Docket No. 90-1745.United States Court of Appeals, Second Circuit.Submitted February 6, 1991.
Decided February 7, 1991.
JON O. NEWMAN, Circuit Judge (in Chambers):
[1] This motion for extension of time to file a brief warrants a written disposition in order to inform the bar of the considerations that bear on such matters and of the strictness that will normally be applied. The motion has been referred to me as a one-judge motion, pursuant to Local Rule § 27(f). The motion seeks a postponement of one month in the due date of appellant’s brief. The postponement is sought on the ground that counsel for appellant has been engaged since November 7, 1990, in a multi-defendant criminal trial and that the continuationPage 575
of the trial will make it “extraordinarily difficult, if not impossible” to meet the briefing deadline established in this Court’s scheduling order.
[2] Like most courts, this Court is experiencing an increase in filings and is struggling to keep pace. We have obliged ourselves to take on extra panel assignments in order to handle our volume. For years, this Court, through the efforts of its judges and the cooperation of the bar, has led the courts of appeals of this country in avoiding or at least holding to a minimum the growth of a backlog and in maintaining the lowest median time from filing of appeals to disposition. We strive to maintain the pace for which this Court is highly regarded, not to value speed for its own sake, but in the firm conviction that once backlogs are permitted to develop, they tend to increase, with consequent impairment of the overall functioning of the court system. Consequently, those who invoke the appellate jurisdiction of this Court must expect that they will be called upon to adhere to court schedules adopted to enable us to keep pace with our workload. [3] Requests for relief from scheduling orders normally seek postponement of the date of appellant’s brief, the date of appellee’s brief, or the date of oral argument. If appellant’s brief is postponed, the case is delayed in being placed on the general calendar, where it is available for assignment to a panel. A series of cases with such postponements will prevent the Court from scheduling arguments to keep pace with the appeals entitled to argument. We believe that we are the only federal court of appeals that still affords oral argument to every litigant who desires argument (except incarcerated pro sePage 576
point, 491 U.S. 617, 109 S.Ct. 2646, 105 L.Ed.2d 528 (1989). Since counsel’s application in this instance might have been made without sufficient awareness of the considerations set forth herein, it will be granted, but only to the limited extent of postponing the filing date for appellant’s brief for ten days, rather than the 30 days requested.
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