Plaintiff-appellee the United States has moved for summary dismissal of this appeal on the ground that this court lacks appellate jurisdiction. Defendant-appellant Glenn Heller, proceeding pro se, has moved to transfer the appeal to the Temporary Emergency Court of Appeals (“TECA”).
This appeal is from a district court judgment enforcing a remedial order issued by the Department of Energy and ordering Heller, a gasoline retailer, to pay $159,-689.95 in civil penalties and in restitution for customer overcharges. Heller does not dispute the government’s assertion that this case arises under the Economic Stabilization Act, 12 U.S.C. § 1904 note, and the Emergency Petroleum Allocation Act, 15 U.S.C. § 751 et seq. Accordingly, TECA has exclusive jurisdiction over this appeal. 12 U.S.C. § 1904 note, § 211(b)(2); 15 U.S.C. § 754(a)(1). This court has no jurisdiction.
Under 28 U.S.C. § 1631, “[whenever ... an appeal ... is ... filed with ... a court and that court finds that there is a want of jurisdiction, the court shall, if it is in the interest of justice, transfer such ... appeal to any other such court in which the ... appeal could have been brought at the time it was filed_” (Emphasis added).
This statutory language makes it clear that in order for the transferor court to decide whether the statutory requirements for transfer are met, the transferor court must first decide whether the appeal could have been brought in the transferee court at the time it was filed. Thus, for the purpose of deciding whether we should transfer the case, we must inquire whether TECA would have jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Keller v. Petsock,
Absent some extension of the time for appeal, this appeal could not have been brought in TECA at the time it was filed. Heller filed the notice of appeal on July 22, 1991, over thirty days after the district court’s judgment entered on May 30, 1991. Rule 15(a) of TECA’s General Rules requires that “[a] notice of appeal ... shall be filed with the clerk of this court within 30 days of the entry of judgment by the district court.” Heller’s notice of appeal was late. Accordingly, unless the time for appeal were somehow extended, we would not have any statutory basis under 28 U.S.C. § 1631 for transferring the appeal to TECA.
TECA has made it clear that “[t]he only ground for extending the prescribed time for filing a notice of appeal which this court will consider is ‘a showing of unique circumstances.’
Harris Truck Lines, Inc. v. Cherry Meat Packers, Inc., supra,
371 U.S. [215] at 217 [
This court on November 8, 1991 issued an order in which, in recognition of Heller’s *28 pro se status, this court deferred ruling on the pending motions in order to give Heller an opportunity to raise any claim of unique circumstances he might have. Our order directed Heller to show cause why, on account of unique circumstances, this appeal should not be dismissed on grounds of untimeliness.
Heller responded to the show cause order by asserting that he had relied upon the incorrect assurances of employees in the district court clerk’s office that he had sixty days in which to appeal. Heller stated as follows:
Appellant relied upon the assurances of District Court personnel and upon the accuracy of specific information provided by those same personnel in determining the amount of time available in which Appellant might properly file his timely appeal. Unfortunately, the District Court personnel proved to be mistaken in the information and assurances which they provided to the Appellant.
Upon Appellant’s receipt in June of the District Court’s Judgment dated May 29th, 1991, Appellant telephoned the Clerk’s Office at the District Court to inquire about filing an appeal. Appellant plainly stated that he was proceeding pro se and that he wished to file an appeal. Appellant then inquired as to the specific rules governing time limitations for filing his appeal. He was told at that time by Court personnel in authority that since the United States Government is a party to the case, Appellant had sixty (60) days from the date of the District Court’s Judgment in which to file his appeal. Appellant contacted the Clerk’s Office on at least one subsequent occasion and was again reassured as to this filing deadline by other knowledgeable personnel within the Office.
As a direct result of these specific telephone conversations, Appellant felt certain that the information he was given was complete and accurate, and that the assurances by these knowledgeable personnel within the Clerk’s Office could, in good faith, be safely and wholly relied upon by Appellant in calculating the maximum time available to properly file his appeal. Appellant never made (and had no reason to make) any prior assumptions concerning such filing time limitations since he is not an attorney.
According to Heller’s response, the assurances by the clerk’s office were given him within the 80-day period, so had he instead been given correct advice, he would have had plenty of time to file a timely appeal.
We now entertain Heller’s allegations because an appellate court is the proper forum to determine whether the doctrine of unique circumstances should apply in a given case (although the appellate court may choose to remand the matter to the trial court for factual determinations, if necessary).
Kraus v. Consolidated Rail Corp.,
The doctrine permitting a late appeal in cases of “unique circumstances” is a judge-made doctrine created by the Supreme Court.
See Wolfsohn v. Hankin,
The Supreme Court in
Ostemeck
stated that the unique circumstances exception, as articulated in
Thompson, supra,
“[I]f at a time when a party might take a timely appeal, he receives assurances from the district court that he need not appeal ..., or that time for appeal is extended ..., then he should not lose his right to appeal where the district court was in fact mistaken.”
United States v. Wickland,
There has been some disagreement among the circuits about the scope of the doctrine, specifically about the extent to which misleading actions or statements by a judicial officer that fall short of an affirmative assurance may satisfy the doctrine.
See Pinion, supra,
The issue here, instead, is that Heller alleges affirmative assurances only by clerk’s office personnel,
not
by a judge. The Supreme Court authorities which established the unique circumstances doctrine
{Harris, Thompson,
and Wolfsohn) all involved misleading statements or actions by a district judge. In
Ostemeck,
the petitioners claimed that the doctrine should apply “because certain statements made by the District Court, as well as certain actions taken by the District Court,
the District Court Clerk,
and the Court of Appeals, led them to believe that their notice of appeal was timely.”
Osterneck, supra,
The Eleventh Circuit, it is true, has extended the doctrine to include misleading statements or actions by the district court clerk’s office. In Willis v. Newsome, 747 *30 F.2d 605 (11th Cir.1984), appellant’s counsel alleged that the district court clerk told him, on the last day of the 30-day appeal period, that a notice of appeal mailed on that day would be stamped with that day’s date according to local custom. In reliance on this advice, appellant’s counsel passed up the chance to effect timely filing by hand delivery and instead mailed the notice of appeal, which was received, filed, and stamped late. In addition, because no one in the clerk’s office told counsel that the appeal had been stamped late, counsel failed to timely file a Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(5) motion to extend the time for appeal. The Eleventh Circuit remanded to the district court for factual findings as to whether counsel had reasonably and in good faith relied upon the clerk’s misrepresentation, but ruled that if counsel had, then the unique circumstances doctrine would apply. The court stated:
Courts will permit an appellant to maintain an otherwise untimely appeal in unique circumstances in which the appellant reasonably and in good faith relied upon judicial action that indicated to the appellant that his assertion of his right to appeal would be timely, so long as the judicial action occurred prior to the expiration of the official time period such that the appellant could have given timely notice had he not been lulled into inactivity.
Id. at 606. The court thus assumed that action by the clerk constituted “judicial action.”
The Seventh Circuit has disagreed. In
Sonicraft, Inc. v. NLRB,
Other courts, too, have declined to extend the doctrine to the clerk’s office.
See Neeley v. Murchison,
More important, TECA itself has emphatically refused to apply the unique circumstances doctrine in a case where appellant’s counsel pleaded reliance on the oral advice of a district court clerk. In
Reed v. Kroger Co.,
TECA rejected this argument, characterizing counsel’s reliance on the clerk’s oral advice as “an effort to justify the complete absence of professional care.” Id. at 1271. The court concluded:
We strongly believe that professional standards require counsel to be familiar with, or to make at least a reasonable effort to learn, the rules of the courts in which they practice.... We are unable to conclude that counsel’s failure to acquaint himself with the basic requirement for the filing of his client’s notice of appeal can properly be described as constituting ‘unique circumstances’....
Id.
at 1271-72.
See also Spinetti v. Atlantic Richfield Co.,
Although
Reed
makes it clear that TECA would not invoke the unique circumstances doctrine to rescue counsel who filed a late notice of appeal in reliance on clerk’s office advice, the appellant in the instant case, Heller, was and is proceeding pro se. We are aware that, as the Eleventh Circuit has noted, when “dealing with the mistakes of a pro se litigant, ... the justification for applying the ‘unique circumstances’ exception would become at least more compelling because pro se litigants are arguably not charged with as much responsibility in following the filing rules.”
Pinion, supra,
The deadline for filing a notice of appeal is jurisdictional and therefore not waivable by TECA. The unique circumstances doctrine, if it retains any vitality, “jostles uneasily” with this principle,
Sonicraft, supra,
We hold, therefore, that reliance on the advice, statements, or actions of court employees cannot trigger the doctrine, whether appellant is or is not pro se. We caution, however, that our holding should not be read to suggest that pro se status can have no relevance to application of the doctrine. “Unique circumstances” is an equitable doctrine that, within the sphere of its potential application, enables the court to inquire into “the reasonableness of the
*32
party’s conduct in its totality,”
Kraus, supra,
We acknowledge that our ruling could cause hardship to pro se litigants who, lacking procedural expertise, understandably look to clerk’s office personnel for procedural guidance. Self-represented parties must be aware from the outset that advice from that quarter is merely advice and cannot excuse a failure to meet fundamental jurisdictional requirements. They must be aware, too, that this is a risk they assume when they opt to proceed pro se.
Any such hardship perhaps is mitigated in the case of Heller, who has had at least three counselled appeals decided by TECA.
See United States v. Heller,
Heller’s motion to transfer his appeal is denied. The United States’ motion for summary dismissal is granted.
Notes
. In the instant case, too, of course, Heller filed his notice of appeal with the clerk of the district court, not with the clerk of TECA as is required by current TECA Rule 15(a). This defect is no obstacle to transfer to TECA and to TECA's jurisdiction. The entire purpose of 28 U.S.C. § 1631, after all, is to permit transfer to the proper court of a timely appeal filed in the wrong court. The issue of transfer was neither raised nor considered in Reed.
