Notice of
Appeal Deadlines

Given
that Notice of Appeal deadlines are jurisdictional in the state Courts
of Appeal – if you’re out of time you’re
out luck – it should follow that the deadline would be easy
to calendar. But alas, tis not so.
Most
civil practioners know the basic rule: the Notice must be filed within
60 days after service of notice of entry of the judgment or appealable
order (Rule of Court
8.104(a)). But that only begs the questions: When
was the judgment or order entered? What constitutes notice of
that entry? And what about those extensions of time for
post-judgment motions?
The
fact is that calculating the deadline can be a trap even for the wary.
For example, notice of entry of a judgment is accomplished by either
service of a document entitled “Notice of Entry” or
by service of a file-stamped copy of the judgment itself (Rule of Court
8.104(a) 1, 2). That is, there need not be service
of a formal
“Notice of Entry”. Danger lurks when your office
receives a bare copy of the judgment accompanied by a proof of service
– your clock has begun to tick!
Consider,
for another example, the impact of filing a motion for reconsideration
from an appealable order pursuant to Civ. Pro. §1008.
As long
as that motion is “valid” – that is,
timely and otherwise not facially defective – it will extend
the time for filing a notice of appeal from the underlying order (Rule
of Court 8.108 (d)). But the length of that extension of
time is not
consistent with other extensions provided by similar, post-judgment
motions such as those for new trial.
A
motion for new trial will extend the time for filing a notice of appeal
to the earlier of 30 days after service of a notice of an order denying
the motion or
30 days after denial of the motion by operation of law
(trial courts eventually lose jurisdiction to rule on the motion
– see Civ.
Pro. §§ 660; Rule of Court
8.108(a)). But a trial court may still rule on a
motion for
new trial after a notice of appeal is filed (Varian Medical Systems,
Inc. v. Delfino (2005) 35 Cal.4th 180). Thus an early
notice of appeal
will not prejudice your client’s rights to have the new trial
motion considered.
On the
other hand, a motion for reconsideration of an appealable order extends
the notice of appeal time by 30 days after the clerk or a party serves
notice of an order denying the motion or 90 days after
the date of
filing the motion whether the trial court rules or not (Rule of Court
108(d)). Unlike motions for new trial, there is no
statutory cut-off
for the trial court to rule on a motion for reconsideration. But
here’s the trap: unlike a motion for new trial, the trial
court loses jurisdiction to rule on the motion for reconsideration once
a notice of appeal is filed (Betz
v. Pankow (1993) 16 Cal.App.4th 931).
Thus
it is possible to file a motion for reconsideration from an appealable
order, wait for the court to rule before filing a notice of appeal, but
then be forced to file the notice of appeal as the 90 day deadline
approaches and thereby terminate the trial court’s
jurisdiction to even consider your motion!
What’s
the solution? Wait for the Legislature to make the notice of
appeal deadlines uniform. Until then, when in doubt, call an appellate
specialist for help.

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