OPINION
Donald McGill (Claimant) appeals from the trial court’s judgment sustaining The Boeing Company’s (Employer) Motion to Dismiss Claimant’s appeal of the final award of the Labor and Industrial Relations Commission denying Claimant’s claim for worker’s compensation. Because Claimant’s amended appellate brief (amended brief) fails to comply with the appellate briefing requirements as provided by Rule 84.04 1 , we dismiss the appeal.
Following the trial court’s entry of judgment in favor of Employer, Claimant filed his notice of appeal and appellate brief pro se. 2 Claimant’s brief was handwritten and did not substantially comply with Rule 84.04 or Rule 84.06. This Court sua sponte issued an order describing in detail the deficiencies of Claimant’s brief, directing Claimant to file an amended brief that complied with Rule 84, and notifying Claimant that his failure to do so would result in the dismissal of his appeal. Claimant subsequently filed his amended appellate brief, which was typewritten in accordance with Rule 84.06, but still did not comply, in form or substance, with Rule 84.04.
Employer thereafter filed its motion to strike Claimant’s amended brief or, in the alternative, to dismiss the appeal. Employer’s motion argued that Claimant’s amended brief was deficient in that it failed: to provide a sufficient jurisdictional statement necessary to invoke this Court’s jurisdiction over the case; to provide an adequate or relevant statement of facts with citations to the record on appeal; to contain any “points relied on” setting out
Pro se
appellants are held to the same standards as are attorneys and must comply with the Supreme Court’s rules of procedure.
Gant v. Lou Fusz Motor Co.,
15B S.W.3d 866, 866 (Mo.App. E.D.2004);
Davis v. Coleman,
Rule 84.04 provides the requirements for appellate briefs, and a party’s failure to comply with those requirements constitutes grounds for our dismissal of the appeal.
Gant,
In this case, Claimant’s amended brief fails to comply with Rule 84.04 to such an extent that his appeal is unreviewable. Claimant’s amended brief contains a one-page introduction reciting the steps he took to file his appeal in this Court. Rule 84.04 does not contemplate the inclusion of an introduction such as this. Rather than containing a table of contents and an alphabetized table of authorities, the amended brief contains an “Index of Pages” listing the pages of the brief alongside the titles given to those pages. Claimant’s jurisdictional statement contains no information or reference to the constitutional provisions conferring jurisdiction upon this
Clearly, Claimant’s amended brief fails to comply with Rule 84.04, preserves nothing for our review, and is inadequate to invoke the jurisdiction of this Court.
Gant,
