N.Y. Comp. Codes R. & Regs. tit. 22, § 1250.8
(1) a table of contents, which shall include:
(8) in the First and Second Judicial Departments, in any civil cause permitted to be heard on the original record, the appellant’s brief shall include:
(iii) a copy of the notice of appeal or order transferring the proceeding to this court.
(c) Respondent’s brief.
The respondent’s brief shall conform to the requirements of subdivision (b) of this section, except that a counterstatement of the questions involved or a counterstatement of the nature and facts of the case shall be included only if the respondent disagrees with the statement of the appellant.
(d) Reply brief.
Any reply brief of the appellant or cross appellant shall conform to the requirements of subdivision (b) of this section, without repetition. An appellant’s reply in a cross appeal shall include the points of argument in response to the cross appeal.
(e) Sur-reply brief.
Absent leave of the court, sur-reply briefs shall not be permitted.
(f) Computer-generated briefs.
(1) Briefs prepared on a computer shall be printed in either a serifed, proportionally spaced typeface such as Times Roman, or a serifed, monospaced typeface such as Courier. Narrow or condensed typefaces and/or condensed font spacing may not be used. Except in headings and in quotations of language that appears in such type in the original source, words may not be in bold type or type consisting of all capital letters.
(2) Computer-generated appellants' and respondents' briefs shall not exceed 14,000 words, and reply and amicus curiae briefs shall not exceed 7,000 words, inclusive of point headings and footnotes and exclusive of signature blocks and pages including the table of contents, table of citations, proof of service, certificate of compliance, or any addendum authorized pursuant to subdivision (k) of this section.
(g) Typewritten briefs.
(2) Typewritten appellants' and respondents' briefs shall not exceed 50 pages and reply briefs and amicus curiae briefs shall not exceed 25 pages, exclusive of pages containing the table of contents, table of citations, proof of service, certificate of compliance, or any addendum authorized pursuant to subdivision (k) of this section.
(h) Margins, line spacing and page numbering of computer-generated and typewritten briefs.
Computer-generated and typewritten briefs shall have margins of one inch on all sides of the page. Text shall be double-spaced, but quotations more than two lines long may be indented and single-spaced. Headings and footnotes may be single-spaced. Pages shall be numbered consecutively.
(i) Handwritten briefs.
(2) Handwritten appellants' and respondents' briefs shall not exceed 50 pages and reply briefs and amicus curiae briefs shall not exceed 25 pages, exclusive of pages containing the table of contents, table of citations, proof of service, certificate of compliance or any addendum authorized pursuant to subdivision (k) of this section. Pages shall be numbered consecutively. The submission of handwritten briefs is not encouraged. If illegible, handwritten briefs may be rejected for filing by the clerk.
(j) Printing specifications statement.
Every brief, except those that are handwritten, shall have at the end thereof a printing specifications statement, stating that the brief was prepared either on a typewriter, a computer or by some other specified means. If the brief was typewritten, the statement shall further specify the size and pitch of the type and the line spacing used. If the brief was prepared on a computer, the statement shall further specify the name of the typeface, point size, line spacing and word count. A party preparing the statement may rely on the word count of the processing system used to prepare the brief. The signing of the brief in accordance with section 130-1.1a(a) of this Title shall also be deemed the signer’s representation of the accuracy of the statement.
(a) Cover.
The cover shall set forth the title of the action or proceeding. The upper right-hand section shall contain a notation stating: whether the cause is to be argued or submitted; if it is to be argued, the time actually required for the argument; and the name of the attorney who will argue. The lower right-hand section shall contain the name, address, telephone number and email address of the attorney filing the brief and shall indicate whom the attorney represents.
(b) Appellant’s brief.
The appellant’s brief shall include, in the following order: