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C.D., Father, Appellant. v. << (2021)

Court of Appeals of Iowa.2021-10-20No. No. 21-0070

Summary

Holding. The appeal is dismissed due to the untimely filing of the petition on appeal, as the father failed to meet the jurisdictional deadline and presented no extenuating circumstances warranting a delayed appeal.

A father appealed a juvenile court order terminating his parental rights to his two children. He filed his notice of appeal on time, but submitted his petition on appeal thirty-two seconds after midnight on the deadline date due to technical difficulties with the electronic filing system. The father's attorney had completed the petition by 9:30 p.m. on the deadline but encountered system problems that prevented timely submission.

The court acknowledged that under a prior decision, delayed appeals may be permitted in parental-rights termination cases when three conditions are met: the parent clearly intended to appeal, the delay was outside the parent's control, and the delay is negligible. Although these conditions appeared satisfied here, the court found two reasons to deny relief. First, the state's electronic filing rules explicitly warn against last-minute filings and state that technical difficulties do not excuse missed jurisdictional deadlines. Second, the prior decision permitting delayed appeals required extenuating circumstances beyond the parties' control, such as those presented during the COVID-19 pandemic. The routine scenario of an attorney waiting until the final hours to file and encountering predictable technology problems does not qualify as extenuating.

Summary generated by law.co from the public-domain opinion. The opinion text itself is public domain.

Key issues

  • Whether technical difficulties with electronic filing system excuse missed jurisdictional deadline
  • Whether a thirty-two-second delay qualifies as negligible for purposes of delayed appeal
  • What circumstances are extenuating enough to justify delayed appeal in parental-rights termination case
  • Whether last-minute electronic filings with predictable technology risks merit equitable relief

Procedural posture

A father appealed a termination-of-parental-rights order after filing his petition on appeal thirty-two seconds past the jurisdictional deadline.

Authorities cited

No cited authorities resolved to law.co cases yet.

Opinion

This case highlights the pitfalls of waiting until the last moment to meet a deadline. It involves a father appealing the juvenile courts order terminating his parental rights to his eight- and seven-year-old children.

1

Due to a missed filing deadline, we lack jurisdiction to hear the appeal and are required to dismiss it.

The details and timeline of the missed deadline are not disputed. The juvenile court issued its order terminating the fathers parental rights on January 4, 2021. The father filed timely notice of appeal on January 17, 2021. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.101(1)(a) (requiring notice of appeal from an order terminating parental rights to “be filed within fifteen days after the filing of the order”). The filing of the notice of appeal triggered a fifteen-day deadline for the father to file his petition on appeal. Iowa R. App. P. 6.201(1)(b). If the deadline for filing the petition on appeal is not met, the appeal must be dismissed. Iowa R. App. P. 6.201(3).

As the notice of appeal was filed on January 17, the fathers deadline for filing his petition on appeal was February 1. The father filed his petition thirty-two seconds after midnight on February 2. When the late filing was discovered, the supreme court ordered the father to submit a statement explaining why the appeal should not be dismissed. The fathers attorney filed such a statement, asserting that the petition was completed by 9:30 p.m. on February 1, but the attorneys staff member experienced technical difficulties with the electronic document management system (EDMS) that prevented the document from being filed until thirty-two seconds after midnight on February 2. The supreme court ordered that the issue of whether the appeal should be dismissed because of untimely filing be decided with the appeal.

Before our supreme courts decision in In re A.B., 957 N.W.2d 280 (Iowa 2021), the untimely filing of the petition on appeal would have ended the discussion. See Iowa R. App. P. 6.201(3); see also Root v. Toney, 841 N.W.2d 83, 87 (Iowa 2013) (noting our appellate “rules relating to time for appeal are mandatory and jurisdictional” (quoting In re Marriage of Mantz, 266 N.W.2d 758, 759 (Iowa 1978))). However, A.B. has added a wrinkle. Despite the express strictness of the rule, in A.B. our supreme court authorized granting a delayed appeal to give our appellate courts jurisdiction in some termination-of-parental-rights cases even when there is an untimely filing. 957 N.W.2d at 292. A delayed appeal is permitted “only where the parent clearly intended to appeal,” “the failure to timely perfect the appeal was outside the parents control,” and “the resulting delay is no more than negligible.” Id.

Here, it appears the three requirements set forth in A.B. are met, as the father clearly intended to appeal, the untimely filing of the petition was outside the fathers control, and the thirty-two-second delay is negligible. As a result, a case can be made for allowing a delayed appeal in this case. However, two cautions lead us to conclude a delayed appeal is not warranted in this case.

The first caution comes from the Iowa Rules of Electronic Procedure. Those rules state that “[a] partys technical difficulty or the unavailability of EDMS does not excuse a party from complying with a jurisdictional deadline.” Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.309(2)(a). If the express language of the rule were not enough to quell any notion that a delayed appeal is permitted in this situation, the comment to the rule is even more direct in warning against last-minute filings:

Electronic filing enables the filing of documents outside of normal business hours. A document filed before midnight on the date the filing is due is considered timely filed. Filers are cautioned, however, not to wait until the last moment to file documents electronically as EDMS may not always be available. Just as a jurisdictional deadline cannot be extended for a filer, who—due to vehicle or traffic problems, for example—arrives at the courthouse moments after the clerk of court office has closed, jurisdictional deadlines cannot be extended for the filer who encounters system or other technical difficulties between the time of close of business and a midnight filing deadline.

Iowa R. Elec. P. 16.309 cmt. (emphasis added). The situation cautioned against in the rule and its comment is exactly what happened here. The filer waited until the last moment—between the close of business and a midnight filing deadline—to attempt to electronically file a document to meet a jurisdictional deadline. EDMS was purportedly unavailable, so the deadline was missed. By the plain language of rule 16.309(2)(a), any technical difficulties experienced by the father do not excuse him from complying with the jurisdictional deadline.

The second caution is found in A.B. itself. In A.B., the court recognized the availability of a delayed appeal in a termination-of-parental-rights case when the petition on appeal was filed two days after the deadline. 957 N.W.2d at 289. The late filing resulted from the parents counsels failure to calendar properly the deadline “due to required quarantining and working from home after her daughter tested positive for COVID-19.” Id. at 293. In recognizing and granting the delayed appeal, however, the supreme court cautioned that attorney errors would not necessarily warrant a delayed appeal because doing so “would effectively write our ‘no extensions’ provision out of the rules, which we have no intention of doing.” Id. n.4 (emphasis added). The supreme court then explained that it was granting the delayed appeal because of the extenuating circumstances in the case that “involv[ed] the heightened quarantining practices required by the coronavirus” at the time, which was when Iowa was experiencing “some of its highest transmission rates, hospitalizations, and deaths.” Id.

We interpret the holding in A.B. as imposing an extenuating-circumstances requirement together with the aforementioned requirements of intent to appeal, no fault of the parent, and negligible delay. In A.B., those extenuating circumstances existed because of an unprecedented global pandemic with resulting disruption and risk caused by spikes in infection rates when the attorneys mistake was made. See id. We do not mean to suggest that only COVID-related excuses will suffice, but A.B. makes it clear the circumstances must be extenuating to some degree.

Here, we have no such extenuating circumstances. Instead, we have fairly predictable and foreseeable circumstances of an attorney waiting until the last moment to meet a jurisdictional filing deadline and running into technology problems. The fact that this scenario is used as an example in our rules of electronic procedure as an occurrence that does not excuse a late filing demonstrates how this is not an extenuating circumstance.

We are mindful of the fact that the delay here—a mere thirty-two seconds—is the epitome of a negligible delay. However, if we were to grant a delayed appeal on that basis alone, without the showing of extenuating circumstances found in A.B., it would naturally lead to a need to figure out where to draw the line in future cases with no extenuating circumstances. Is an hour too long? A day? A week? Our rules of appellate procedure have already drawn that line. It is fifteen days after filing of the notice of appeal. The father here neither met the deadline nor showed the extenuating circumstances required by A.B. We will not blur the line drawn by our rules by granting a delayed appeal under these less-than-extenuating circumstances.

There being no basis for granting a delayed appeal, the late filing of the fathers petition deprives of us jurisdiction to decide his appeal on the merits.

APPEAL DISMISSED.

FOOTNOTES

1

.   The juvenile court also terminated the parental rights of the childrens mother. She does not appeal.

AHLERS, Judge.