blindey said:
aggiehawg said:
Does the appointment of Gleeson as amicus curiae qualify as a final order to be the basis for an application for a writ of mandamus?
Because I'm not sure the minute order saying Sullivan would in the future entertain any interested party to apply for amicus curiae and set briefing schedules is the kind of order that could be appealed through a writ, since he hadn't actually done it yet.
Confusing as hell.
Candidly, I haven't done much mandamus work in federal court because I'm almost always just in scumbag (BK) court. In the BK court (at least in S.D. Tex.) the judges understand the necessity of timeliness and the fluidity of most cases so they'll issue an order with an explicit statement that it is appealable (and often for complex, novel, or important issues, they'll invite the parties to appeal and will craft a mechanism for keeping the BK case moving while the legal issue gets sorted out). So mandamus is not really in my wheelhouse.
That said, I think you raise both minute entries in your mandamus application. But someone with a lot more federal appellate experience than me should weigh in.
I didn't do much federal appellate work either, mostly state appellate work and even that was rare. I wrote a lot of briefs when I was a law clerk but those were on substantive issues of law and not appellate procedures.
Your supposition that a law clerk came up with the amicus idea and they ran with it without thinking it through. What has happened since is an attempt at damage control and a poor one at that because all Sullivan really had to do was rescind that minute order inviting the briefs.
As Andy McCarthy said recently, a
good judge (my emphasis) doesn't throw his hands up and declare I don't know what to do-----help! as Sullivan did.