in chambers.
On August 4, the Chicago Board of Trade moved under Fed. R.App. P. 29 for leave to file a brief amicus curiae in support of the petitioner in this case, who is challenging a disciplinary order of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission. The motion was referred to me as motions judge and on August 25 I denied the motion without a statement of reasons, precipitating a further motion by the Board of Trade, this time asking me to explain myself — which I am happy to do.
The tendency of many judges of this court, including myself, has been to grant motions for leave to file amicus curiae briefs without careful consideration of “the reasons why a brief of an amicus curiae is desirable,” although the rule makes this a required part of the motion. After 16 years of reading amicus curiae briefs the vast majority of which have not assisted the judges, I have decided that it would be good to scrutinize these motions in a more careful, indeed a fish-eyed, fashion.
The vast majority of amicus curiae briefs are filed by allies of litigants and duplicate the arguments made in the litigants’ briefs, in effect merely extending the length of the litigant’s brief. Such amicus briefs should not be allowed. They are an abuse. The term “amicus curiae” means friend of the court, not friend of a party.
United States v. Michigan,
The Board claims to have an “overriding interest” in the case because one of its members is being punished unjustly in its view, and to be able to assist the court “by expressing its strongly held view that the evidence clearly and convincingly establishes” the lack of any need for the sanction meted out by the Commission. We are not helped by an amicus curiae’s expression of a “strongly held view” about the weight of the evidence, see
New England Patriots Football Club, Inc. v. University of Colorado,
supra,
Were there some doubt about the Board of Trade’s position concerning the sanctioning of Mr. Ryan, an amicus curiae brief might serve to inform us of a material consideration of which we might otherwise be unaware. There is no doubt. The Board pronounced him rehabilitated and reinstated him, and the Commission, disagreeing with the Board’s evaluation of Ryan’s danger to the investing public, went ahead and sanctioned him anyway. The amicus brief does not tell us anything we don’t know already. It adds nothing to the already amply proportioned brief of the petitioner.
The bane of lawyers is prolixity and duplication, and for obvious reasons is especially marked in commercial cases with large monetary stakes. In an era of heavy judicial caseloads and public impatience with the delays and expense of litigation, we judges should be assiduous to bar the gates to amicus curiae briefs that fail to present convincing reasons why the parties’ briefs do not give us all the help we need for deciding the appeal.
The motion for clarification is granted, and the denial of the motion for leave to file a brief amicus curiae is reaffirmed.
