When a bankruptcy court ruling is appealed to the district court, Bankruptcy Rule 8009(a)(1) requires that an appellate brief be filed within fifteen days of the filing of the appeal. In this case, debtor Ralph Scheri, acting through his attorney, failed to file an appellate brief in the allotted time period. The district court dismissed his appeal. Mr. Scheri submits that the dismissal was an abuse of the district court’s discretion. For the reasons stated below, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand the case for further consideration.
I
BACKGROUND
Barbara Baker is a creditor holding a claim against Mr. Scheri’s bankruptcy estate. On October 1, 1993, the bankruptcy court decided that Mr. Scheri’s debts to Ms. Baker were nondischargeable, and denied the debt- or’s motion for discharge. See 11 U.S.C. § 727. Mr. Scheri’s appeal of that decision was docketed in the district court on November 22, 1993. However, Mr. Scheri’s attorney did not file a brief in support of that appeal within fifteen days of that docketing date, i.e., by December 7,1993, as prescribed by Rule 8009.
At a status hearing held on January 7, 1994, Baker filed a motion to dismiss Mr. Scheri’s appeal. Five days later, Mr. Scheri objected to the motion and filed a motion for leave to file the brief instanter. The appellate brief accompanied the motion. The reasons offered for the untimely filing were his ignorance of Bankruptcy Rule 8009 and his attorney’s mistaken belief that the scheduling for filing of briefs would be done at the *73 status hearing on January 7, 1994. Mr. Scheri also asserted that his untimely filing had caused no harm or injury to the creditor.
On February 1, 1994, the district court granted the creditor’s motion to dismiss the appeal. In a brief entry, the district court stated that, under Bankruptcy Rule 8009(a)(1), dismissal was within the court’s discretion and was appropriate whenever the failure to file was the result of negligence, bad faith, or indifference. The court noted that the appellant’s failure to file timely his brief was “merely the latest in a long series of dilatory tactics.” It did not believe Mr. Scheri’s excuse for his lack of filing and concluded that the debtor’s actions exhibited both negligence and bad faith. The court stated:
Appellant disingenuously argues that his failure to timely file his brief “was predicated on his misunderstanding and misinformation that the time or need to file the Brief would be fixed by the Court at the Status Hearing Set for January 7, 1994.[”] The court notes that this status hearing was first scheduled on Decеmber 29, 1993—more than two weeks after Appellant’s brief was due under Bankruptcy Rule 8009(a)(1). The court hereby finds that appellant’s delay was the result of negligence, and that his explanation of the delay was offered in bad faith.
Order of February 1, 1994. As a result, the court granted the creditor’s motion to dismiss thе appeal. On February 18, 1994, the court denied Mr. Scheri’s motion to vacate the dismissal. It reasoned that the status hearing was not set until December 29,1993, and thus that “it is difficult to imagine how Debtor-Appellant could have expected the court to establish a new briefing schedule at such a late dаte.” Mr. Scheri appeals that dismissal.
II
DISCUSSION
A.
Mr. Scheri asserts that the record on appeal does not support the district court’s findings of negligence, bad faith, or “a long series of dilatory tactics.” The only delict, he submits, was his attorney’s admittedly mistaken belief that a briefing schedule would be set at thе status hearing if the district court determined from review of the record that briefs would be required. Mr. Scheri also contends that there was no prejudice caused to the creditor by the delayed filing. Under these circumstances, he submits, it cannot be said that the debtor exhibited negligence or indifferеnce to the bankruptcy procedural rules.
Baker contends that courts should not be burdened with the task of re-explaining rules of procedure to every litigant. A simple rule is hard to misunderstand—especially one as clear as Bankruptcy Rule 8009. Because the district court found consistent dilatory conduct, Baker concludes, the court acted within its discretion in refusing to accept the debt- or’s excuse for negligence.
B.
The timely filing of briefs is governed by Bankruptcy Rule 8009, which establishes, in the absence of an overriding time limitation, a fifteen-day period for the filing of a brief aftеr the appeal has been entered. The rule provides:
8009(a) Briefs. Unless the district court or the bankruptcy appellate panel by local rule or by order excuses the filing of briefs or specifies different time limits:
(1) the appellant shall serve and file his brief within fifteen days after entry of the appeal on the docket pursuant to Rule 8007. 1
Bankruptcy Rule 8009(a)(1). The failure to file a required pleading or brief in a timely manner may be a ground for dismissal of the appeal under Bankruptcy Rule 8001:
Failure of an appellant to take any steps other than the timely filing of a notice of *74 аppeal does not affect the validity of the appeal, but is ground only for such action as the district court ... deems appropriate, which may include dismissal of the appeal.
As that rule indicates, the failure to' file a timely brief is a nonjurisdictional procedural error. The distriсt court, faced with such an error, must choose the “appropriate” action. The choice of dismissal is within the district court’s sound discretion. We review it only for an abuse of that discretion.
In re Bulic,
C.
This court has not had оccasion to deal with the precise situation presented here, the late filing of an appellate brief in the district court pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 8009. Our colleagues in other circuits have had the question presented to them, and the resulting caselaw manifests a consensus that is a helpful starting point to our analysis. As the district court noted, a late filing of an appellate brief does not justify dismissal of the appeal under Rule 8009 absent a showing of bad faith, negligence, or indifference; 3 When district courts have found dismissal to be the appropriate sanction because the record demonstrates a consistent pattern of dilatoriness or multiple failures to comply with deadlines, courts of appeals have not hesitated to affirm the district court’s exercise of discretion. 4
In his commentary on Rule 8009, bankruptcy scholar and former bankruptсy judge Daniel R. Cowans states the principle that reflects the general approach of the reported eases: “Dismissal of an appeal for failure to file a brief is a severe sanction.” Daniel R. Cowans,
Bankruptcy Law & Practice
§ 18.6, at 530 (6th ed. 1994). Indeed, this perspective is not limited to bankruptcy prаctice, but has long characterized our approach to dismissal sanctions.
See Halas v. Consumer Servs., Inc.,
Neverthelеss, dismissal is the proper sanction when the circumstances require it:
[T]he most severe in the spectrum of sanctions provided by statute or rule must be *75 available to the district court in appropriate cases, not merely to penalize those whose conduct may be deemed tо warrant such a sanction, but to deter those who might be tempted to such conduct in the absence of such a deterrent. '
National Hockey League v. Metropolitan Hockey Club, Inc.,
Nevertheless, although our review of the district court’s decision must be very deferential, deferential review cannot be equated with no review at all.
Land v. Chicago Truck Drivers, Helpers & Warehouse Workers Union (Indep.) Health & Welfare Fund,
Our present concern in this case is the absenсe of a sufficient explanation by the district court of the basis for its determination that dismissal was appropriate. The court noted that the “appellant’s failure to timely file his brief on appeal is merely the latest in a long series of dilatory tactics.” We received no further dеscription of those tactics and, more importantly, of the district court’s assessment of the impact of those instances on the overall conduct of the litigation.
The district court characterizes the explanation for the delay as “disingenuous” bécause the status hearing was scheduled more than two weeks after Mr. Scheri’s brief was due, and the court found it “difficult to imagine how Debtor-Appellant could have expected the court to establish a new briefing schedule at such a late date.” However, if it is true that Mr. Scheri’s counsel misunderstood the district court’s procеdure for setting a briefing schedule, it is not inconsistent for him to wait for the notice of the status hearing without any awareness of his mistake in failing to file the brief weeks before. If the court believed that this explanation constituted a deliberate misrepresentation to the court by Mr. Scheri’s counsеl, an explicit finding to that effect would have been appropriate. As a general proposition, the delicts of the attorney may be attributed to the party.
See Pioneer Inv. Servs. Co. v. Brunswick Assocs. Ltd. Partnership,
— U.S. -, -,
We emphasize that we respect the broad discretion of the district court to sanction parties by dismissing their appeals when appropriate: “The district judge should be presumed to have acted reasonably, and reversal is .warranted therefore only if it is plain either that the dismissal was a mistake or that the judge did not consider factors essential to the exercise of a sound discretion.”
Ball,
Conclusion
We vacate the dismissal of Mr. Scheri’s appeal and remand the case to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. Bankruptcy Rule 8007 requires that “the clerk ... shall enter the appeal in the docket and give notice promptly to all parties.” The district court docketing date for this appeal is November 22, 1993. Notice of the appeal was mailed to all counsel of record pursuant to Bankruptcy Rule 8007(b) on the same date.
.
See also In re SPR Corp.,
.
See In re Tampa Chain Co.,
.
See, e.g., In re Fitzsimmons,
. Cases that consider the propriety of dismissal for attоrney's noncompliance with bankruptcy's procedural deadlines include
Greco v. Stubenberg,
