Montana Motion to Dismiss Appeal - Not Within Jurisdiction of Court

State:
Multi-State
Control #:
US-03192BG
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Word; 
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Description

Motions in any Federal Court of Appeals are generally covered by Rule 27 of the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure. A motion must state with particularity the grounds for the motion, the relief sought, and the legal argument necessary to support it along with accompanying documents like supporting affidavits. A motion, response, or reply may be reproduced by any process that yields a clear black image on light paper. The paper must be opaque and unglazed. Only one side of the paper may be used.


The document must be bound in any manner that is secure, does not obscure the text, and permits the document to lie reasonably flat when open. The document must be on 81D2 by 11 inch paper. The text must be double spaced, but quotations more than two lines long may be indented and single-spaced. Headings and footnotes may be single-spaced. Margins must be at least one inch on all four sides. Page numbers may be placed in the margins, but no text may appear there. The document must comply with the typeface requirements of Rule 32(a)(5) and the type-style requirements of Rule 32(a)(6).


A motion or a response to a motion must not exceed 20 pages, exclusive of the corporate disclosure statement and accompanying documents authorized by Rule 27(a)(2)(B), unless the court permits or directs otherwise. A reply to a response must not exceed 10 pages. An original and 3 copies must be filed unless the court requires a different number by local rule or by order in a particular case.

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FAQ

Rule 7. Pleadings allowed. In justice or city court there may be a complaint, answer, counterclaim, and reply to a counterclaim. No other pleadings are allowed, except that the court may order a reply to an answer.

(4) Acquisition of Jurisdiction. A court of this state may acquire personal jurisdiction over any person through service of process as provided in this rule or by statute, or by voluntary general appearance in an action by any person either personally or through an attorney or any other authorized person.

Rule 6. Application of these rules. (1) What a court may review upon appeal from a judgment. A party may appeal from a final judgment in an action or special proceeding and from those final orders specified in sections (2), (3), and (4) of this rule.

(4) Content of notice of appeal or cross-appeal. (a) The notice of appeal or cross-appeal shall specify the party or parties taking the appeal or cross-appeal, and shall designate the final judgment or order or part thereof from which the appeal is taken.

In Montana, district court cases may be appealed to the Montana Supreme Court, which is the highest court in Montana and the final court of appeals. For city and justice court decisions, appeals may be made to district court.

Any paper after the complaint that is required to be served -- together with a certificate of service -- must be filed within a reasonable time after service.

Unlike the procedure in New York state courts, under the federal rules of civil procedure, the denial of a motion to dismiss does not qualify as a ?final decision? and thus there is no appeal as of right, and discretionary appeals almost always fall outside the scope of 28 U.S.C. §1292(b).

The first party to file is called the petitioner or appellant, and its request for review is an appeal. If an opposing party (called the respondent or appellee) also wishes to request review of a lower court's decision, that request is called a cross-appeal.

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Montana Motion to Dismiss Appeal - Not Within Jurisdiction of Court