This case presents for our resolution the question of how to conceptualize the effect of Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 26(a), and by analogy, the effect of Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 6(a), in determining the end of a statute of limitations period. In some of our prior cases, we have conceptualized Civil Rule 6(a) as “expanding” or “extending” a statute of limitations period. Today, we decide that Appellate Rule 26(a) and Civil Rule 6(a) do not operate to “expand” a limitations period, but merely provide a method of computing time. More specifically, in this case *165 we must determine whether a filing deadline actually occurred on a Sunday when the clerk’s office was closed or on the next day when it was open.
Andrew Bartlik has petitioned this Court for review of the decision issued by the Secretary of Labor dismissing his complaint against his former employer, the Tennessee Valley Authority, under the whistleblower provision of the Energy Reorganization Act, 42 U.S.C. § 5851 (1988). The only dispute before us relates to whether his petition was timely filed in this Court. On April 7, 1993, the Secretary of Labor issued a final decision and order adopting the administrative law judge’s conclusion that the petitioner’s complaint should be dismissed. In effect, the Secretary’s decision held that the petitioner had failed to carry his burden of establishing that the Tennessee Valley Authority intentionally discriminated against him. The reasoning is unimportant for purposes of this decision.
The Energy Reorganization Act, 42 U.S.C. § 5851(c)(1), provides that “[t]he petition for review must be filed within sixty days from the issuance of the Secretary’s order.” On Monday, June 7, this Court received a petition to review the April 7 order. This was the sixty-first day following the Secretary’s final decision. The sixtieth day was on Sunday, June 6. The motion to dismiss for failure to file a timely petition was heard by a panel of this Court, and its decision was reported as
Bartlik v. United States Dep’t of Labor and Tennessee Valley Auth.,
Our task here is to determine the relationship between Appellate Rule 26(a) and a statutory limitations period (Section 5851(c)(1)), in light of the fact that the courthouses are not open for business on weekends, legal holidays, 5 U.S.C. § 6103 (1988
&
Supp. V 1993), or may be closed due to other circumstances. In this context, we must interpret how to calculate the statute of limitations period in Section 5851(c)(1).
See In re Vause,
We now believe that our previous understanding of the effect of Civil Rule 6(a) on a “jurisdictional” statute of limitations, as explained in
Rust, Butcher,
and
Hilliard,
is erroneous. We now hold that the application of Appellate Rule 26(a), and likewise its counterpart Civil Rule 6(a), to calculate a limitations period does not “expand” or “enlarge” our jurisdiction.
1
Both of these rules do nothing more than provide the court and the parties with a means of determining the beginning and end of a statute of limitations prescribed elsewhere in law. Accordingly, a petition for review of an agency decision that is due on a Saturday, Sunday, federal holiday, or a day on which the court clerk’s office is closed will be timely if filed on the next day the courthouse, or other designated place for filing, is open for business. Other Circuits have so held.
United Mine Workers v. Dole,
We reach our conclusion by a straightforward and commonsense reading of Civil Rule 6(a) and Appellate Rule 26(a). Appellate Rule 26(a) explicitly applies to “any period of time prescribed by these rules, by an order of the court, or by any applicable statute.” (Emphasis added). Civil Rule 6(a) applies to any period of time “prescribed or allowed ... by any applicable statute.” Were there any question that Appellate Rule 26(a) applied in this case, Appellate Rule 20 goes on to state that “[a]ll provisions of these rules are applicable to review or enforcement of orders of agencies.... ” Because proposed federal procedural rules are sent to Congress by the Supreme Court prior to their enactment, we must assume that Congress understood that the filing deadline for a petition for review of an administrative agency decision would be the first business day following the day the petition was due if the due date fell on a Saturday, Sunday, a legal holiday, or if the courthouse was closed for reasons listed in the rules.
In addition to enacting Section 5851(c)(1) in light of these pre-existing procedural rules, Congress was presumably aware of Supreme Court cases that have applied the procedural rules to federal statutes of limitations. In
Johnson v. Railway Express Agency, Inc.,
Any period of limitation ... is understood fully only in the context of the various circumstances that suspend it from running against a particular cause of action. Although any statute of limitations is necessarily arbitrary, the length of the period allowed for instituting suit inevitably reflects a value judgment concerning the point at which the interests in favor of *167 protecting valid claims are outweighed by the interests in prohibiting the prosecution of stale ones. In virtually all statutes of limitations the chronological length of the limitation period is interrelated with provisions regarding tolling, revival, and questions of application.
Id.
at 463-64,
Finally, our decision is consistent with the intent of Congress to expedite the review of agency decisions. The implementation of the agency’s decision is not meaningfully delayed by the application of Appellate Rule 26(a) to Section 6861(c)(1), and the agency clearly is not prejudiced.
Our understanding of the language of Section 5851(c)(1) and Appellate Rule 26(a), and the relationship between them, is, of course, commonsensical. If the courthouses of the United States were open twenty-four hours a day, seven days a week, with no breaks and no holidays and if a time clock with a stamping mechanism was available to the parties, then a strict construction of a limitations period might make sense, and Appellate Rule 26(a) would be unnecessary. Thankfully, we do not live in such a world, and Congress has recognized that filing deadlines must be calculated in a realistic, practical manner.
Thus, we conclude that when a filing is required to be made on a Sunday and is made on Monday, it is timely filed. The petitioner here has timely filed his petition for review. Therefore, the ease is returned to the original panel for consideration of the merits of the petition.
Notes
. The distinction found in our case law between a 'jurisdictional" statute of limitations,
e.g., Rust, Butcher, Hilliard,
and a “procedural” one,
e.g., Allgood v. Elyria United Methodist Home,
