with whom LAVENDER, Justice, joins, dissenting.
Today’s opinion concludes that the trial court had cognizance to decide the plaintiffs’ [collectively called Cunningham] post-Cunningham I1 plea for trial-related attorney’s fees and affirms the nisi prius order awarding him, qua prevailing party below, appeal- and trial-related counsel fees as well as court costs.
In an earlier proceeding in error [Cunningham 7], Cunningham had appealed from denial of trial-related attorney’s fees and costs; and the defendants [called defendant] counterappealed for reversal of judgment on jury verdict for Cunningham. The defendant won in the Court of Appeals. It succeeded in the judgment’s reversal. Cunningham’s prevailing party status, on which he had relied for the counsel-fee award and which the reversal had destroyed, came to be reinstated on certio-rari when this court vacated the Court of Appeals’ opinion and affirmed nisi prius judgment in his favor.
I recede from today’s pronouncement. The post-Cunningham I counsel-fee quest, which at its pre-mandate inception and at the time of favorable consideration at nisi prius included both appeal- and trial-related services,2 is fraught with multiple fatal remedial infirmities: (1) in pre-*977mandate stages of Cunningham I the district court was utterly without jurisdiction to entertain Cunningham’s counsel-fee claim;3 (2) in post-mandate stages of Cunningham I the plea for trial-related services stood barred by both the settled law of the case4 as well as res judicata;5 and lastly (3) the plea for appeal-related services was cognizable solely by this court.6
The trial court’s cognizance over the counsel-fee quest first came to be restored upon our transmission of Cunningham I mandate.7 With the issuance of that mandate, the earlier fee denial stood impliedly affirmed. This is so because it was left undisturbed and unaffected by the review process. The effect of Cunningham I appellate inaction with respect to the fee issue was that the earlier nisi prius denial became the settled law of the case as well as res judicata. As for appeal-related counsel fees, the trial court was utterly without cognizance to entertain the quest for any review-related legal services. The exclusive jurisdiction of that issue was in the appellate courts; the relief could come only from this court after Cunningham’s judgment came to be reinstated on certiora-ri.8 Timely-pressed relief by certiorari was Cunningham’s only way to avoid the res judicata and settled-law-of-the-case bar. Cunningham should have included in his certiorari quest a renewed plea for reversal of the earlier nisi prius counsel-fee denial. His fee quest could have been advanced first on rehearing of the Court of Appeals’ reversal opinion and then, if that proved unsuccessful, by petition for certio-rari.9 In post-mandate stages of Cunningham I, res judicata and settled law of the case both stood as an insuperable bar to reconsideration of the fee quest. The bar could have been avoided only by post-mandate prosecution of a vacation proceeding on § 103110 grounds.
Cunningham I ended on certiorari in this court without any corrective relief to Cunningham from the earlier trial-court denial of the counsel-fee award. That denial stood undisturbed when the trial judge “piled on top of it” a post-Cunningham I counsel-fee award. In this posture of the record, we must — and I would— reverse the trial court’s post-Cunningham I fee order as (a) void for lack of cognizance insofar as it entertained and decided the quest for review-related legal services and (b) barred by res judicata and the settled law of the case insofar as it provides an award for trial-related services.
I
PROCEDURAL HISTORY OP CUNNINGHAM I AND II
Cunningham recovered judgment on jury verdict for negligent destruction of a shade tree but failed in his nisi prius post-judgment quest for trial-related attorney’s fees and court costs. He then appealed solely from the negative postjudgment ruling on the fee issue. The defendant counterapp-ealed for corrective relief from the judgment allowing recovery. Cunningham’s *978own appeal failed in the Court of Appeals when his judgment met with reversal. Cunningham’s success as a prevailing party claimant was tied inextricably to the judgment’s appellate survival. On rehearing and later on certiorari Cunningham focused solely on his judgment’s reinstatement. He did not press for corrective relief from the earlier nisi prius fee denial. This court vacated the Court of Appeals’ opinion and affirmed the judgment. Before our mandate had issued, Cunningham sought in the district court an award for both trial- and appeal-related attorney’s fees and costs.11 A few days after our mandate’s issuance the trial court awarded him $1,700 in attorney’s fees, but gave no breakdown between appeal- and trial-related portions of the services for which compensation was awarded. It also allowed $311.50 in costs..
In this, the second appeal [Cunningham 77], the sole issue was whether the trial court erred in its post-Cunningham I award of trial- and appeal-related attorney’s fees with costs. The Court of Appeals reversed the post-Cunningham I order, holding that (a) after the mandate’s transmission in Cunningham I the trial court was without cognizance to reopen the attorney’s-fee issue in the face of this court’s failure to disturb the earlier nisi prius fee denial, and (b) the post-Cunningham I order for appeal-related fees was unauthorized either by Cunningham I opinion or by some postdecisional order connected with that review process. Cunningham’s certiorari argument today advances solely his quest for trial-related attorney’s fee award; he does not complain of the Court of Appeals’ opinion insofar as it reversed the fee allowance for appeal-related legal services.
II
CUNNINGHAM’S TRIAL-RELATED COUNSEL-FEE AWARD IS BARRED BY RES JUDICATA AND THE SETTLED LAW OF THE CASE
Herbert v. Wagg12 teaches that during the pendency of an appeal — before mandate’s transmission13 — the trial court has no jurisdiction over issues then in appellate litigation.14 Those issues rest solely within appellate cognizance.15 Pre-man-date trial court rulings which affect issues then on appeal are coram non judice— void for want of jurisdiction.16 Whenever an appellate court gives no corrective relief from a decision on review, the nisi prius decision stands affirmed.17 Both *979judgments as well as final postjudgment orders 18 which are affirmed on appeal become clothed with res judicata effect. The parties may not relitigate the decided issues nor those which could have been raised in the case.19 Also barred from re-litigation are issues settled in an earlier appeal which did not terminate the cause. That is the settled-law-of-the-case doctrine.20 An appealable decision of the trial court, when left undisturbed at the end of the review process, is by force of law placed beyond the trial court’s power to modify, except upon grounds authorized in § 1031.21
III
THE TRIAL COURT LACKED COGNIZANCE TO ENTERTAIN CUNNINGHAM’S APPEAL- AND CERTIORA-RI-RELATED COUNSEL-FEE QUEST
Before mandate issued in Cunningham I Cunningham could have pressed a postde-cisional motion for appeal and certiorari-related counsel fees. That was his sole remedy. Chamberlin22 teaches that only the court in which services were rendered can authorize or give an award for counsel fees. Like taxable appellate costs, counsel fees for services in an appellate court must be authorized in the very case in which they were performed.23
Cunningham failed in Cunningham I to seek appeal- or certiorari-related attorney’s fees by a pre-mandate motion in this court. The trial court was hence without cognizance to entertain that part of his plea by which he sought allowance for review-related legal services.
IV
ISSUES RAISED BY AN APPEAL AND LATER ABANDONED ON CERTIO-RARI ARE NOT REACHABLE BY POSTDECISIONAL MOTION IN THE TRIAL COURT
Issues pressed on certiorari are framed by the petition for that writ.24 An issue tendered on appeal but not reasserted on certiorari is abandoned.25 An abandoned issue is sapped of potency for viable judicial relief; it will not be reached for cer-tiorari review sua sponte;26 a fortiori, it cannot, after remand, be considered in *980the district court. An aggrieved party’s certiorari petition supersedes all prior pleas for corrective relief on review.
Cunningham did not press for reversal of the earlier nisi prius fee denial. He abandoned this reviewable issue when he failed to press it on rehearing and later in certiorari stages of Cunningham I. Cunningham’s fatal mistake was to bring his plea in the district court. That court was powerless to afford him relief from the earlier fee denial. 27
SUMMARY
When in pre-mandate stages of Cunningham I Cunningham lodged in the district court his second quest for a fee award, the trial court was still without cognizance of the issue. Although jurisdiction of the case revested in the trial court upon mandate’s issuance, it was then too late for any effective relief from the earlier nisi prius fee denial. Res judicata and the settled-law-of-the-case doctrines interposed themselves as an insuperable barrier to Cunningham’s attempt at readjudication of his right to the trial-related fee. Cunningham I’s silence on the fee issue represents affirmance of the earlier nisi prius fee denial. Appellate inaction allowed that denial to survive review. Today that denial stands both for us and for the lower courts as res judicata and settled-law-of-the-case bar. Cunningham could have avoided this disastrous outcome had he (a) rather than moving m the district court for counsel fees and costs, pressed in his certiorari quest for reversal of the earlier nisi prius counsel-fee denial, or (b) moved in the district court, after mandate, to vacate the earlier fee denial on some § 1031 grounds or (c) moved in this court before Cunningham I mandate for appeal- and certiorari-related counsel-fee award.
The result I counsel here, harsh though it may appear, tracks with fidelity the beaten path of time-honored principles of our remedial law. Fundamental fairness in litigation process cannot be afforded except within a framework of orderly procedure. No area of the law may lay claim to exemption from the range of its basic strictures— not even postjudgment proceedings for a counsel-fee award. Chaos, caprice and ad hoc pronouncements would inevitably follow from any departure.28
“ * * * It is procedure that spells much of the difference between rule by law and rule by whim or caprice. Steadfast adherence to strict procedural safeguards is our main assurance that there will be equal justice under law. * * * f> 29
I would hence reverse the post-Cunningham I nisi prius fee order as tainted for lack of cognizance to entertain Cunningham’s quest for any review-related legal services; insofar as the fee order affects trial-related counsel-fee quest, I would condemn it as erroneous because Cunningham’s plea is barred by the settled law of the case and res judicata.
. Roger L. Cunningham and Georgia S. Cunningham v. Public Service Company of Oklahoma and Statewide Service Company, Inc., No. 63,187 (March 3, 1987, unpublished opinion). [Cunningham /].
. The record on appeal clearly shows Cunningham’s counsel-fee quest was for both trial and appeal-related legal services. His “Motion To Assess Attorney Fees and Costs” sought an award of "an appropriate attorney’s fee and court costs ... and in support thereof’ gave the litigation history at both trial and appeal stages. He prayed for an amount that "shall be proven reasonable in these circumstances”. [Record 184-186]. At the hearing on his motion, Cunningham’s counsel explained that “these reasonable attorney fees will be attorney fees not just for. the trial or through the trial, but also post trial including all appeals”. [Record 238]. He stated that he had previously presented a "list which showed a total of 70 hours [trial-related]” and "on the appellate proceeding a total of 32 hours”. [Record 239-240]. Finding no "objection to the manner in which ... [Cunningham’s counsel] presented his hours," the trial judge stated he would "make a determination as to whether I think they’re [Cunningham] entitled to it or not entitled to it_" [Record 242], The appellate record includes a letter from Cunningham’s counsel to the trial judge in which he attached “a copy of the time records which had been submitted as an exhibit to the court in the hearing on attorney fees_” [Record 195].
. During the pendency of an appeal trial courts are without jurisdiction over issues then in appellate litigation. Herbert v. Wagg, 27 Okl. 674, 117 P. 209, 211 (1911). For a discussion of the '' Wagg" rule, see infra Part II.
. Mobbs v. City of Lehigh, Okl., 655 P.2d 547, 549 n. 5 (1982); Mullins v. Ward, Okl., 712 P.2d 55, 61 n. 13 (1985); Timmons v. Royal Globe Ins. Co., Okl., 713 P.2d 589, 592 (1986); Reeves v. Agee, Okl., 769 P.2d 745, 756 n. 46 (1989); Panama Processes v. Cities Service Co., Okl., 796 P.2d 276, 283 n. 27 (1990).
. Salyer v. National Trailer Convoy, Inc., Okl., 727 P.2d 1361, 1363 (1986); Depuy v. Hoeme, Okl., 775 P.2d 1339, 1343 (1989).
. See Chamberlin v. Chamberlin, Okl., 720 P.2d 721 (1986), where we held that counsel fees may be allowed only by the court in which services are performed.
. Herbert v. Wagg, supra note 3 117 P. at 211.
. Chamberlin v. Chamberlin, supra note 6.
. Chamberlin v. Chamberlin, supra note 6, at 726.
. See 12 O.S.1991 § 1031 for statutory provisions which afford an avenue for postjudgment vacation and modification relief. Salyer v. National Trailer Convoy, Inc., supra note 5; Depuy v. Hoeme, supra note 5.
. See supra note 2.
. Supra note 3.
. Early Oklahoma jurisprudence requires that mandate to be effective must be "spread of record” in the trial court. See Dooley v. Foreman, 94 Okl. 163, 221 P. 47 (syllabus 1) (1923); Wagoner Oil & Gas Co. v. Goad, 136 Okl. 29, 275 P. 1036 (syllabus 1) (1929); Board of Com'rs v. Baxter, 113 Okl. 280, 241 P. 752, 753 (syllabus 2) (1925). This is no longer necessary. In this day of rapid communication we can regard the mandate’s issuance date as the point when jurisdiction revests in the district court ex lege.
. Other issues — independent of and collateral to the appeal — which lie outside the arena framed by the petition in error and briefs, remain within the trial court’s cognizance during appeal. Herbert v. Wagg, supra note 3; Enyart v. Comfort, Okl., 591 P.2d 709, 711 (1979).
. The Wagg teaching is reaffirmed in Rule 1.31(a)(7), Rules on Perfecting a Civil Appeal, 12 O.S.Supp.1990, Ch. 15j App. 2 (as amended by order of Dec. 20, 1990, eff. Jan. 1, 1991). Its terms of Rule 1.31(a)(7) are:
"(a) For the purposes to be stated the trial court does retain jurisdiction in the case after a petition-in-error has been filed in this court:
(7) To take action with respect to any issue collateral to a pending appeal. Herbert v. Wagg, 27 Okl. 674, 117 P. 209 [1911].’’
. Herbert v. Wagg, supra note 3; Dooley v. Foreman, supra note 13; Wagoner Oil & Gas Co. v. Goad, supra note 13, at (syllabus 2); Ratdaff v. State, 122 Okl. 263, 249 P. 934 (syllabus 1) (1926); Board of Com’rs v. Baxter, supra note 13, at (syllabus 2); Cameron v. White, 128 Okl. 251, 262 P. 664 (syllabus 8) (1928).
Cunningham instituted his counsel-fee quest by motion filed 15 days before mandate in Cunningham I. The district court was then without jurisdiction to entertain the quest because the issue raised was not collateral to but on appeal.
. Want of corrective relief on appeal — whether as a consequence of the appeal’s dismissal or of remedial inaction by the appellate tribunal— *979leaves the nisi prins judgment undisturbed and hence “affirmed". Matter of Estate of Burkhart v. Wabaunsee, Okl., 594 P.2d 361, 363 (1979), states that "... dismissal of an appeal can ordinarily be likened in its effect to an affirmance in the sense that trial court's judgment at once becomes enforceable....” Issues adjudicated on appeal are barred from district court reconsideration. Jones v. Medlock, 201 Okl. 109, 202 P.2d 212, 213 (1949).
. Res judicata governs with like force judgments or decrees of the court as it does post-judgment and post-decree rulings that stand in law as “final”. For the preclusive effect given to postjudgment orders see Depuy, supra note 5 at 1343 n. 24; Salyer, supra note 5 at 1343-1344.
. Salyer v. National Trailer Convoy, Inc., supra note 5 at 1343-1344; Depuy v. Hoeme, supra note 5. On the other hand, when a judgment is reversed on appeal and the cause remanded, its conclusive character is lost so that it will not stand as a bar to further suit on the same cause of action. Mobbs v. City of Lehigh, Okl., 655 P.2d 547, 549 n. 5 (1982).
. Mobbs v. City of Lehigh, supra note 4 at 549; Mullins v. Ward, supra note 4 at 61; Timmons v. Royal Globe Ins. Co., supra note 4 at 592; Reeves v. Agee, supra note 4 at 756 n. 46; Panama Processes v. Cities Service Co., supra note 4 at 283 n. 27.
. Supra note 10; Depuy v. Hoeme, supra note 5 at 1343-1344.
. Chamberlin v. Chamberlin, supra note 6.
. An exception to this principle was carved out in Carpet World, Inc. v. Riddles, Okl., 737 P.2d 939, 942 (1987). There we held that in an appeal in which the prevailing party cannot get an attorney’s fee because the case is not yet terminated, the party seeking attorney’s fees in anticipation of ultimate victory in the trial court may have this court authorize a fee award when the case reaches a terminal stage at nisi prius.
. Ford v. Ford, Okl., 766 P.2d 950, 952 n. 1 (1989); Johnson v. Wade, Okl., 642 P.2d 255, 257-258 (1982); Matter of D.D.F., Okl., 801 P.2d 703, 709 (1990).
. Ford v. Ford, supra note 24; Johnson v. Wade, supra note 24; Matter of D.D.F., supra note 24.
. Ford v. Ford, supra note 24; Johnson v. Wade, supra note 24.
.An attorney’s fee quest is most often ancillary to an appeal; it is supplemental to the main claim for corrective relief from the judgment and may hence be raised by motion. In contrast, a plea for relief from judgment or order may not be raised by motion; it must be pressed by petition in error and brief. Greene v. Circle Insurance Company, Okl., 557 P.2d 422, 423 (1976).
. Pryse Monument Co. v. District Court, Etc., Okl., 595 P.2d 435, 438 (1979).
. Joint Anti-Fascist Refugee Committee v. McGrath, 341 U.S. 123, 179, 71 S.Ct. 624, 652, 95 L.Ed. 817 (1951) (Douglas, J., concurring) (emphasis mine).