Plаintiff-Appellant Neal Kirkpatrick, a Florida resident, filed this pro se civil rights action against then Chief Justice Leander Shaw, of the Florida Supreme Court, and John Moore, executive director of the Florida Board of Bar Examiners (“FBBE”). Kirkpatrick has alleged numerous constitutional deficiencies in Florida’s bar admissions system.
Kirkpatrick was admitted to praсtice law in Oklahoma in 1956 and New York in 1959. He moved to Florida in 1978, but did not practice law there. In 1989, he applied for admission to the Florida bar, and he passed the Florida bar exаm.
The FBBE’s character investigation revealed certain facts adverse to Kirkpatrick’s application for admission to the bar. Pend *102 ing a more extensive FBBE investigation, Kirkpatrick filed this complaint in federal district court. He complained that the FBBE requirements for attorneys who had been previously admitted in other jurisdictions were unduly burdensome, and unсonstitutionally violated freedom of speech, full faith and credit between states, the Commerce Clause, the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses, and the Privileges and Immunities Clause.
During the pendency of this lawsuit, the FBBE granted Kirkpatrick a hearing, and determined that he lied on his bar application and omitted information about past unethical сonduct. On December 31, 1991, the FBBE recommended that the Florida Supreme Court deny Kirkpatrick’s application for admission to the bar, and the Court adopted the recommеndation. Kirkpatrick raised constitutional objections in petitions for review before the Florida Supreme Court and the United States Supreme Court. The Florida Supreme Court denied Kirkpatrick’s petition for review on November 17, 1992, and the U.S. Supreme Court denied certiora-ri on April 19, 1993.
The district court reviewed Kirkpatrick’s constitutional claims and granted thе defendants’ motion for summary judgment on October 20, 1993. Kirkpatrick filed a notice of appeal on November 12,1993. On February 10,1994, the district court awarded attorneys’ fees against Kirkpаtrick. 1
The district court correctly determined that it had subject matter jurisdiction only over Kirkpatrick’s facial challenge to the constitutionality of Florida’s general rules and procedures governing admission to the bar (the “Florida Bar Rules”). Federal district courts lack jurisdiction over claims, “based on constitutional or other grounds, that a state court’s judiсial decision in a particular case has resulted in the unlawful denial of admission to a particular bar applicant.”
Berman v. Florida Bd. of Bar Examiners,
The district court proceeded to address Kirkpatrick’s objections tо the facial validity of the Florida Bar Rules. The court correctly rejected all of Kirkpatrick’s arguments.
(a) Full Faith and Credit
Kirkpatrick argues that his admission to practice law in Oklahoma аnd New York is a state court judgment that must be accorded full faith and credit in the courts of Florida.
See U.S. Const,
art. IV, § 1. However, Kirkpatrick’s admission in Oklahoma and New York qualified him to practicе law only in those states, not in Florida. The district court correctly held that admission to practice in another state does not entitle an applicant to automatiс admission to the Florida bar.
See O’Neal v. Thompson,
(b) Privileges and Immunities
Kirkpatrick argues that the Privileges and Immunities Clause (of Article IV) prevents states from interfering with the “fundamental right” to practice law. Kirkpatrick fails to state a claim under this constitutional provision, because the Florida Bar Rules do not discriminate on the basis of out-of-state residency.
See Supreme Court of Virginia v. Friedman,
(c) Commerce Clause
Kirkpatrick also alleges that the Florida Bar Rules violate the negative implications of the Commerce Clause because they have a protectionist purpose (i.e., to prevent out-of-state attorneys from practicing law in Florida) and/or because the rules impose an undue burden оn interstate commerce. Kirkpatrick has failed to demonstrate that the Florida Bar Rules discriminate against interstate commerce, either facially or in practiсal effect.
See Brown-Forman Distillers Corp. v. New York Liquor Authority,
(d) Due Process and Equal Protection
Kirkpatrick argues that the FBBE’s character review process is unduly lengthy, burdensome and irrelevant, and that the bar’s character requirements are unconstitutionally vague and subjective. Kirkрatrick also argues that the Rules violate equal protection because out-of-state lawyers, as a class, are subject to more stringent standards for seeking a Flоrida license than other out-of-state professionals, such as physicians and architects.
The right to practice law is not a fundamental right and therefore rational basis review is the appropriate standard for classifications affecting applicants for admission to the bar.
See Jones v. Board of Commissioners of Alabama State Bar,
*104 (e) First Amendment Freedom of Speech
The Supreme Court has recognized that attorneys have a protected right to commercial speech under the First Amendment.
See, e.g., Bates v. State Bar of Arizona,
For the foregoing reasons, Plaintiff-Appellant has failed to demonstrаte that the Florida Bar Rules violate the United States Constitution.
AFFIRMED. 4
Notes
. Plaintiff-Appellant failed to file a separate notice of appeal from the order awarding attorneys’ fees. Because Plaintiff-Appellant’s brief was not filed within the time specified by Fed.R.App.P. 4, it is ineffective as a notice of appeal. Therefore, because the requirements of Fed.R.App.P. 3 are jurisdictional in nature, appellate review of the award of attorneys’ fees is inappropriate.
See Smith v. Barry,
. Plaintiff-Appellant has movеd the Court to supplement the record with a transcript of his hearing before the FBBE. Because this Court lacks subject matter jurisdiction over the merits of the Florida Supreme Court's denial of his admission, this motion is denied as moot.
. The plaintiff’s argument that the Florida Bar Rules impair his fundamental right to travel is also without merit.
. Plaintiff-Appellant's request for oral argument is denied.
