the relevant inquiry is broader in its scope. Deterrence is a function of degree, and nothing in the Rehabilitation Act or in the ease law commands that it be maximized at all costs. This practical wisdom has particular force where, as here, maximizing deterrence might well interfere with the measured achievement of other statutory goals.
10
Even short of maximization, the statutory purpose can be fully satisfied so long as deterrence is meaningfully achieved.
Cf. Navarro-Ayala v. Nunez,
We add a postscript: viewing a front pay award in isolation for the purpose of measuring its contribution toward the goals of an antidiscrimination statute is risky business. A front pay award — like any other single strand in a tapestry of relief — must be assessed as a part of the entire remedial fabric that the trial court has fashioned in a particular case.
See, e.g., Barbano v. Madison County,
We sum up by remarking the obvious: decisions within the world of equity by their nature reflect judicial efforts to balance competing centrifugal and centripetal forces. In this instance, the district court struck an entirely reasonable balance between the goals of fair compensation and adequate deterrence. Mindful of the breadth of the district court’s discretion in such matters, we affirm its decision to award front pay to the plaintiff, but to tailor the award to take into account the collateral VA benefits that he received as a result of his unlawful discharge. 11
*1113 III. LATE-ARRIVING EVIDENCE
In general, the view that we take of the flexible interplay between front pay and the collateral source rule extends to CSRS benefits. 12 Withal, the district court’s handling of these benefits gives us pause.
During the trial, reference was made to Lussier’s eligibility for a CSRS disability retirement annuity. The government advanced a rough estimate of the monthly stipend that Lussier would likely receive. Dissatisfied with the trial evidence on this subject, the district court ordered “the parties to file within 30 days a status report concerning Lussier’s application for CSRS disability benefits.”
Lussier I,
Lussier contends that the entire enterprise was procedurally infirm; that the Service failed to prove the amount of any purported offset, thus rendering the issue moot; and, in all events, that the collateral source rule should have operated to disqualify the CSRS benefits from consideration in connection with the front pay award. For its part, the Service asseverates that the court erred in not using the estimate of CSRS benefits introduced at trial, or, alternatively, in not granting its Rule 59(e) motion and using the more precise figure limned therein. Since we give our stamp of approval to Lussier’s first contention, we need not address the parties’ other points.
Typically, a district court’s decision to reopen the record for the purpose of receiving additional evidence engenders an exercise of the court’s discretion, reviewable for abuse of that discretion.
See Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc.,
It is a fundamental principle of our jurisprudence that a factfinder may not consider extra-record evidence concerning disputed adjudicative facts. A good illustration of this precept in operation can be found in the realm of judicial notice. Under Fed.R.Evid. 201(b), a judge may take notice of an adjudicative fact only if it is “not subject to reasonable dispute in that it is either (1) generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court or (2) capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be ques
*1114
tioned.” Courts have tended to apply Rule 201(b) stringently — and well they might, for accepting disputed evidence not tested in the crucible of trial is a sharp departure from standard practice. Hence, in
Cooperativa de Ahorro y Credito Aguada v. Kidder, Peabody & Co.,
In this case, the court’s acquisition of extra-record information by special delivery is similarly beyond the pale. Its actions cannot be justified under the first furculum of Rule 201(b). Facts that are “generally known within the territorial jurisdiction of the trial court” are those that exist in the unrefreshed, unaided recollection of the populace at large.
See
21 Charles A. Wright & Kenneth W. Graham, Jr.,
Federal Practice and Procedure
§ 5105, at 489 (1977). Though a court, under this rubric, may take judicial notice of such varied matters as the “traditional features of a snowman,”
Eden Toys, Inc. v. Marshall Field & Co.,
By like token, the evidence also fails to satisfy the second branch of Rule 201(b). Court records aside,
14
some government documents are subject to judicial notice (albeit under certain limited conditions) on the ground that information contained therein is “capable of accurate and ready determination by resort to sources whose accuracy cannot reasonably be questioned.”
See, e.g., Massachusetts v. Westcott,
Ours is a system that seeks the discovery of truth by means of a managed adversarial relationship between the parties. If we were to allow judges to bypass this system, even in the interest of furthering efficiency or promoting judicial economy, we would subvert this ultimate purpose. As Rule 201(b) teaches, judges may not defenestrate established evidentiary processes, thereby rendering inoperative the standard mechanisms of proof and scrutiny, if the evidence in question is at all vulnerable to reasonable dispute.
*1115 Here, the district court failed to steer by this beacon. There is no indication, despite the court’s contrary characterization, 16 that the record was actually reopened or that the parties were afforded anything approximating the evidentiary and procedural guarantees to which they were entitled. Similarly, there is no basis for finding that the parties waived this deprivation, consented to the court’s shortcut, or otherwise invited judicial reliance on the extra-record “proof.” To the extent that the judgment is premised on this late-arriving evidence, it cannot stand.
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment and remand. 17 We neither dictate how the district court should proceed on remand nor restrict its range of options. For instance, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, the court may in its discretion choose to reopen the record fully for the purpose of obtaining more information about Lussier’s CSRS benefits, and, if the court follows that path, it can then decide what, if any, use to make of the new evidence. Alternatively, the court may, if it so elects, hold the parties to their proof at trial and determine the front pay award on the existing record.
IV. CONCLUSION
We have reached the point at which neither snow, nor rain, nor heat, nor gloom of night, nor any lingering unresolved issue impedes the delivery of our judgment. Thus, we need go no further.
We hold that the adjustment of a front pay award under the Rehabilitation Act of 1973 to take collateral benefits into account is within the equitable discretion of the district court; and that, in this case, the court, by choosing to account for collateral benefits in fashioning such an award, did not abuse its discretion. But because the court, in calculating a particular offset, relied on evidence dehors the record, we vacate the judgment and remand for further proceedings relating to that offset.
Affirmed in part, vacated in part, and remanded. Each party shall bear his own counsel fees and costs in regard to these appeals.
Notes
. The named defendant is the Postmaster General, but, for all intents and purposes, the Service is the real party in interest, and we treat it as such.
. We limit this holding to situations where, as here, (1) front pay is a discretionary equitable remedy, and (2) there is no statutory impediment to factoring collateral benefits into the mix.
. This is particularly true in view of the close relationship between the ADEA and Title VII.
See, e.g., McKennon v. Nashville Banner Publ.
Co., - U.S. -, -,
.
NLRB v. Gullett Gin Co.,
. The Eighth Circuit recently noted this "possible conflict."
Gaworski v. ITT Commercial Fin. Corp.,
. In addition to the cases catalogued above, several trial-level cases in this circuit take the same position.
See, e.g., Townsend v. Grey Line Bus Co.,
.To illustrate this point, we remind the reader that, while front pay is fully within the district court’s discretion, back pay is a presumptive entitlement of a plaintiff who successfully prosecutes an employment discrimination case.
Compare, e.g., Wildman,
. The parties attach great significance to the source of the benefits. The Service argues that the collateral source rule is peculiarly inappropriate here because both the front pay and the collateral benefits emanate from the same source—the federal government. Lussier sees no such special relationship. He advocates that we judge the parcel not by its wrapping, but, rather, by its contents, and asseverates that the post office is an independent entity distinct from other federal agencies, such as the Veterans Administration. In his view, therefore, the front pay and the collateral benefits do not derive from the same source, and there is all the more reason to apply the collateral source rule simpliciter. Since the district court’s discretionary decision in this case is sustainable without regard to the source of the benefits, we need not decide the precise relationship between the post office and other parts of the federal apparatus.
. At a more refined level, we have focused appellate review on the following considerations:
In making discretionary judgments, a district court abuses its discretion when a relevant factor deserving of significant weight is overlooked, or when an improper factor is accorded significant weight, or when the court considers the appropriate mix of factors, but commits a palpable error of judgment in calibrating the decisional scales.
United States v. Roberts, 978 F.2d 17, 21 (1st Cir.1992). Whether the district court's decision is viewed macroscopically or microscopically, however, the appellate focus is fundamentally the same.
. We add that, as between the two primary statutory purposes, the goal of compensation, and not deterrence, is likely the more important in regard to front pay. After all, the basic function of a front pay award is to make victims of discrimination whole.
See Wildman,
. The Service complains that the lower court erred in figuring the amount of VA benefits used to reduce Lussier’s front pay award. Because the factfinder’s choice between two or more permissible views of the evidence cannot be deemed clearly erroneous,
see Cumpiano v. Banco Santander P.R.,
. Lussier argues that CSRS benefits arise, at least in part, out of employee contributions, and, therefore, should not be treated in the same manner as other collateral benefits. We express no opinion on this aspect of the matter. Lussier can, of course, renew the argument before the district court on remand.
. These protections include, but are not limited to, the right to object to evidence, the right to question its source, relevance, and reliability, the right to cross-examine its proponent, and the right to impeach or contradict it.
. Because courts may take judicial notice of their own records and the records of sister tribunals under a special set of rules, see. generally 21 Wright & Graham, supra, § 5106, at 256-57 (Supp.1994), we exempt court documents from this discourse.
.
Westcott
forms an interesting contrast to this case. There, in addition to the qualitative differ-enees in the information sought and in the data source upon which the court relied, "[t]he parties were given an opportunity to comment on the propriety of [the Court’s] taking notice of the license, and both sides agreed that [the Court] could properly do so.”
. The district court paid lip service to the principle we have discussed, writing that it had "reopened the record.” But the parties agree that no actual reopening occurred, and calling what the court did a "reopening” does not make it so.
Cf. Siegfriedt v. Fair,
. We neither overlook nor condone the Service’s cavalier disregard of the district judge’s request for status reports. Had the judge scrapped the proposed offset as a sanction for uncooperative behavior, a different issue would confront us.
Cf.
R.W.
Int’l Corp. v. Welch Foods, Inc.,
