Tоny P. Campos, pro se, seeks to appeal from a judgment of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York, Edward R. Korman, Judge, denying his petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2254. The clerk of the district court entered the judgment on May 6, 1986. On June 16, 1986, Campos mistakenly sent a notice of appeal to the court of appeals, which was then forwarded to the district court where it was filed on July 1, 1986. Campos also filed a request for a certificate of probable cause with the district court on July 1, 1986; this request was denied on July 3, 1986. He now asks us to grant a certificate of probable cause so that hе may appeal the denial of his habeas petition. We write here to address the issue of our jurisdiction over this appeal in view of the fact that Campos’s appeal was plainly untimely as not having been filed within the thirty days initially allowed by Fed.R. App.P. 4(a)(1), though it was filed within an additional thirty days thereafter.
Under
Stirling v. Chemical Bank,
Four years after our decision in Stirling, however, the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure were amended. Fed.R.App.P. 4(a)(5) now reads:
The district court, upon a showing of excusable neglect or good cause, may extend the time for filing a notice of appeal upon motion filed not later than 30 days after the expiration of the time prescribed by this Rule 4(a). Any such motion which is filed before expiration of the prescribed time may be ex parte unless the court otherwise requires. Notice of any such motion which is filed after expiration of the prescribed time shall be given to the other parties in accordance with local rules. No such extension shall exceed 30 days past such prescribed time or 10 days from the date of entry of the order granting the motiоn, whichever occurs later.
All the other circuits construe this provision of Rule 4 literally as requiring the filing of a motion for extension of time and precluding a court from treating a tardy notice of appeal as the “substantial equivalent” of such a motion.
See Wyzik v. Employee Benefit Plan of Crane Co.,
When a Fourth Circuit panel first addressed this issue in
Shah v. Hutto,
Upon en banc review, however, the Fourth Circuit reversed the panel’s holding in
Shah
and held that the 1979 Amendment required that “a motion to extend the time must be filed no later than thirty days after the expiration of the original appeal period in order for a court of appeals to have jurisdiction over the appeal.”
Shah v. Hutto,
There was, however, a strong dissent in the en banc case, written by Senior Circuit Judge Haynsworth and joined in by Chief Judge Winter and Judges Murnaghan and Ervin. The dissenters point out that the substantive changes in Rule 4(a)(5) effected by the 1979 amendment are not relevant to the question whether a belated notice of appeal may be treated as a motion for extension of time. Rather, they say, the amendment’s principal concern was the problem presented in
In re Orbitec Corp.,
If the en banc majority in
Shah
and the First, Third, Fifth, Sixth, Seventh, Eighth, Ninth, Tenth, and Eleventh Circuits are correct, then our decision in
Stirling
should be overruled. This is true despite the fact that in
Fearon v. Henderson,
A quick review of the history of the rules pertaining to appeals to the courts of appeals from the district courts takes us back first to the decision in
Hill v. Hawes,
In 1966, former Rule 73(a) was again amended to eliminate the reference to the “failure of a party to learn оf the entry of the judgment” and to give the district court greater power to extend the appeal time for no more than thirty days simply “upon the showing of excusable neglect.” See Wright, Miller, Cooper & Gressman, 16 Federal Practice and Procedure § 3950 at 366 & n. 13 (1977). While the showing to be made under the rule came to be a “fairly strict standard,” id. at 366, in Stirling we followed the lead of the Fourth and Sixth Circuits to find that filing a notiсe of appeal within the thirty-day extension period was the equivalent, or could be treated as the equivalent, of filing a motion for extension of time in the district court. By the time of Stirling, of course, the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure had been adopted (as of July 1, 1968), and Rule 4 simply echoеd the text of the old Fed.R. Civ.P. 73. In any case, Rule 4 provided that the thirty-day extension “may be granted before or after the time otherwise prescribed by this subdivision has expired; but if a request for an extension is made after such time has expired, it shall be made by motion with such notice as the court shall deem approрriate.” Thus, Rule 4 itself, even when construed flexibly (or permissively, as some say), as it was in Stirling, clearly provided that a request for an extension made after time had expired was to be made by motion, though the rule did not expressly prevent us from treating a tardy notice as a “motion” for extension.
It is at least arguable that the 1979 amendments to Rule 4 were not intended to modify the permissive view of the rule. Indeed, the notes of the Advisory Committee do not cite Stirling and the cases on which it relied or other cases following it, let alone allude to the problem whether a notice of appeal may be treated as a motion to the district court. On the other hand, Rule 4(a)(5) now quite plainly spells out that an extension of time shall be made “upon motion filed not later than 30 days” after expiration of the initial thirty-day appeal period and, in referring to motions filed before expiration of the prescribed time, permits them tо be ex parte unless the court otherwise requires. As the other circuits have held, the language of the current rule suggests that there is only one way to obtain an extension of time, and that is to file a motion above and beyond the notice of appeal. Two sentences in the Advisory Committee notes on amended Rule '4(a)(5) clearly support this interpretation:
Under the present rule there is a possible implication that prior to the time the initial appeal time has run, the district court may extend the time on the basis of an informal application. The amendment would require that the applicatiоn must be made by motion, though the motion may be made ex parte.
Still, to construe the rule literally as the other circuits have done may be Draconian in some cases. As we deal more and more frequently with pro se appeals and laymen unfamiliar with the intricacies of federal civil procedure, let alone the rules of appellate practice, we suspect that there will be more cases of this nature rather than fewer. Our
Fearon v. Henderson,
for example, was a pro se case where an inflexible reading of Rule 4 would certainly have been Draconian.
See
In the end, however, we feel constrained — in the interests of national uniformity and the avoidance of a cоnflict requiring or at least calling for action by the United States Supreme Court, which has other more momentous issues to determine — to follow the other circuits which now unanimously, even with dissent, favor the literal construction of the amended *676 rule. The Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure were adoрted largely because it was thought to be in the public interest that uniformity of such procedure be achieved. See 16 Wright, Miller, Cooper & Gressman, supra, § 3945; see also Carrington, Crowded Dockets and the Courts of Appeals: The Threat to the Function of Review and the National Law, 82 Harv.L. Rev. 542, 551-53 (1969). Thus, we hold that Stirling v. Chemical Bank and Fearon v. Henderson are overruled. 1
In so doing, however, we note one fact and follow other circuits in making two other pоints for the protection of litigants, especially those appearing pro se.
First, while a “motion” is required by the rule to request an extension of time, no particular form of words is necessary to render a filing a “motion.” Any submission signed by a party that may fairly be read as a request to the district court to exerсise its discretionary powers to permit a late appeal should suffice. See Fed.R. Civ.P. 10 & 11.
Second, following the lead of the Eighth Circuit in
Campbell v. White,
Third, in light of the long adherence to our prior practice and the need for district courts to establish the necessary procedures, our new practice of dismissing untimely appeals where no motion for extension of time has beеn filed shall not take effect until thirty-one days after the filing of this opinion. The Fifth Circuit similarly gave its decision prospective effect in
Sanchez v. Board of Regents of Texas Southern University,
On the merits, the application for a certificate of probable cause is denied.
Notes
. This opinion was circulated among all the active and senior members of this court, none of whom has requested a rehearing en banc.
