The first thing an appellate judge does after picking up the briefs of an appeal is read the district judge’s explanation for the decision under challenge. It is impossible to evaluate the challenge' — sometimes impossible even to understand it — without knowing-why the district court acted as it did.
See Hill v. Porter Memorial Hospital,
(a) Contents. The appellant shall submit, bound with the main brief, an appendix containing the judgment or order under review and any opinion, memorandum of decision, findings of fact and conclusions of law, or oral statement of reasons delivered by the trial court or administrative agency upon the rendering of that judgment, decree, or order.
(b) Additional Contents. The appellant shall also include in an appendix:
(1) Copies of any other opinions or orders in the case that address the issues sought to be raised.
(2) Copies of any opinions or orders in the case rendered by magistrates or bankruptcy judges that address the issues sought to be raised.
(3) Copies of all opinions, orders, findings of fact and conclusions of law rendered in the case by administrative agencies (including their administrative law judges). This requirement applies whether the original review of the administrative decision is in this court or was conducted by the district court.
(4) An order concerning a motion for new trial, alteration or amendment of the judgment, rehearing, and other relief sought under Rules 52(a) or 59, Fed. R.Civ.P.
(5) Any other short excerpts from the record, such as essential portions of the pleading or charge, disputed provisions of a contract, pertinent pictures, or brief portions of the transcript, that are important to a consideration of the issues raised on appeal.
(6)The documents in (b) may also be placed in the appendix bound with the brief if these documents when added to the required appendix in (a) do not exceed fifty pages.
(c)Statement that All Required Materials are in Appendix. The appendix to each appellant’s brief shall contain a statement that all of the materials required by parts (a) and (b) of this rule are included. If there are no materials within the scope of parts (a) and (b) of this rule, counsel shall so certify.
This supplements Fed.RApp. P. 30(a) in several ways: (i) it specifies that counsel must furnish not only judgments and orders but also “findings of fact and conclusions of law, or oral statement of reasons delivered by the trial court or administrative agency”; (ii) it demands not only the explanations directly supporting the judgment but also “[ejopies of any other opinions or orders in the case that address the issues sought to be raised” and “portions of the transcript that are important to a consideration of the issues”, which includes (for example) explanations for eviden-tiary rulings, if those rulings come under attack in this court; (iii) it requires counsel to certify compliance. Because the clerk’s office does not know which materials in a given case are required by this rule, the certificate required by Circuit Rule 30(c) is the key to filing a brief. The clerk’s office will reject any brief lacking the required statement, but if the representation is present the clerk’s office will not look behind it.
An appellant who files the brief with the aid of a false representation is at risk of summary affirmance.
See, e.g., Urso v. United States,
A client aggrieved by summary affirmance in a civil case may obtain recompense from the errant lawyer. See
Pioneer Investment Services Co. v. Brunswick Associates Limited Partnership,
Risk of dismissal has produced substantial compliance in civil appeals. Unfortunately, the lack of an effective sanction in criminal cases has led counsel to be careless, or, worse, to behave strategically — to omit the district court’s reasons in the hope that silence will make the district court’s decision look unsupported. Compliance with Rule 30 in criminal cases is poor. Six criminal appeals were set for oral argument before this panel last July 10. In four of the six cases, counsel for the appellant violated Rule 30. In two of these four cases, counsel also violated Circuit Rule 28(d)(2), which provides: “No fact shall be stated in the statement of facts unless it is supported by a reference to the page or pages of the record or the appendix where that fact appears.” Knowledge of the district court’s reasons and the ability to find disputed material in the record are especially important in criminal appeals, for the most common appellate issues — the length of sentence, the admission or exclusion of evidence, rulings on joinder and severance, jury selection and control-require this court to respect reasoned decisions by the district judge. See
Koon v. United States,
— U.S. -, —-—,
After deciding the cases on the merits, we issued orders requiring the attorneys to show cause why they should not be disciplined under Fed.R.App. P. 46(c) for their violations of the rules and their false representations to the court. The responses have been received; none of the four asked for a hearing, so the disciplinary proceedings are ready for decision. All four lawyers concede noncompliance with Rule 30. The question, therefore, is what disposition is appropriate.
Reminders have not sufficed to induce attorneys to comply with Rule 30, although it is the most important rule this court has issued. Unfiltered knowledge of the district court’s reasons is vital if a court of appeals is to do its job. Disappointment at the failure of exhortations (and even summary affir-mances) led the panel in Hill to fine counsel $1,000 on the authority of Fed.R.App. P. 46(c).
A similar disposition could be appropriate here too, although we, hesitate to impose on lawyers who serve under the Criminal Justice Act fines that may approximate their full compensation for handling the appeal. When meting out sanctions, we bear in mind that there is an element of public service in the representation of the accused in criminal cases, and we do not want to thin the ranks of volunteers. Nonetheless, rules must be enforced — especially when violation entails misrepresentation to the court. We therefore have decided that fines will be used *585 in future criminal cases, but only for briefs filed after July 19, 1996, the date Hill made it pellucid how important this court deems compliance with Rule 30 to be. For these four lawyers, a public admonition suffices.
For the benefit of the bar, we take this opportunity to emphasize that under Rule 30 the appellant (including a cross-appellant) must include in the appendix all of the district court’s pertinent reasoning. This includes:
• Any document styled an opinion, memorandum, or entry.
• Any transcript that contains oral statements of reasons for admitting or excluding evidence, denying motions to sever, imposing sentence, or taking any other step that is contested on appeal. Counsel for appellant is responsible for ordering the transcript of any oral statement of reasons. (Statements of reasons for decisions that the appellant does not contest need not be included in the appendix.)
• Any pretrial order (or transcribed statement of reasons) concerning a motion to suppress evidence, a motion in limine, a motion to dismiss the indictment, and so on — again with the proviso that the appellant may omit reasons concerning decisions not contested on appeal.
We hope that this warning, and the elaboration of the scope of counsel’s obligation, will increase compliance with Rule 30 and so improve the ability of this court to decide cases quickly and correctly.
