Me. R. App. P. 1C
Advisory Committee Note - July 2022
Rule 1C is adopted to provide a uniform rule on signatures and to expand the types of permissible signatures, primarily to allow for lawyers to "sign" documents electronically and to direct another attorney or an assistant to place a signature on a document. It is modeled on provisions from existing Rule 7A(g)(1) and from Pandemic Management Order PMO-SJC-2(G) (as amended December 14, 2020). It has four subdivisions.
Subdivision (a) permits a signature to be placed on a document by methods other than the traditional handwritten, or "wet ink," signature. A person may sign a document by physically signing the document by hand (as always), by incorporating an image of a handwritten signature, or by typing "/s/" followed by the person's name. Filers should note that a mere "/s/," without a typed name following the signature, is insufficient. For example, a signature might be "/s/ Jane Smith."
Subdivision (b) sets out the requirements for the "signature block" following a signature. The signature block must contain the listed information about the person whose signature appears on the signature line. Each client must be named; an indication that the attorney is the "Attorney for appellants" is not sufficient. If more than one attorney from a single firm signs the document, the common information need not be repeated. For example, the signatures and signature block on a document filed by two attorneys on behalf of three appellants should take this form:
Respectfully submitted,
/s/ Andrea Attorney
Andrea Attorney
Maine Bar No. 11111
aattorney@attylawyer.com
/s/ Lawrence Lawyer
Lawrence Lawyer
Maine Bar No. 22222
llawyer@attylawyer.com
Attorney & Lawyer, LLC
100 Main St
Anytown, Maine 04999
207-555-5555
Attorneys for John Doe, Jane Roe, and Charlene Client