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DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA COURT OF APPEALS
No. 20-FM-2
DWIGHT G. DELOATCH, APPELLANT,
V.
ROBIN SESSOMS-DELOATCH, APPELLEE,
and
No. 20-CO-119
MARCELO F. PEREZ, APPELLANT,
V.
UNITED STATES, APPELLEE.
Appeals from the Superior Court
of the District of Columbia
(DRB-2086-14 & CF1-23123-09)
(Hon. Peter A. Krauthamer, Trial Judge)
(Hon. William M. Jackson, Trial Judge)
(Decided June 18, 2020)
Before EASTERLY and DEAHL, Associate Judges, and NEBEKER, Senior Judge.
2
DEAHL, Associate Judge: We have consolidated these appeals because they
share dispositive issues. In each case, a notice of appeal was filed several years late,
forcing us to confront whether the time prescriptions for noting appeals in D.C. App.
R. 4 (“Rule 4”) are jurisdictional. Because we hold that Rule 4’s time limits are non-
jurisdictional, we must further address if and when it is appropriate for us to
proactively dismiss an appeal as untimely where the appellees have raised no such
objection.
The Supreme Court has made clear in recent years that time limits codified
only in court-made rules—such as Rule 4(a) (governing civil appeals, like the appeal
filed by Dwight Deloatch) and Rule 4(b) (governing criminal appeals, like the appeal
filed by Marcelo Perez)—are non-jurisdictional “claim-processing” prescriptions.
Kontrick v. Ryan, 540 U.S. 443, 454 (2004); Hamer v. Neighborhood Hous. Servs.
of Chi., 138 S. Ct. 13, 17 (2017). This straightforward rule, that courts cannot divest
themselves of statutorily conferred jurisdiction, compels the conclusion that Rule
4(a) and 4(b)’s time limitations are non-jurisdictional so that they may be “subject
to forfeiture if not properly raised by the appellee.” Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 16. Our
past precedents to the contrary—e.g., Frain v. District of Columbia, 572 A.2d 447,
449 (D.C. 1990) (Rule 4(a) “time limit is mandatory and jurisdictional”); McKnight
v. United States, 764 A.2d 240, 241 (D.C. 2000) (Rule 4(b) time limits “are both
3
mandatory and jurisdictional”)—are irreconcilable with intervening Supreme Court
precedent and are no longer good law.
It follows that in the normal case, it falls first to appellees to raise any
argument that a notice of appeal is untimely under Rule 4. The present appeals are
not normal cases, however, as each appellant filed a notice of appeal several years
out of time. This court retains some discretion to enforce claim-processing rules sua
sponte. Given the substantial delays here, we exercise that discretion and dismiss
both of these appeals as untimely. See, e.g., United States v. Gaytan-Garza, 652
F.3d 680, 681 (6th Cir. 2011) (sua sponte dismissing untimely appeal because, while
defect was non-jurisdictional, dismissal was “appropriate” where notice of appeal
was “over four years late”); United States v. Oliver, 878 F.3d 120, 122 (4th Cir.
2017) (“We conclude that this Court has the authority to dismiss untimely criminal
appeals sua sponte but that it should exercise that authority only in extraordinary
circumstances.”); United States v. Mitchell, 518 F.3d 740, 751 (10th Cir. 2008)
(declining to dismiss sua sponte appeal that was filed one day late).
I.
In the first consolidated case, the trial court issued a judgment of absolute
divorce settling various claims between Dwight G. Deloatch and his former wife,
4
Robin Sessoms-Deloatch, in May 2015. It then denied Mr. Deloatch’s motion to
vacate the judgment on March 30, 2016. In January 2020, Mr. Deloatch noted an
appeal from the underlying judgment. This court issued an order directing him to
show cause why the appeal should not be dismissed as untimely where it was filed
nearly four years after the time permitted by Rules 4(a)(1) and 4(a)(4)(A)(iii). See
Rule 4(a)(1) (“The notice of appeal in a civil case must be filed . . . within 30 days
after entry of the judgment or order from which the appeal is taken . . . .”); Rule
4(a)(4)(A)(iii) (“the time to file an appeal runs” from denial of motion “to vacate”
the judgment). Mr. Deloatch failed to respond.
In the second case, Mr. Perez pled guilty to first-degree child sexual abuse,
and a judgment was entered in November 2011. He moved to withdraw his guilty
plea, but on August 31, 2012, the trial court denied that motion because Mr. Perez
expressly abandoned it. Mr. Perez noted an appeal from that decision in February
2020, making his appeal more than seven years out-of-time under the applicable
Rule 4(b). See Rule 4(b)(1) (“A notice of appeal in a criminal case must be filed
with the Clerk of the Superior Court within 30 days after entry of the judgment or
order from which the appeal is taken . . . .”). This court issued an order to show
cause why the appeal should not be dismissed as untimely. Mr. Perez responded
but, suffice it to say, he offered no adequate explanation for waiting seven-plus years
5
to raise a challenge to the August 2012 denial of his motion to withdraw his guilty
plea.1
II.
We first determine whether we have jurisdiction to entertain these appeals.
See Murphy v. McCloud, 650 A.2d 202, 203 n.4 (D.C. 1994) (“[W]here a substantial
question exists as to this court’s subject matter jurisdiction, it is our obligation to
raise it, sua sponte . . . .”). Under Rule 4(a), an appeal in a civil case must generally
be filed within thirty days of the challenged judgment’s entry. The same thirty-day
deadline applies to appeals from criminal cases under Rule 4(b).2 The appeal is thus
nearly four years late in Mr. Deloatch’s case, and more than seven years late in Mr.
Perez’s case.
Mr. Perez’s response makes clear that he is not challenging the August 2012
1
ruling regarding his claim that counsel failed to investigate his case, but instead
wants to press a separate claim never ruled upon by the trial court, namely that he
directed his counsel to file a notice of appeal and that counsel failed to do so. See
generally Garza v. Idaho, 139 S. Ct. 738 (2019). Whatever the merits of that claim,
we cannot review it in the first instance. Washington v. United States, 834 A.2d 899,
906 n.16 (D.C. 2003).
2
Rules 4(a) and 4(b) contain exceptions to those time prescriptions—see Rule
4(a)(5) (governing extensions), 4(b)(4) (same), and 4(a)(7) (permitting the Superior
Court to reopen the time to appeal under certain conditions)—but they are not
implicated here.
6
We have previously held that failing to satisfy Rule 4’s time limits divests this
court of jurisdiction, as we have stated that the time requirements in both Rule 4(a)
and Rule 4(b) are “mandatory and jurisdictional.” See Frain, 572 A.2d at 449 (Rule
4(a) civil appeal); McKnight, 764 A.2d at 241 (Rule 4(b) criminal appeal). Those
holdings hewed closely to how the Supreme Court had, at one point in time,
described various rule-based filing deadlines. For instance, in Frain, we relied
primarily upon Browder v. Director, Department of Corrections, 434 U.S. 257
(1978), which described federal Rule 4 as “mandatory and jurisdictional.”3 Frain,
572 A.2d at 449 (citing Browder, 434 U.S. at 264). Likewise in McKnight, we relied
on authority that traces back to the Supreme Court’s opinion in United States v.
3
Browder was discussing Rule 4’s thirty-day time limit alongside the thirty-
day time limit codified by federal statute. Browder, 434 U.S. at 264 (“Under Fed.
Rule App. Proc. 4(a) and 28 U.S.C. § 2107, a notice of appeal in a civil case must
be filed within 30 days of entry of the judgment or order from which the appeal is
taken. This 30-day time limit is ‘mandatory and jurisdictional.’”). Unlike court-
made rules, statutory time limits are sometimes jurisdictional, at least when “the
Legislature clearly states that a threshold limitation on a statute’s scope shall count
as jurisdictional.” Gonzalez v. Thaler, 565 U.S. 134, 141 (2012) (quoting Arbaugh
v. Y & H Corp., 546 U.S. 500, 515 (2006)); see also United States v. Kwai Fun
Wong, 575 U.S. 402, 409 (2015) (statutory time bars “cabin a court’s power only if
Congress has ‘clearly stated’ as much”); Sebelius v. Auburn Reg’l Med. Ctr., 568
U.S. 145, 153–54 (2013) (citing Arbaugh, 546 U.S. at 515–16). They may also do
so, at least as between Article III courts, when the statutory time prescription at issue
“govern[s] the transfer of adjudicatory authority from one Article III court to
another.” Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 20.
7
Robinson,4 which proclaimed that “the filing of a notice of appeal within the 10-day
period prescribed by Rule 37(a)(2) is mandatory and jurisdictional.” 361 U.S. 220,
224 (1960).
That would normally be the end of the matter. See M.A.P. v. Ryan, 285 A.2d
310, 312 (D.C. 1971) (explaining that “no division of this court will overrule a prior
decision of this court,” reserving such reconsideration for the “court en banc”)
(footnote omitted). We as a division would usually be bound by Frain and
McKnight, which held (respectively) that Rule 4(a) and Rule 4(b)’s time limits are
jurisdictional. But in the years following those opinions, the Supreme Court has
taken direct aim at their underpinnings and offered a course correction. It has
acknowledged its own “less than meticulous” use of the word jurisdictional in cases
like Robinson and Browder. See Kontrick, 540 U.S. at 454 (citing Robinson as
exemplifying the Supreme Court’s own past imprecisions); Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 21
n.11 (noting that Robinson “mistakenly suggested that a claim-processing rule was
‘mandatory and jurisdictional’”); Arbaugh, 546 U.S. at 510 (admitting the Supreme
Court has “sometimes been profligate” in its use of the word “jurisdictional,” and
4
In describing Rule 4 as “mandatory and jurisdictional,” McKnight, 764 A.2d
at 241, relied on United States v. Jones, 423 A.2d 193, 196 (D.C. 1980), which relied
on West v. United States, 346 A.2d 504, 506 (D.C. 1975), which in turn relied on the
language quoted above from Robinson, 361 U.S. at 224.
8
highlighting Robinson as an example). It has clarified, repeatedly and in no
uncertain terms, that “a time limit prescribed only in a court-made rule . . . is not
jurisdictional; it is, instead, a mandatory claim-processing rule subject to forfeiture
if not properly raised by the appellee.” Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 16; see also Kontrick,
540 U.S. at 454 (diagnosing its own mistakes of “describ[ing] emphatic time
prescriptions in rules of court” as “jurisdictional”). The reason for that, the Court
explained, is that only the legislature can alter a court’s basic jurisdiction. Kontrick,
540 U.S. at 452 (“Only Congress may determine a lower federal court’s subject-
matter jurisdiction.”); Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 17 (“A time limit not prescribed by
Congress ranks as a mandatory claim-processing rule . . . .”). While a court might
constrain itself via court-made rules, it can also free itself of its self-imposed
constraints so that they are, by their nature, non-jurisdictional restrictions.
This is not the first time that we have reversed course to acknowledge that
time limits in court-made rules are non-jurisdictional. In Smith v. United States, we
held that Superior Court Criminal Rule 35(b)’s 120-day time limit for seeking a
reduction of a sentence is non-jurisdictional. 984 A.2d 196, 200 (D.C. 2009). While
we had previously held to the contrary, 5 Smith acknowledged that intervening
5
Brown v. United States, 795 A.2d 56, 61 n.2 (D.C. 2002); Littlejohn v.
United States, 749 A.2d 1253, 1258 (D.C. 2000).
9
Supreme Court precedents substantially undermined those prior holdings and
established the clear tenet that “court-promulgated rules” are “not jurisdictional and
can be relaxed by the Court in the exercise of its discretion.” Id. (quoting Bowles v.
Russell, 551 U.S. 205, 211–12 (2007)).
Likewise in Mathis v. District of Columbia Housing Authority, we held that
D.C. App. R. 15’s deadline for filing a petition for review of an agency order is non-
jurisdictional and noted that the rationale behind prior precedent to the contrary had
been debunked. 124 A.3d 1089, 1102–03 (D.C. 2015) (abrogating Capitol Hill
Restoration Soc’y v. District of Columbia Mayor’s Agent for Historic Pres., 44 A.3d
271 (D.C. 2012)). That was true even though Rule 15 had some statutory backing:6
D.C. Code § 2-510(a) (2016 Repl.) states that petitions for agency review “shall be
6
As explained supra note 3, statutes can divest courts of jurisdiction in a way
that court-made rules cannot. Even so, we have taken a piecemeal approach to
evaluating court-made rules in cases like Smith and Mathis, and we follow the same
approach today, opining only that the particular time prescriptions in Rule 4 are non-
jurisdictional. There notably are clear statutory time prescriptions for filing certain
types of appeals, and we express no opinion as to whether those are jurisdictional
because they are not implicated here. See, e.g., D.C. Code § 17-307(b) (2012 Repl.)
(providing that to appeal “judgments of the Small Claims and Conciliation Branch
of the Superior Court,” parties must submit an application to allow such an appeal
within three days); D.C. Code § 50-1301.04(b) (2014 Repl.) (providing “30 days” to
file an application to appeal a “denial, revocation, or suspension” of motor vehicle
registration).
10
filed . . . within such time as” prescribed by court rule. No matter, we held, because
that statutory prescription evinces “no position on issues of timeliness and delegates
all decisions about timeliness to our court.” Mathis, 124 A.3d at 1103. The same is
true here, as the relevant statutory prescription leaves it to us to determine the
deadlines for noting appeals, if we see fit to impose any deadlines at all. See D.C.
Code § 17-307(a) (2012 Repl.) (“[T]he time during which an appeal may be taken
. . . may be fixed by rules of the District of Columbia Court of Appeals.”) (emphasis
added).7
The inescapable conclusion is that the jurisprudential basis for Frain and
McKnight has been substantially undermined by a swath of intervening Supreme
Court precedents, headlined by Kontrick and Hamer, which demonstrate why Rule
7
For the same reason, the statutory prescription that this court “shall conduct
its business according to the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure unless the court
prescribes or adopts modifications of those Rules” cannot be viewed as a
jurisdictional command. D.C. Code § 11-743 (2012 Repl.); see also D.C. Code § 11-
946 (instructing that the Superior Court should likewise conduct itself according to
Federal Rules “unless it prescribes or adopts” modifications to them). This provision
expressly permits us to deviate from the federal rules and the pertinent federal Rule
4 is itself of no jurisdictional import. Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 21-22. Nor could D.C.
App. R. 26(b)(1)’s prescription that we may not extend the time for filing an appeal
be jurisdictional, because that too is a court-made rule, and just as we may free
ourselves from the self-imposed constraints of Rule 4, we can likewise unbind
ourselves from the self-imposed constraints of Rule 26. Stacking one non-
jurisdictional constraint upon another does not somehow give rise to a jurisdictional
Voltron with powers exceeding the sum of its constituent parts.
11
4(a) and Rule 4(b)’s time prescriptions are, by themselves, non-jurisdictional. We
thus have jurisdiction to entertain these late-filed appeals.
III.
That we have jurisdiction to entertain these appeals does not require us to do
so. As we have noted, Rule 4 is what is described as a mandatory claim-processing
rule. See Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 17. Such rules “seek to promote the orderly progress
of litigation by requiring that the parties take certain procedural steps at certain
specified times.” Henderson ex rel. Henderson v. Shinseki, 562 U.S. 428, 435
(2011). “Filing deadlines . . . are quintessential claim-processing rules.” Id. When
a mandatory claim-processing rule is “properly invoked” by a party, it “must be
enforced” by the court. Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 17. However, claim-processing rules
are also “subject to forfeiture if not properly raised by the appellee.” Id. at 16; see
also Neill v. District of Columbia Pub. Emp. Relations Bd., 93 A.3d 229, 238 (D.C.
2014); Smith, 984 A.2d at 199 (citing Eberhart v. United States, 546 U.S. 12, 19
(2005)).
Neither appellee has objected to the untimeliness of the present appeals,
though that can hardly be counted against them given this court’s longstanding
practice of doing that work for appellees. For decades our precedents dictated that
12
Rule 4 deadlines were jurisdictional and, as a result, we as a court had an obligation
to steadfastly police those deadlines. It has thus been our court’s practice to sua
sponte issue orders directing appellants to show cause why appeals should not be
dismissed whenever we detected an apparently late notice of appeal. Parties may
have understandably grown reliant on that practice. While any change in this court’s
practice of issuing show cause orders is a topic for another day, it is fair to say that
it is a live issue and any appellee who detects an untimely notice of appeal would be
well-advised to move to dismiss it as untimely, see D.C. App. R. 13, 27, rather than
assuming our current practice will endure as is.
The question remains (regardless of whether a show cause order has issued),
having held Rule 4’s time limits non-jurisdictional, when should we take the
initiative to dismiss an appeal as untimely where no party is asking us to do so?8
Our rules provide that we “sua sponte or upon motion of the appellee . . . may dismiss
an appeal for failure to comply with a rule of this court.” D.C. App. R. 13(a). We
are thus expressly empowered to dismiss appeals for failure to comply with Rule 4’s
deadlines regardless of whether any party is requesting we do so. When to take that
8
We recently noted this open question, deferring its resolution for a case that
presented it. Baldwin v. District of Columbia Office of Emp. Appeals, 226 A.3d
1140, 1144 (D.C. 2020).
13
proactive initiative, and when to refrain, is a thornier question guided by competing
interests.
On the one hand, and in favor of dismissing these appeals, is the interest in
the orderly administration of justice and the “deep-seated interest in promoting the
finality of judgments.” Siddiq v. Ostheimer, 718 A.2d 145, 147 (D.C. 1998) (internal
quotation marks omitted); see also Clement v. District of Columbia Dep’t of Human
Servs., 629 A.2d 1215, 1218 (D.C. 1993) (surveying the importance of finality in
various contexts). To permit a litigant to sit on their right to appeal for several years
and then reinstitute dormant litigation by noting an appeal would frustrate that
interest, jeopardize “the fairness of our procedures,” and unnecessarily burden the
courts.9 Oliver, 878 F.3d at 126. We have described this need for finality as a
9
Of special concern are cases where appellees are unrepresented and might
not think to raise Rule 4’s time limits as a defense to reinitiating litigation that has
gone stale over the years. We should be particularly mindful of that concern in this
court, where “[i]n 2017, the D.C. Court of Appeals saw pro se participation at the
time of filing ranging from 50% to 90% depending on case type.” See District of
Columbia Access to Justice Commission, Delivering Justice: Addressing Civil Legal
Needs in the District of Columbia at 4 (2019), https://www.dcaccesstojustice.
org/assets/pdf/Delivering_Justice_2019.pdf https://perma.cc/BP2W-3SHA. Indeed,
Ms. Sessoms-Deloatch did not have a lawyer in the divorce proceedings that Mr.
Deloatch now seeks to upend. This concern can of course cut both ways, as
appellants are also frequently uncounseled and a lack of representation is surely at
the root of many late notices of appeal. We focus on unrepresented appellees in this
footnote only because this paragraph focuses on reasons favoring this Court’s sua
sponte intervention, rather than those cutting against it.
14
“fundamental principle of litigation that has been stressed in a variety of contexts.”
Clement, 629 A.2d at 1218.
On the other hand, in favor of allowing the appeals to proceed, is the fact that
ours is fundamentally an adversarial system and “we rely on the parties to frame the
issues for decision and assign to courts the role of neutral arbiter of matters the
parties present.” Greenlaw v. United States, 554 U.S. 237, 243 (2008); see also
Vergara v. City of Chicago, 939 F.3d 882, 885–86 (7th Cir. 2019) (noting federal
Rule 4(a) is non-jurisdictional and must be enforced when “properly invoked,” but
stressing that “the ‘properly invoked’ qualifier is important, for a litigant may forfeit
the benefit of these rules”) (cleaned up). Where no party has raised an objection, as
here, “appellate courts do not sit as self-directed boards of legal inquiry and research,
but essentially as arbiters of legal questions presented and argued by the parties
before them.” Rose v. United States, 629 A.2d 526, 536-37 (D.C. 1993) (quoting
Carducci v. Regan, 714 F.2d 171, 177 (D.C. Cir. 1983)).
We find the balance tips in favor of dismissal of these appeals given the
substantial delays in filing the present notices of appeal. Perhaps a slight or moderate
delay in filing a notice of appeal would not warrant this court’s sua sponte
intervention, but we adopt the view of those federal circuit courts that have found
15
that at least a substantial delay does. See Gaytan-Garza, 652 F.3d at 681 (finding
sua sponte dismissal “appropriate here, as Gaytan-Garza’s delay of over four years
in filing his appeal implicates the important judicial interests of finality of
convictions and efficient administration of claim processing”); Mitchell, 518 F.3d at
750 (timeliness of criminal appeal should not be raised sua sponte “when judicial
resources and administration are not implicated and the delay has not been
inordinate”).10
We do not attempt to draw a line as to when an appeal is filed so late as to
merit our sua sponte intervention, as that is “a task best resolved according to the
varying circumstances of each case.” Mitchell, 518 F.3d at 750 n.13. To provide
some guideposts, we note that the United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth
Circuit in Gaytan-Garza found that a notice of appeal filed “over four years late”
merited sua sponte dismissal. 652 F.3d at 680. On the other side of the ledger, the
10
One federal circuit court has articulated a narrower view of when sua sponte
dismissal of untimely appeals is appropriate. The United States Court of Appeals
for the Fourth Circuit has indicated, albeit in what is arguably dicta, that it will
dismiss criminal appeals as untimely on its own motion only under limited
circumstances where the judiciary’s institutional interests outweigh the interest in
adversarial party presentation. Oliver, 878 F.3d at 128 (choosing to raise timeliness
where, for example, “a court has issued a subsequent judgment . . . in reliance on the
judgment appealed” or “the defendant has completed collateral review of the same
judgment”).
16
United States Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit found that “it would be
inappropriate to raise sua sponte the timeliness of [a] notice of appeal” that was only
one day late. Mitchell, 518 F.3d at 751. While there is several years’ worth of
daylight between these guideposts, these appeals—noted nearly four years late in
Mr. Deloatch’s case and more than seven years late in Mr. Perez’s case—fall on the
Gaytan-Garza side of the ledger. They involve substantial delays that warrant sua
sponte dismissal. Any further refinement of how late is so late as to warrant our
intervention is better left to case-by-case adjudication or the rulemaking process.11
In the case of more negligible delays, it would be hazardous for parties to rely
on our sua sponte action; they instead should raise their own objections whenever
an appeal is untimely. See supra n. 8. As we have already noted, mandatory claim-
processing rules like Rule 4 “must be enforced” when properly invoked by the
appellee, Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 17,12 and an appellee is free to assert the untimeliness
11
We do not mean to suggest that the length of delay is the only relevant
consideration in determining when this court’s sua sponte intervention is warranted.
While we have no occasion to enumerate what other considerations should be taken
into account in future cases, one could at least argue that relevant considerations
include any explanation offered for the delay and the underlying merits of the appeal,
among other possible criteria that we do not endeavor to catalog here.
12
Hamer expressly reserved the question of “whether mandatory claim-
processing rules may be subject to equitable exceptions.” 138 S. Ct. at 18 n.3 (citing
Kontrick, 540 U.S. at 457).
17
of an appeal under Rule 4 via a motion to dismiss as early as the moment a notice of
appeal is filed, see D.C. App. R. 13(a), 27. We do not believe that such case-by-
case adjudication will waste this court’s and the litigants’ time and resources.
Appellees concerned with their own resources will no doubt act promptly and move
to dismiss appeals that are late filed before they enter the fray of the merits. When
they fail to do so, they can hardly complain about a resource strain that they visited
upon themselves through their own inaction. As for the court’s resources, it seems
just as likely that taking ourselves out of the business of proactively policing appeals
that are only slightly untimely will conserve court resources. Whatever doubts there
are about that prediction are outweighed by the core tenet of our adversarial system
that we generally place the onus on litigants, rather than the court, to raise their
claims. 13 See Greenlaw, 554 U.S. at 243; Randolph v. United States, 882 A.2d 210,
13
This court might also promulgate a rule requiring appellees to raise any
Rule 4 timeliness objections at some particular point, upon risk of forfeiture. That
would eliminate any guesswork about when appellees must raise a Rule 4 timeliness
challenge—be it within some number of days of the notice of appeal, at any time
before merits briefing, in the merits briefing itself, before a decision is issued, or
before the mandate is issued—in order for it to be considered “properly invoked”
such that it “must be enforced” by the court. Hamer, 138 S. Ct. at 17. That would
also advance the goal of resolving the timeliness of appeals at their outset without
treading upon the adversarial bedrock that we generally will not entertain non-
jurisdictional arguments that the parties themselves have not raised. We do not
intend anything in this opinion to preclude any future rules amendments to address
how this court will treat untimely appeals.
18
223 (D.C. 2005). That maxim will bend in some cases, like this one, but we will not
discard it entirely in the name of some perceived but uncertain efficiency.
IV.
We dismiss these appeals as untimely.
So ordered.