This is Reytblatt’s second effort to appeal from a decision of the district court apparently terminating the litigation adversely to him. We dismissed the first notice of appeal, No. 87-1055, on February 2,1987, because the district court apparently had not entered judgment. The next day the parties produced a document dated December 30, 1986, but docketed on January 26, 1987, on the form used for the entry of judgment in a civil case. This document is preprinted “IT IS ORDERED AND ADJUDGED”, to which the court added: “Insofar as the Court has determined that the defendant is protected by absolute privilege it is unnecessary to determine whether defendant was properly served or whether venue is proper.”
The purpose of the separate judgment required by Fed.R.Civ.P. 58 is to let the parties (and the appellate court) know exactly what has been decided and when. The entry of a final judgment under Rule 58 starts the clock for an appeal. But a document that does not dispose of the case does not start the clock.
United States v. F.M. Schaefer Brewing Co.,
The final judgment in a case should be complete and self-contained.
Claybrook Drilling Co. v. Divanco, Inc.,
The parties have not agreed, as Mollis allows, that the document entered on January 26 is a “final decision”. The appeal is therefore dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
