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A principal brief may not exceed 30 pages, or a reply brief 15 pages, unless it complies with Rule 32(a)(7)(B). (B) Type-volume limitation. uses a monospaced face and contains no more than 1,300 lines of text.
Next Steps After the Appellants Reply Brief All parties who file a brief that the Court of Appeal accepts will have an opportunity to make an oral argument. This is a chance for the parties to talk to the Court of Appeal justices in person and explain the arguments in their briefs.
(c) Length (2) If typewritten, an opening or answering brief on the merits must not exceed 50 pages and a reply brief on the merits must not exceed 30 pages.
The writing and editing is an extremely time-consuming process done in collaboration with the justices, so its a process of weeks and months given the depth of analysis and the back-and-forth that needs to happen in the editing stages. The entire process isnt fast because its not designed to be fast.
A party can ask the court for permission to file brief longer than 50 pages, but such motions are rarely granted. And briefs are usually much shorter, often 20 to 30 pages or less.
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(1) If produced on a computer, an opening or answering brief on the merits must not exceed 14,000 words, including footnotes, and a reply brief on the merits must not exceed 8,400 words, including footnotes.
Typically, about five percent of the Courts decisions are accepted by the Minnesota Supreme Court for further review. The Court reviews appeals in a timely manner. By law, the Court must issue a decision within 90 days of oral arguments.
briefly summarizes the reply argument and. tells the Court of Appeal what relief they are asking for. Basically, this means what the appellant is asking the court to do. For example, the appellant can ask that the order or judgment be reversed, or that a new trial be granted.
The respondents brief argues that the trial courts decision was correct. Even if the trial court made a legal mistake, the respondents brief may argue that the mistake did not impact the judgment. The respondents brief is optional.
The attachments must not be more than a combined total of 10 pages, unless the court grants you permission to break this rule. If you need to file more than 10 pages of attachments, you can ask the Court of Appeal for permission.

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