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Amicus Brief - suggest Oracle v. Google | 245 comments | Create New Account
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Amicus Brief - suggest Oracle v. Google
Authored by: Steve Martin on Thursday, May 16 2013 @ 06:32 PM EDT

Okay, I found the answer in the Federal Circuit Rules of Practice [PDF], which document encompasses the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure; specifically, the answer appears to come from FRAP Rule 29(d):

Except by the court’s permission, an amicus brief may be no more than one-half the maximum length authorized by these rules for a party’s principal brief. If the court grants a party permission to file a longer brief, that extension does not affect the length of an amicus brief.

Rule 32(a)(7)(A) states:

A principal brief may not exceed 30 pages, or a reply brief 15 pages, unless it complies with Rule 32(a)(7)(B) and (C).

However, Rule 32(a)(7)(B) states:

  1. A principal brief is acceptable if:

    • it contains no more than 14,000 words;

    • or it uses a monospaced face and contains no more than 1,300 lines of text.

  2. A reply brief is acceptable if it contains no more than half of the type volume specifi ed in Rule 32(a)(7)(B)(i).

  3. Headings, footnotes, and quotations count toward the word and line limitations. The corporate disclosure statement, table of contents, table of citations, statement with respect to oral argument, any addendum containing statutes, rules or regulations, and any certificates of counsel do not count toward the limitation.

So it would seem from this that the short answer is "15 pages".

However, if anyone has any idea of filing an amicus brief, they'd better hurry. Rule 29(e) says:

An amicus curiae must file its brief, accompanied by a motion for filing when necessary, no later than 7 days after the principal brief of the party being supported is filed. An amicus curiae that does not support either party must file its brief no later than 7 days after the appellant’s or petitioner’s principal brief is filed. A court may grant leave for later filing, specifying the time within which an opposing party may answer.

---
"When I say something, I put my name next to it." -- Isaac Jaffe, "Sports Night"

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