On September 26, 1986, the National Labor Relations Board denied Sonicraft’s request for an award of attorney’s fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act, 5 U.S.C. § 504. On October 30 the clerk of this court received by mail Sonicraft’s petition to review the Board’s denial; the letter containing the petition was postmarked October 27. The Act provides that a party who is dissatisfied with an agency’s ruling on a request for fees under the Act “may, within 30 days after the determination is made, appeal the determination to the court of the United States having jurisdiction to review the merits of the underlying decision.” 5 U.S.C. § 504(c)(2). Citing this provision, the Board has moved to dismiss Sonicraft’s petition as untimely. Sonicraft replies that the date of mailing is the date of appeal, and that it relied on advice received from a staff attorney at this court, who told its counsel that a petition mailed within 30 days would be timely.
A notice of appeal or petition for review is filed when received, not when sent.
City of Chicago v. U.S. Dept. of Labor,
The Board’s rule adding three days to the deadline for filings that are mailed, 29 C.F.R. § 102.114, can’t help Sonicraft, and not only because an agency cannot enlarge our jurisdiction to review its orders (nor, for that matter, can we). The rule by its terms applies only if the deadline runs from the receipt by the party of the decision that he wants to challenge; *387 here the deadline runs from “the determination” itself. 5 U.S.C. § 504(c)(2).
As for the misleading advice that Sonicraft allegedly received from a staff attorney of this court: We have not tried to determine the truth of the allegation, because it is irrelevant as we are about to see, but shall merely note that Sonicraft’s counsel apparently spoke to an employee of the clerk’s office who was not an attorney, rather than to a member of the court’s legal staff. Whether or not there was misleading advice and whether or not it came from a staff attorney, it cannot extend the deadline for filing the petition for review. The deadline, as we said, is jurisdictional, meaning we can’t waive it; if we can’t, neither can the court’s nonjudicial personnel. The oft-cited case of
Thompson v. Immigration & Naturalization Service,
Appeal Dismissed.
