After losing a case brought against it by the EEOC on behalf of eight female employees who were sexually harassed by one of the company’s supervisory employees, defendant-appellant Gurnee Inns, Inc. contends now that the magistrate judge erred in awarding postjudgment interest on back pay awards to the eight injured employees. Gurnee Inns argues that the judgment against it required it to do a specific act, rather than pay a sum certain, and therefore, the judgment is not one on which postjudgment interest can be levied.
The original judgment required Gurnee Inns to deliver certified checks in specific amounts to each of the victims. On a motion by Gurnee Inns, the judgment was amended on February 9, 1989, to permit Gurnee Inns to make appropriate payroll deductions in the back pay awards. As amended, the judgment set out for each employee a specific sum “as back pay, less appropriate payroll deductions, and [a specific sum] as prejudgment interest.” For example, the amount of the check that Gur-nee Inns was to deliver to Linda Gillespie was “$3283.00 as back pay, less appropriate payroll deductions, and $1832.42 as prejudgment interest.”
Gurnee Inns dragged its feet when it came to satisfying the judgment. It failed
*148
to make
any
payments at all until after this court had affirmed the relief granted against it,
see EEOC v. Gurnee Inn Corp.,
The EEOC raises a threshold issue of our jurisdiction to hear this appeal, contending that Gurnee Inns waited too long to take an appeal from the award of postjudgment interest. Explanation of this contention requires a review of the skirmishing that took place after the lower court’s judgment was affirmed on September 13, 1990.
If the order of November 5, 1990 reinstated the running of the time for appeal, the EEOC is right, and there is no jurisdiction over the merits of the appeal because Gurnee Inns did not file its appeal until approximately one hundred days after the entry of that order. If the November 2 motion was a timely motion made pursuant to Fed.R.Civ.P. 59(e), it tolled the time for filing an appeal.
Charles v. Daley,
The October 23 order awarding postjudgment interest was a final, appeal-able order. It concluded all of the proceedings after judgment.
Securities and Exchange Comm’n v. Suter,
However, the magistrate judge did not rule on the merits of the motion, but merely extended the time in which Gurnee Inns could comply with the earlier order. Al *149 though it should be self-evident to any sentient lawyer that a grant of an extension of time to comply with a court order implies denial of the motion for modification or clarification of that order, we are reluctant to hold that a party can be barred from appealing on the basis of an order that is not explicit. We hold that until the magistrate judge made it clear in her ruling on Gurnee Inns’ second motion for clarification that the motion was denied, the October 23 ruling was not reinstated. Therefore, the time for appeal was tolled from November 2, 1990 until January 30, 1991. Gurnee Inns’ appeal is timely and we can address the merits.
Gurnee Inns’ position is that the judgment entered by the magistrate judge was not a money judgment but an injunc-tive judgment for specific performance (the delivery to certain individuals of certified checks in specified amounts), which when modified to allow Gurnee Inns to compute the applicable payroll deductions, did not set forth specific amounts for the checks. Additionally, Gurnee Inns argues that post-judgment interest is improper because 28 U.S.C. § 1961 allows interest only on “money judgments” in a sum certain, and the checks it was ordered to deliver were not for a specific amount. Neither argument survives even minimal scrutiny. Back pay awards are money judgments, even though they are equitable in nature.
Ford v. Alfaro,
AFFIRMED.
