Matter of Rules of Appellate Proced

2007 MT 334
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 10, 2007
Docket07-0016
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Matter of Rules of Appellate Proced, 2007 MT 334 (Mo. 2007).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

No. AF 07-0016 ______________

IN THE MATTER OF THE ADOPTION OF THE ) NEW RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE ) ORDER ______________

Many of the present Montana Rules of Appellate Procedure (M. R. App. P.), Title 25, Chapter 21, MCA, are over four decades old. These Rules have been amended piece- meal over the years and, in many instances, are confusing, internally inconsistent, and comport neither with this Court’s jurisprudence nor with current appellate practice and procedure in this State. With these deficiencies in mind, over the last two years and in a series of public meetings, this Court has undertaken a project to comprehensively re-write and revise the M. R. App. P. Our goal has been to draft rules that are clearer, more user-friendly, which comport with our jurisprudence and with current appellate practice and procedure, and which will facilitate presently existing and anticipated increasing use of and reliance upon electronic filing and advances in information technology. A draft copy of these Rules, so revised and re-written, is attached to this Order and as Word and PDF document links. We are circulating this draft for public comment, with the caveat that the Court reserves the right to make further or additional revisions to the Rules after the comment period ends, and that the Rules will be submitted to a technical writer for editing. Furthermore, while, in some cases, comments have been appended to these draft rules, we do not anticipate adopting such comments in the final version of the Rules. Finally, it is our intention that the present version of the M. R. App. P. will be repealed and that the revisions will be adopted in time for inclusion in the 2007 version of the Montana Code Annotated, to apply to all appeals, petitions for extraordinary writs, original proceedings, motions and other proceedings and documents filed in this Court after January 1, 2008.

1 We urge the practicing Bar and members of the Judiciary to provide their comments on the proposed Rules to this Court with the above-stated goals in mind. Therefore, pursuant to Article VII, Section 2(3) of the Montana Constitution, IT IS ORDERED that until 5:00 p.m., March 30, 2007, this Court will accept written public comments on the attached draft revisions to the M. R. App. P. Each person submitting comments shall file an original and 7 copies of his or her comments with the Clerk of this Court within the time herein provided. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that a copy of this Order with the attached Word and PDF document links be electronically published on the State Bar of Montana website, http://www.montanabar.org, and on the website for the Judicial Branch, http://www.courts.mt.gov, and that a copy of this Order be published in the next available issue of The Montana Lawyer. We leave it to the discretion of the editor of The Montana Lawyer whether to publish the actual draft rules in the hard copy of that publication. IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that notice of this Order be served by electronic transmission to: the Executive Director of the State Bar of Montana; the editor of The Montana Lawyer; the State Law Librarian; the Code Commissioner for the State of Montana; the Clerks of the District Court with the request that they provide a copy to all District Judges in their county; the President of the Montana Judges’ Association; and the President of the Montana Magistrates’ Association. Dated this 10th of January, 2007. /S/ KARLA M. GRAY /S/ JAMES C. NELSON /S/ JOHN WARNER /S/ W. WILLIAM LEAPHART /S/ PATRICIA COTTER /S/ JIM RICE /S/ BRIAN MORRIS

2 MONTANA RULES OF APPELLATE PROCEDURE

Rule 1. Title and Scope: These rules may be referred to as the Montana Rules of Appellate Procedure and may be cited as M.R.App.P.

These rules shall govern proceedings before the Supreme Court.

Comment: The Supreme Court’s jurisdiction and authority to make rules governing the practice and procedure of the courts in this state are set forth in Article VII, Section 2 of the Constitution of Montana.

3 Rule 2. Parties; Amicus Curiae. (1) The following are parties to proceedings before this Court and shall be referred to as such in the caption of and signature block of documents filed with this Court:

a. Appellant: The party who appeals from and usually seeks reversal of a decision in the District Court. A party who files a cross-appeal shall also be referred to as a cross-appellant.

b. Appellee: The party who usually responds to the appeal, seeking affirmance of the District Court. A party who responds to a cross-appeal shall also be referred to as a cross-appellee.

c. Petitioner: A party who seeks relief by way of an original proceeding or an application for an extraordinary writ.

d. Respondent: The party against whom a petition is filed.

e. Relator: The real party in interest in whose name the government brings an action or proceeding before this Court.

f. Intervenor: One who, because of an asserted interest in the outcome, has voluntarily entered into an action or who is given permission to enter a proceeding before this court, despite not being named originally as a party,

(2) Amicus Curiae: One who is not a party, but who, upon leave of this Court, files a brief in a pending proceeding because of a strong interest in the subject matter. (3) On motion of a party, or on the Court’s own motion, the caption of a pending cause may be modified to more accurately reflect the actual alignment or status of a party. Upon entry of an order correcting the caption the cause shall, thereafter, proceed under that caption.

Comment: Previous versions of the Montana Rules of Appellate Procedure did not contain definitions of the parties and non-parties that may appear before this Court. Frequently, captions include designations of parties in a confusing manner-e.g. the petitioner in a proceeding in the District Court may be referred to as the respondent in the Supreme Court. The designation, relator, is frequently misused. Our intention is that regardless of the party’s designation in the District Court, in the Supreme Court, the party will only be designated as indicated above in the caption and signature block. The party’s designation in the District Court can be explained in the opening paragraph of the document- e.g., The appellant, XYZ Corp., was the defendant in an action filed by Mary Jones, the plaintiff. The terms petitioner and respondent will be used in the caption and signature block only in connection with original proceedings and extraordinary writs. It is also our intention that in the text of the document

4 itself, the party will be not be referred to as indicated above, but, rather, by the party’s common name-e.g. XYZ Corp. and Mary or Jones. See Rules 9 and 11 infra regarding briefing and special briefing rules in certain cases.

5 Rule 3. Interpretation of Time Requirements. All time limits set forth in

these rules for filing documents or performing any act are actual time limits. In

order to comply with a time-specific requirement, the document must be filed or

the act performed on or before the last day of the time specified. In computing any

period of time prescribed by these rules, by an order of court, or by any applicable

statute, the day of the act, event or default from which the designated period of

time begins to run shall not be included, but the last day of the period shall be

included. No additional time may be added to any such time requirement for

mailing or transmitting any document and all weekends and holidays are included

in the times specified, provided however, that if the last day of the time limit falls

upon a weekend or holiday, then the time limit is extended to the next business

day.

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2007 MT 334, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/matter-of-rules-of-appellate-proced-mont-2007.