Appeals from the Eastern District of New York

The United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York (the “EDNY”) is the federal trial court for Brooklyn, Queens, Staten Island, and Long Island. When a case is decided in the EDNY and a party believes the court got the law wrong, the remedy is an appeal to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. Our firm handles those federal appeals for both appellants seeking to overturn a judgment and appellees defending one.

Federal appellate practice is governed by federal law — the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure and the Second Circuit's Local Rules — not by the CPLR or the rules of the state Appellate Division. If your case was decided in federal court, the procedures are different from a state appeal, and the deadlines are unforgiving.

What the Eastern District Covers

The Eastern District of New York has courthouses in Brooklyn (225 Cadman Plaza East) and Central Islip on Long Island. Its territory includes:

  • Kings County (Brooklyn)
  • Queens County
  • Richmond County (Staten Island)
  • Nassau County
  • Suffolk County

The EDNY handles a large and varied docket — complex commercial and financial litigation, organized-crime and other federal criminal prosecutions, civil rights and employment cases, intellectual property, and matters arising from John F. Kennedy International Airport and the surrounding region. Together, the EDNY and its Manhattan counterpart, the Southern District of New York, cover all of New York City and its suburbs in the federal system.

Where EDNY Appeals Go: The Second Circuit

An appeal from a final judgment of the EDNY is taken to the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit, the federal appellate court for New York, Connecticut, and Vermont. The Second Circuit sits at the Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse at 40 Foley Square in Manhattan, where appeals from both the EDNY and the SDNY are heard. Cases are decided by panels of three judges, who review the record and the briefs and hear oral argument.

The Notice of Appeal and the Federal Deadline

The first and most important step is the notice of appeal, and the deadline comes from the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure:

  • In a civil case, the notice of appeal must generally be filed within 30 days after entry of the judgment or order (Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)).
  • When the United States or a federal officer or agency is a party, the period is 60 days.
  • The notice of appeal is filed in the district court (the EDNY), not in the Court of Appeals.
  • Certain post-judgment motions can toll the deadline, and a limited extension is possible for excusable neglect or good cause — but these are narrow exceptions. In civil cases the deadline is treated as strict and jurisdictional.

Missing the federal notice-of-appeal deadline forfeits the appeal. If you received an adverse judgment in the EDNY, act immediately to protect your right to seek review.

What Can Be Appealed

Generally, you may appeal from a final judgment that ends the litigation on the merits (28 U.S.C. § 1291). Appeals from non-final, interlocutory orders are available only in limited circumstances, such as:

  • Certain orders concerning injunctions and receiverships (28 U.S.C. § 1292(a));
  • Controlling questions of law certified by the district court for immediate appeal (28 U.S.C. § 1292(b));
  • Partial final judgments entered under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b); and
  • A narrow category of orders under the collateral order doctrine.

Whether a ruling can be appealed now or only after final judgment is one of the threshold questions in any federal appeal.

How a Second Circuit Appeal Works

Once the notice of appeal is filed, the appeal proceeds under the Federal Rules of Appellate Procedure and the Second Circuit's Local Rules:

  • The record and appendix. The appeal is decided on the record made in the EDNY. The parties assemble a joint appendix with the relevant portions of that record.
  • The briefs. The appellant files an opening brief, the appellee responds, and the appellant may reply. Strict rules govern length, format, and content.
  • Oral argument. Many appeals are argued before a three-judge panel; others are decided on the briefs alone. Argument is brief and the questioning can be pointed.
  • The decision. The panel may affirm, reverse, vacate, modify, or remand the case to the district court.

Standards of Review

The standard of review frequently decides the appeal:

  • Questions of law — reviewed de novo, without deference to the district court.
  • Findings of fact — reviewed for clear error.
  • Discretionary rulings — reviewed for abuse of discretion.

Matching each issue to its governing standard is central to an honest evaluation of an appeal's prospects.

Beyond the Second Circuit

A party that loses in the Second Circuit may petition the Supreme Court of the United States for a writ of certiorari. Supreme Court review is discretionary and granted in only a small fraction of cases, so a Second Circuit decision is usually final as a practical matter.

If your case was decided in the Eastern District of New York and you are weighing an appeal — or need to defend a favorable judgment — contact us promptly, because the federal deadline is short. Reach the Law Offices of Albert Goodwin, PLLC, in Midtown Manhattan, by phone at 212-233-1233 or by email at [email protected]. You may also want to read our overview of the appeals process and our page on appeals from the Southern District of New York.

Appellate Attorney Albert Goodwin

Speak With an Appellate Attorney

Albert Goodwin, Esq. is a licensed New York attorney with over 18 years of courtroom experience who handles appeals throughout New York. If you are considering an appeal — or defending one — he can be reached directly at 212-233-1233 or [email protected].

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