VIRGINIA LAND CO. v. MIAMI SHIPBUILDING CORP. et al.
No. 14158
United States Court of Appeals Fifth Circuit
Jan. 29, 1953
Rehearing Denied March 2, 1953
506-508
Before HUTCHESON, Chief Judge, and STRUM and RIVES, Circuit Judges.
HUTCHESON, Chief Judge.
This appeal is from an order1 entered March 28, 1952, denying appellant‘s motion2 for substitution of Miami Shipbuilding Company as respondent in place of the receiver, who had been dismissed from the cause, and from an order entered April 15, 1952, denying a motion for rehearing of the above motion.
Appellee has moved to dismiss the appeal on the grounds that: filed on May 8, 1952, it was not filed within thirty days from the order entered March 28, 1952; that the motion for rehearing of that order was not timely filed;3 and that the order entered April 15, 1952, was not an appealable order.4
Appellant, calling to our attention that it had been brought into the cause on the petition of the United States, insists that it had sixty days to file its appeal under the exception to the rule that “in an action in which the United States or an officer or agency thereof is a party, the time as to all parties shall be sixty days from such entry“.
In addition, it argues that though the order denying the motion for rehearing was not an appealable order, the filing of the motion prevented time for appeal from beginning to run until its disposition.
Appellee denies both of these claims. As to the claim that, because the United States
It points, too, to the record showing: that the only controversy the United States ever had or asserted was with Miami Shipbuilding Corporation; that that controversy was settled; and that by orders entered November 4, 1948, and November 24, 1948, the receiver was dismissed; that the property, which had been taken into receivership on the petition of the United States, was restored to Miami Shipbuilding Corporation; that, as to the only controversy asserted by the United States, the suit was in effect determined and brought to an end; and that the United States was not, and could not have been, a party at interest in the appeal.
We agree with appellee that this is so, and that, therefore, this appeal is not governed by the sixty day exception. The whole basis of the exception, as is shown in the note of the Advisory Committee on Rules, pp. 428-429, 28 U.S.C.A., Rule 52 to End, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, was the affording to others in respect of matters, in which the United States was interested, the same time for appeal which had been extended to the United States. It was not intended to change the rule in respect to appeals by other persons from orders with which the United States had no concern simply because of the fact that the United States was a party to the proceeding below but not to the issues involved in the appeal.
We find ourselves in agreement, too, with the claim of appellee that because the motion for rehearing was not timely filed, its filing and consideration did not prevent the time from running from the entry of the order. The cases cited in Note 3, supra, particularly Fine v. Paramount Pictures, Inc., 7 Cir., 181 F.2d 300, fully support that claim.
Finally, we agree with the appellee that the order appealed from was not a final decision, within the meaning of
The motion to dismiss is granted. The appeal is dismissed.
RIVES, Circuit Judge.
I concur in the result.
