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Electronic Filing on Appeal: What Does the Future Hold?
Howard J. Bashman
Special to Law.com
November 20, 2006
The 8th U.S. Circuit Court
of Appeals recently announced on its Web site that it will begin
implementing its appellate electronic case filing system in December
-- and the other federal appellate courts aren't far behind.
Many lawyers are already
familiar with electronic case filings in federal district courts,
where ECF systems have been launched across the nation over the past
several years.
In the federal trial court
system, pleadings, motions, briefs and exhibits are being filed and
served on other counsel electronically instead of on paper.
Computerized PDF files, which can be read using the Adobe Acrobat
Reader, have replaced paper as the format of choice for federal
trial court filings.
Federal trial court judges,
who were initially skeptical of moving from a paper-based to an
electronically based filing system, have generally grown to
appreciate ECF, and are now accustomed to reading briefs on the
computer. One noteworthy advantage of ECF for these judges is that
they can file and serve orders and opinions on any day, and at any
time, without relying on the Clerk of Court's office. And thanks to
the incremental launch of ECF in the courts, the vast majority of
cases that will be the subject of ECF appellate proceedings will
have begun as ECF cases in the trial court.
Just as federal trial court
judges were once skeptical of eliminating paper with the advent of
ECF, federal appellate judges must now decide whether to require the
filing of paper copies of briefs and appendices in addition to the
ECF copies. Perhaps not surprisingly, federal appellate judges are,
at least at the outset, even more reluctant than federal trial
judges to abandon briefs and appendices filed on paper.
That reluctance is
unfortunate, as ECF offers many potential benefits, the greatest of
which may be the elimination of the need for an appendix printed on
paper. In the days before ECF's use in federal district courts, only
one copy of a paper-based trial court record was generated, which
meant the parties on appeal had to reproduce in an appendix
additional copies of the most relevant items in the trial court
record -- pleadings, exhibits, briefs, transcripts -- so that each
appellate judge could have a copy of those materials handy while
considering what decision to reach in the case.
However, now that trial
court records exist largely in electronic form, multiple ECF account
holders can simultaneously access the document. If federal appellate
judges have access to electronic versions of trial court files, it
clearly makes little sense to require the parties to file paper
copies of those pleadings bound into an appendix on appeal.
Unfortunately, even today
not all documents that could be reproduced in an appendix on appeal
are available electronically through federal district courts' ECF
systems. Trial court transcripts, for example, are not available for
download via ECF, perhaps reflecting the power of court reporters,
who apparently have prevailed on judges to prevent that access,
thereby making it more difficult for attorneys to obtain such
transcripts without paying a court reporter for them. In addition,
copies of exhibits used at trial are not commonly filed
electronically in the federal district court.
For ECF systems to serve as
a perfect substitute for the appendix on appeal, federal appellate
courts will, of course, need electronic access to trial court
transcripts and exhibits used at trial. If those items were
available electronically to those courts, the appendix on appeal
could be eliminated altogether, and the parties on appeal could cite
directly to the materials in the trial court's original ECF record.
A compromise would be to
either allow or require litigants to file an appendix on paper
limited to one 500-page volume containing only those portions of the
trial court pleadings, briefs, transcripts and exhibits that are of
the greatest importance to the appeal. Doing this in cases with
tremendously large trial court records may be especially difficult,
but the remaining portions of the record would continue to be
available to the federal appellate court electronically.
Alternatively, the federal
appellate courts could mandate that any paper-based appendix filed
on appeal would be limited to those items not available
electronically via the federal trial court's system, as a means of
preventing any overlaps with the trial court's ECF documents.
One of the worst possible
ways to solve the ECF appellate appendix conundrum would be to
require the parties on appeal to compile an entire paper-based
appendix, as has been done in the past, and then scan that appendix
in to a PDF file, which would then be electronically filed with the
federal appellate court. The drawback to this scenario is that PDF
files created via optical scanning consist of images of documents
whose content cannot be searched or copied and pasted into new
documents.
By contrast, most of the
PDF files found in trial court ECF systems are so-called "native"
PDF files, which have been created directly from a word processor
and can be searched via the Adobe Acrobat Reader, and can also be
copied and pasted into a new word processing file. Requiring the
scanning of federal district courts' native PDF documents to create
a new PDF version of the appendix would merely serve to deprive the
federal appellate court of the functionality offered by the original
native PDF files. This is why I believe that federal appellate
courts should, to the greatest extent feasible, eliminate the
requirement that an appendix be filed on appeal where the district
court materials are available electronically to the federal
appellate court.
Although federal appellate
courts are unlikely to immediately eliminate the requirement that
paper copies of the appellate briefs be filed in addition to an
electronic copy, I expect that these courts will ultimately do away
with this rule. Federal appellate judges -- like their counterparts
on the federal district courts -- will, over time, become accustomed
to reading and evaluating briefs on a computer terminal. And federal
appellate judges whose fondness remains undiminished for paper
copies of briefs can easily satisfy that desire by hinting the
"print" button.
Despite all the
technological advances in society in general and the court system
specifically, comparatively little is still known about ECF on
appeal. If federal appellate judges are serious about making ECF a
success, they should look to the federal district courts' procedures
and try to eliminate paper in their own courts as much as possible.
Given that electronic
records on appeal are likely to ultimately replace traditional
multivolume paper-based appendices, I conclude that federal
appellate courts should embrace these evolving procedures now and
set about maximizing the use of electronic records being generated
in the federal district courts.
Howard J. Bashman operates
his own appellate litigation boutique in Willow Grove, Pa., a suburb
of Philadelphia. He can be reached via e-mail at
hjb@hjbashman.com.
You can access his appellate Web log at
http://howappealing.law.com/.
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