Tommie Toliver, appellant pro se, appeals from an order of the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Thomas P. Griesa, Judge, granting the defendants’ rule 60(b) motion to reopen the judgment and assessing $11,-825 in attorney’s fees against Toliver. The district court lacked jurisdiction to grant the motion, because Toliver already had filed his notice of appeal to this court. We therefore reverse.
BACKGROUND
Toliver brought his action under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1981 and 1983, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-5, against defendants Sullivan County, Brian Ingber, Richard L. Green, Lloyd T. Shimer, and Leon Siegal. Toliver alleged that the defendants had discriminated against him on the basis of race when Sullivan County declined to hire him as either a veterans service officer or as an assistant director for veterans services. Judge Griesa conducted a bench trial on the Title VII claims; the §§ 1981 and 1983 claims were tried to a jury.
At trial, after both sides had rested, Judge Griesa dismissed all claims against defendants Ingber and Siegal. He also found in favor of all defendants on the Title VII claims.
The jury found for two of the remaining defendants, Sullivan County and Richard Green, on the §§ 1981 and 1983 claims; however, they could not reach a verdict with regard to Lloyd Shimer. Subsequently, Judge Griesa granted defendants’ motion for a directed verdict on the §§ 1981 and 1983 claims against Shimer. In a final judgment dated March 1, 1991, and docketed March 4, 1991, Judge Griesa dismissed appellant’s action and, significantly for this appeal, ordered each party to bear its own “costs”. Under 42 U.S.C. §§ 1988 and
Over one month later, on May 9, 1991, while Toliver’s appeal was pending in this court, defendants moved under Fed. R.Civ.P. 60(b) to reopen the judgment to obtain an award of attorney’s fees. Judge Griesa granted the motion in an order filed July 5, 1991.
Toliver then filed this second appeal to challenge separately Judge Griesa’s award of attorney’s fees. Before argument of this second appeal, another panel of this court that heard Toliver’s appeal from the original judgment affirmed Judge Griesa’s dismissal of the action in an unpublished summary order,
see Toliver v. County of Sullivan,
DISCUSSION
Toliver contends on appeal that the defendants lack “standing to make a motion some sixty-five days after the [district court] issued and filed its final order.” Defendants’ brief ignored this jurisdictional argument and instead concentrated on the merits of the attorney’s fee award. However, Toliver is correct: the district court lacked jurisdiction to grant the rule 60(b) motion.
While the federal rules do permit the district court to “relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment”,
see
Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b), this circuit has repeatedly held that the docketing of a notice of appeal “ousts the district court of jurisdiction except insofar as it is reserved to it explicitly by statute or rule.”
Ryan v. United States Line Co.,
Consequently, the district court may
grant
a rule 60(b) motion after an appeal is taken only if the moving party obtains permission from the circuit court. In
Ryan
we noted that the district court can entertain and
deny
the rule 60(b) motion; however, “if [the district court] decides in favor of it, then and then only is the necessary remand by the court of appeals to be sought.”
Id.
at 434.
See also Fidenas AG v. Compagnie Internationale Pour L’Informatique CII Honeywell Bull S.A.,
In this case, however, our permission was not obtained. The district court’s March 4 judgment disposed of the entire action, including attorney’s fees, and Toliver’s filing of a notice of appeal removed the entire matter, including attorney’s fees, from the jurisdiction of the district court. Thus, absent this court’s permission, Judge Griesa lacked jurisdiction to grant the defendants’ rule 60(b) motion, and we reverse on that ground.
We note that this is not a case where the district judge reserved decision on attorney’s fees, but entered final judgment on the merits. As the Supreme Court has held, “an unresolved issue of attorney’s fees for the litigation in question does not prevent judgment on the merits from being final.”
Budinich v. Becton Dickinson & Co.,
If we were to address the merits of the attorney’s fees award itself, we would have reservations about the amount of attorney’s fees assessed in the absence of some affirmative indication by the district court that it had considered plaintiff’s financial standing when it granted the defendant’s motion. As we have previously noted, “fee awards are at bottom an equitable matter, [and] courts should not hesitate to take the relative wealth of the parties into account.”
Farad v. Hickey-Freeman,
Consequently, a significantly reduced award of attorney’s fees might be appropriate, if the defendants decide to present to the district court a new application for attorney’s fees, and if the district court determines that the defendants’ new motion satisfies the requirements of rule 60(b).
Reversed.
