Plaintiff Trustmark Insurance Company wishes to execute a money judgment it obtained against its insured, defendant Gallucci. The district court concluded that Trustmark could not execute the judgment because Trustmark’s appeal from the judgment was pending. We summarily vacate the order denying Trustmark’s motion for execution of the judgment and remand for further proceedings.
Below, Trustmark filed an action against its insured, Carmine J. Gallucci, seeking to recover payments Trustmark had made to Gallucci under a disability insurance policy. Trustmark contended that Gallucci had claimed to be totally disabled when in fact he was not. The jury eventually returned a verdict for Trustmark, and judgment entered on that verdict. Both Gal-lucci and Trustmark have appealed from the judgment, Trustmark challenging the denial of pre-judgment interest, and those appeals are now pending in this court.
As Gallucci had not posted a supersede-as bond under Fed.R.Civ.P. 62(d), Trust-mark moved to execute the judgment in the amount of the jury award plus post-judgment interest, but not including the pre-judgment interest which is the subject of Trustmark’s other pending appeal. The district court denied the motion on the ground that Trustmark’s appeal from the denial of pre-judgment interest “indirectly challenges the validity of the judgment,” so “execution cannot issue ... until the appeal is resolved.”
The district court’s position draws support from
Tennessee Valley Authority
*559
v. Atlas Machine & Iron Works, Inc.,
We are persuaded by the Seventh Circuit’s opinion and adopt its reasoning. Here, Trustmark’s appeal, which seeks to increase the amount of the judgment, is not inconsistent with immediate enforcement of the judgment as it now stands. Ordinarily, therefore, Gallucci would be required to post a supersedeas bond if he wants execution of the judgment stayed pending his appeal. 1 Consequently, we vacate the district court’s June 28, 1999 order denying Trustmark’s motion to execute the December 18, 1997 judgment and remand for further proceedings.
Vacated and remanded.
Notes
. The matter is not before us, so we do not address whether there is any basis in the present case upon which the district court may allow an unsecured stay.
