In Re Arkansas Supreme Court Committe on Civil Practice - Adoption of Revised Rule 4-6 of the Rules of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals of the State of Arkansas ( 2022 )


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  •                                         Cite as 
    2022 Ark. 99
    SUPREME COURT OF ARKANSAS
    Opinion Delivered:   May 12, 2022
    IN RE ARKANSAS SUPREME COURT
    COMMITTEE ON CIVIL PRACTICE –
    ADOPTION OF REVISED RULE 4-6
    OF THE RULES OF THE SUPREME
    COURT AND COURT OF APPEALS
    OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS
    PER CURIAM
    The Supreme Court Committee on Civil Practice recommended amendment to Rule
    4-6 of the Rules of the Supreme Court and Court of Appeals. The recommendation was
    published for comment on January 27, 2022. See In re Arkansas Supreme Court Committee on
    Civil Practice – Recommendations to Revise Rule 4-6 of the Rules of the Supreme Court and Court of
    Appeals of the State of Arkansas, Rule 28 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, and Board of Certified Court
    Reporter Examiners – Recommendation to Revise Section 22 of the Regulations of the Board of Certified
    Court Reporter Examiners, 
    2022 Ark. 14
     (per curiam).
    Today, we adopt and republish the rule as set out below, which shall take effect June 1,
    2022.
    RULE 4-6. AMICI CURIAE BRIEFS.
    (a) Permission required; Scope limited. Briefs of amici curiae may be filed only with
    permission of the court, obtained on motion as provided in this rule. The briefs
    shall be limited to matters in the record on appeal and shall address only the issues
    raised by the parties at the appellate level. No new issues shall be introduced.
    (b) Motion for permission; How and when filed.
    (i) A motion for permission to file an amicus brief shall be filed at any time after
    the filing of the appellee’s brief but no later than the day that the appellant’s reply
    brief is due. It shall not exceed five double-spaced typewritten pages and shall
    not include a memorandum of authorities but shall otherwise comply with Rule
    2-1.
    (ii) The motion shall be accompanied by the proposed amicus brief and shall state
    whether the brief supports the appellant’s or appellee’s position or is neutral.
    (iii) The motion shall specify the nature of the movant’s interest and set forth
    with particularity the reasons why the amicus brief is necessary. The motion shall
    contain the following statement: “The movant has read the briefs of the appellant
    and appellee, and the amicus brief is necessary to address the following issue(s)
    ____________[list issue(s).]”
    (c) Disclosures. A brief filed under this rule shall indicate: (i) whether counsel for
    a party authored the brief in whole or in part, and (ii) whether such counsel or a
    party made a monetary contribution intended to fund the preparation or
    submission of the brief or otherwise collaborated in the preparation or submission
    of the brief. It shall also identify every person or entity, other than the amicus
    curiae, its members, or its counsel, who made such monetary contribution to the
    brief or collaborated in its preparation. These disclosures shall be made in an
    unnumbered footnote on the first page of the argument section of the brief.
    (d) Oral arguments. Attorneys for amici curiae will not be permitted to participate
    in oral arguments.
    (e) Petitions for rehearing. Attorneys for amici curiae will not be permitted to file a
    petition for rehearing or to join in the petition of a party.
    (f) Certificate of Compliance with Administrative Order No. 19, Administrative Order
    No. 21 Sec. 9, and with word-count limitations. Amicus briefs must include a
    statement that the brief complies with (1) Administrative Order No. 19’s
    requirements concerning confidential information; (2) Administrative Order No.
    21, Section 9, which states that briefs shall not contain hyperlinks to external
    papers or websites, and (3) the word-count limitations identified in subsection
    (g) of this Rule. The person preparing the certificate may rely on the word count
    of the word-processing system used to prepare the document. The certificate
    must state the number of words in the document.
    (g) Word-count limitations. Amicus briefs shall be no longer than 5,000 words. The
    cover, the table of contents, the table of authorities, the certificate of service, and
    the certificate of compliance shall not count against this limitation.
    2
    

Document Info

Filed Date: 5/12/2022

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/12/2022