Plaintiffs, several unmarried residents of the State of Utah, brought this action to challenge the state’s laws against fornication and sodomy as engaged in by unmarried heterosexual adults. The district court dismissed the case on summary judgment, determining that plaintiffs lacked standing and their claims were unripe. We dismiss this appeal on other grounds. Because plaintiffs used pseudonyms without first obtaining permission from the district court, the case was improperly filed and must be dismissed for lack of appellate jurisdiction.
“Proceeding under a pseudonym in federal courts is, by all accounts, ‘an unusual procedure.’ ”
Femedeer v. Haun,
When a party wishes to file a case anonymously or under a pseudonym, it must first petition the district court for permission to do so.
Nat’l Commodity & Barter Ass’n,
In this case, plaintiffs failed to request permission from the district court before proceeding anonymously. At our request, two plaintiffs filed sealed affidavits giving their true names to this court. They also secured an order by the original magistrate judge granting leave to proceed using pseudonyms, filed after the start of this appeal but dated nunc pro tunc to the filing of the action. Those acts cannot cure the failure to secure permission at filing. We raised this issue sua sponte because the defect affects our fundamental jurisdiction to hear the appeal. See id. at 1245 n. 3.
A lack of jurisdiction cannot be corrected by an order
nunc pro tunc. Central Laborers’ Pension, Welfare & Annuity Funds v. Griffee,
In sum, the district court was without jurisdiction while this appeal was pending to grant nunc pro tunc plaintiffs’ motion to use pseudonyms. Because the district court never had jurisdiction over the plaintiffs when it granted defendants’ motion for summary judgment, we have no authority to consider an appeal of that decision. Accordingly, plaintiffs’ appeal is DISMISSED.
Notes
. A district court may, however, consider a Rule 60(b) motion and deny it on its merits without remand by the Court of Appeals.
Aldrich,
