BIGGS, Chief Judge
(dissenting).
I think the judgment is an appealable one under Section 1291, Title 28 U.S.C., and that the decision of the majority is erroneous.
On November 24, 1954; the plaintiff secured a verdict against the defendant-appellant for $75,760. Under Rule 58, F.R.C.P., the clerk entered judgment forthwith on this verdict. On November 29, within ten days after the entry of judgment, the defendant-appellant made two timely motions, one for judgment n.o.v. under Rule 50(b), and another for a new trial under Rule 59(b). On June 6, 1955, the court below “dismissed” the motion for a new trial on the ground .that it had been abandoned and denied the motion for judgment n. o.v. Two days later, on June 8, the defendant-appellant filed a petition for re-argument. Eight days later, on June 16, the court below granted reargument on the petition for a new trial and stayed enforcement of the judgment. On June 28, the defendant-appellant filed its notice of appeal.
Rule 6(b), as amended, provides that a United States district court “ * * * may not extend the time for taking any action under rules * * * 50(b) * * * 59(b) * * * and 73(a) * * *, except to the extent and under the conditions stated in them.” Rule 73(a) also was amended and provides precise limitations of time for the taking of appeals, naming specific rules under which motions made terminate the running of time for appeal. Rule 73(a) also provides that when the court denies a motion made under one of the rules so designated, the time for taking the appeal commences to run again. One of the rules named is Rule 59 and one of the motions which terminates the running of time for an appeal is a motion for a new trial. Rule 59(b) provides that “[a] motion for a new trial shall be served not later than 10 days after the entry of the judgment.”
These amendments were designed to eliminate the uncertainties then attendant on the times for taking appeals and to limit the power of the trial court to enlarge the periods during which appeals could be taken, Rule 6(c) having done away with the so-called “End-of-Term” rule. See Committee Note of 1946 to Amended Rule 6(b), Moore’s Federal Practice, Vol. 2, ¶ 601 [6] (2d ed. 1948). Cf. our decisions in Green v. Reading Co., 3 Cir., 1950, 180 F.2d 149, 150, and Healy v. Pennsylvania R. Co., 3 Cir., 1950, 181 F.2d 934, 936.
Everyone agrees that the filing of the timely motions on November 29, 1954 stopped the running of the time for the taking of an appeal. There also seems to be an accord in the view that when the court below on June 6, 1955, dismissed the motion for a new trial and denied the motion for judgment n.o.v., the period of time for taking the appeal provided by Rule 73(a) started running again. At this point, however, comes disagreement. The defendant-appellant contends that, when the petition for re-argument was granted, the order granting reargument did not terminate for a second time the running of the period for the taking of an appeal. Inherent in this view is, of course, the concept that the granting of reargument did not destroy the finality of the judgment. The plaintiff-appellee, on the other hand, insists that the petition for reargument was not the kind of a pleading (motion) at which Rule 6(b), read in the light of Rules -59(b) and 73(a), was aimed. This latter view, which the majority accept, is a controversion of those rules and, indeed, of the ordered plan created for the speedy disposition of business in United States district courts as required by Rule 1.
The majority ruling of this court rejects the defendant-appellant’s conception of the operation of the rules referred to in totality. The majority states: “[W]e have no doubt of the power of a district court, after denying or dismissing a motion for a new trial, to entertain an application for reargument of the motion and thereupon to reinstate the motion and order it to be re-argued.” For this proposition, the majority cites several authorities. The first of these, Dunagan v. Appalachian Power Co., 4 Cir., 1928, 29 F.2d 58 was decided not only before the pertinent amendments to the Rules but almost a decade before the Rules themselves were adopted. In Klein’s Outlet v. Lipton, 2 Cir., 1950, 181 F.2d 713, the appeal was in fact dismissed, not as premature, but as too late. Moreover, that case involved a motion to reargue a bankruptcy decision, a first reconsideration, and not a motion to reargue a motion for a new trial, a request for a second reconsideration of the judgment such as we have here. Nielsen v. Arabian American Co., 5 Cir., 1953, 206 F.2d 391 concerned reconsideration of the denial of a motion to quash a summons and dismiss an action, an interlocutory and nonappealable order. Blaine v. Peters, 1952, 90 U.S.App.D.C. 207, 194 F.2d 887 held correctable under Rule 60(a) as a “clerical mistake” the inadvertent denial of motions for judgment n.o.v. and a new trial on the same day the motions were made. The cases cited do not support the majority’s major premise.
The majority goes on to say, in substance, that the granting of reargument on a petition filed within ten days /of the order of denial or dismissal of the motion does not violate the prohibition of Rule 6(b) against extending the time fixed by Rule 59(b) for serving a motion for a new trial; for, say the majority, “an application for reargument of a pri- or motion for a new trial is not to be regarded as itself a motion for a new trial or even as a renewal of such a motion. * * * If the reargument is granted the original motion is heard anew upon the original papers just as if it had never previously been heard or determined.”
I think that this argument begs the-question. It is true, as the majority points out, that Rule 59(b) provides that-a motion for a new trial shall be served not later than ten days after the entry of the judgment and that the motion for a new trial here was served five days-after entry of the judgment. The petition (motion) for reargument in literal view certainly is not one of the motions referred to in Rule 6(b), the time for which may not be extended by the district court. But to say, as does the majority, that the petition for reargument., is not to be “regarded” as a motion for a new trial or the renewal of such a motion but only as a request that the court, reconsider its prior unfavorable action seems an exercise in dialectics. It cannot be denied that the petition is a plea, for reconsideration, but it is also the-practical equivalent of a renewal of the-motion for a new trial and the practical! equivalent of a motion for a new trial. The fact that the petition is based on-the original papers seems immaterial when one contemplates the result which« the amendments to the rules were intended to effect, the speedy disposition-of business. Compare National Farmers Union Auto. & Cas. Co. v. Wood, 10 Cir., 1953, 207 F.2d 659.
In respect to this issue the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, by Chief Judge Clark, Reporter of the Advisory Committee on the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, stated recently in Terrasi v. South Atlantic Lines, Inc., 1955, 226 F.2d 823, 824: “A motion for reargument of a motion for a new trial is of course nothing but a motion for rehearing thereof, and thus in essence is itself but an application for a new trial under F.R. 59(a) * * *. Slater v. Peyser, 91 U.S.App.D.C. 314, 200 F.2d 360, 361. * * *. The very reasons which led the Advisory Committee to recommend the amended Rule 73(a) in the interest of clarity and to avoid confusion as to the proper time for appeal apply equally to this motion. Of course it must be timely made within 10 days [from the entry of judgment], as specified in F.R. 59(b), and thus in any event cannot delay the proceedings unduly.” Since the motion for reargument in Terrasi had been made within the ten-day period, the court held that the running of the appeal period was stayed.
The majority “concedes” that “if the district court does not grant reargument of the motion for a new trial until after the time allowed for appeal by Rule 73 (a) has run from the original denial of the motion the action of the court in subsequently doing so will not aifect the appealable finality of the judgment originally entered. For the mere filing of an application for reargument of a motion for a new trial does not itself stop the running of the appeal period.5” Inherent in the cases cited in footnote 5 of the majority opinion is the principle that the district court does not have jurisdiction to entertain a motion to reconsider denial of the motion for a new trial, at least when the motion to reconsider is made more than ten days after entry of judgment. Cf. for example, Marten v. Hess, 6 Cir., 1949, 176 F.2d 834, 835, in which it is stated: “A motion for rehearing of a motion to set aside verdict and judgment, and a motion for rehearing of a motion for a new trial are not motions that extend the time for appealing or aifect the finality of the judgment under Rule 73.” Cf. also Randolph v. Randolph, 1952, 91 U.S.App.D.C. 170, 198 F.2d 956, and Deena Products Co. v. United Brick & Clay Workers of America, 6 Cir., 1952, 195 F.2d 612, certiorari denied 344 U.S. 822, 73 S.Ct. 21, 97 L.Ed. 640. If my interpretation of these decisions be correct, there is no need to discuss the majority’s conclusion that, if the district court grants, within the appeal period, reargument of the motion for a new trial, “the revived pendency of the original motion operates again to terminate the running of the time for appeal.”
The theoretical conflict between the cases just cited and Terrasi v. South Atlantic Lines, Inc., supra, is of no importance here. Terrasi presents the rare case where the motion to reconsider itself is made within ten days of the entry of judgment. When the motion to reconsider is not made within the ten-day period, it would seem that both the Second Circuit following Ter-rasi and the Sixth Circuit following Marten v. Hess would agree that the motion would have no effect on the appeal period.
The substantial question presented for our determination is whether the court below, some six months after entry of judgment, had the power to reconsider its dismissal of the motion for a new trial. That such a course lay within the power of the district court prior to the amendments to the Rules is indubitable. See our decisions in Green v. Reading Co. and Healy v. Pennsylvania R. Co., supra. It was a reasonable thing, I think, to give to a trial court an opportunity to correct a decision if it was of the view that it had committed error. But the Rules are made by the Supreme Court, and we may not revise them here. Because a trial court’s reconsideration of their denials of such motions, considerable delay in appeals had been encountered, particularly in the field of bankruptcy law. Moore makes it plain in his comment on Revised Rule 73(a) what he thought the Advisory Committee was getting away from. That was uncertainty as to finality in respect to the appeal period. He said, “In establishing this [new] principle, the Advisory Committee consciously avoided the rule established in bankruptcy proceedings. * * ”
The cases solidly support the view that, by the time the district court “dismissed” the motion for a new trial in the case at bar, that court had lost jurisdiction to consider the matter further. The ten days within which the defendant-appellant could move for a new trial were the ten days immediately following “the entry of judgment” on November 24, 1954. There is no provision in the Rules for another ten-day period following the denial of the motion for a new trial. The situation is unlike that under Rule 73 (a) where the appeal time begins to run a second time upon the denial of such a motion. Terrasi v. South Atlantic Lines, Inc., supra; Marten v. Hess, supra; Moore’s Federal Practice, Vol. 6, ¶¶ 59.09[1], 59.13[1], 59.13[3] (2d ed. 1953). Cf. Randolph v. Randolph, supra, so holding with regard to Rule 59(e). See also National Farmers Union Auto. & Cas. Co. v. Wood, supra; Bergeron v. Mansour, 1 Cir., 1945, 152 F.2d 27; Safeway Stores v. Coe, 1943, 78 U.S.App.D.C. 19, 136 F.2d 771; William Goldman Theatres v. Loew’s, D.C.E.D.Pa.1949, 83 F.Supp. 455. The majority position would permit a trial judge, by “entertaining” numerous motions to reconsider denials of previous motions, to extend the time for taking an appeal almost indefinitely. Such a result flies in the face of the clear language and intent of Rules 6(b), 59(b) and 73(a).
Blaine v. Peters, supra, presents the only exception I have found to this inflexible rule. There the trial judge inadvertently denied motions for a judgment n.o.v. and for a new trial on the same day they were made. The Court of -Appeals held that this error could be corrected later than ten days after entry of the original judgment as a “clerical mistake” under Rule 60(a). However, I do not see how the trial judge’s “dismissal” of the motion for a new trial in the instant case can be categorized as either a “clerical mistake” under Rule 60 (a) or a mistake of “a party or his legal representative” under Rule 60(b). Cf. Safeway Stores v. Coe, supra; Gray v. Dukedom Bank, 6 Cir., 1954, 216 F.2d 108.
The judgment appealed from was final on June 6, 1955. The appeal should not be dismissed.
. Professor Moore’s comment on the case further points up its inaptness: “It should be noted that it is apparent from the opinion that the time in which to move originally for new trial at that time had not yet expired; nor in fact does it appear that any judgment was entered at all at that time.” Moore’s Federal Practice, Vol. 6, ¶ 59.13 [3], n. 3 (2d ed. 1953)
. The court characterized the motion as “in effect, a second reargument” because the referee’s report was argued and re-argued before the district court rendered its decision.
. The different effect of the two motions is noteworthy. A motion for rehearing in bankruptcy will not extend the appeal period unless the court entertains it. Klein’s Outlet v. Lipton, supra, and cases cited therein. A motion for a new trial under Rule 59(b) automatically stops the running of the appeal time under Rule 73(a).
The relevance of a bankruptcy decision is questionable. See Committee Note of 1946 to Amended Rule 73(a), quoted in Moore’s Federal Practice, Vol. 7, ¶ 73.01 [5] at p. 3112 (2d ed. 1955) as follows: “In bankruptcy proceedings it is established that as the bankruptcy court has .no terms it has the power at any time for good reason to revise its judgments or orders upon seasonable application and before rights have vested on the faith of its action. A motion so to do may be entertained even after the expiration of time for appeal, and such appeal time will start running anew upon the disposition of the motion, [citing cases]. In ordinary civil actions governed by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, however, the better view is that-when the time limits prescribed in the-rules expire, the court loses its jurisdiction to entertain a motion, as for new trial or for a rehearing or to vacate or amend, as the case may be, and cannot thereafter entertain such a motion and thereby start the appeal time running-anew. Safeway Stores, Inc., v. Coe, 1943, [78 U.S.App.D.C. 19] 136 F.2d 771 [148 A.L.R. 782]; Jusino v. Morales & Tio, 1 Cir., 1944, 139 F.2d 946; Nealon v. Hill, 9 Cir., 1945, 149 F.2d 883; Norris v. Camp, 10 Cir., 1944, 144 F.2d 1.”
. Professor Moore suggested that “[i]f in a rare case a motion to reconsider can be and is served not later than 10 days after the entry of judgment, the policy behind the time limits of Rule 59 would not preclude consideration.” Moore’s Federal Practice, Vol. 6, ¶ 59.1311], (2d ed. 1953).
. Moore’s Federal Practice, Vol. 7, ¶73.09[4] at p. 3143 (2d ed. 1955). See also note 3, supra.