Vt. R. Civ. P. 6

As amended through April 1, 2024
Rule 6 - Time
(a)Computing Time. The following rules apply in computing any time period specified in these rules, in any court order, or in any applicable statute that does not specify a method of computing time.
(1)Period Stated in Days or a Lonser Unit. When the period is stated in days or a longer unit of time:
(A) exclude the day of the event that triggers the period:
(B) count every day, including intermediate Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays; and
(C) include the last day of the period, but if the last day is a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the period continues to run until the end of the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.
(2)Period Stated in Hours. When the period is stated in hours:
(A) begin counting immediately on the occurrence of the event that triggers the period;
(B) count every hour, including hours during intermediate Saturdays. Sundays, and legal holidays; and
(C) if the period would end on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, the period continues to run until the same time on the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.
(3) Inaccessibility of the Clerk's Office. Unless the court orders otherwise, if the clerk's office is inaccessible:
(A) on the last day for filing under Rule 6(a)(1), then the time for filing is extended to the first accessible day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday; or
(B) during the last hour for filing under Rule 6(a)(2), then the time for filing is extended to the same time on the first accessible day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.
(4)"Last Day " Defined. Unless a different time is set by a statute or court order, the last day ends:
(A) for email and electronic filing, at midnight in the court's time zone; and
(B) for filing by other means, when the clerk's office is scheduled to close.
(5)"Next Day" Defined. The "next day" is determined by continuing to count forward when the period is measured after an event and backward when measured before an event.
(6)"Lesal Holiday" Defined. A "legal holiday" means:
(A) any day declared a holiday by the President or Congress of the United States; and
(B) any day declared a holiday by the State of Vermont.
(7)"Business Day" Defined. A "business day" is a day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.
(b)Extending Time.
(1)In General. When an act may or must be done within a specified time, the court may. for good cause, extend the time:
(A) with or without motion or notice if the court acts, or if a request is made before the original time or its extension expires; or
(B) on motion made after the time has expired if the party failed to act because of excusable neglect.
(2)Exceptions. The court must not extend the time to act under Rules 50(b) and (c)(2), 52(b), 59(b), (d) and (e), 60(b), and 80.1(m).
(c)Unaffected by Expiration of Term. The period of time provided for the doing of any act or the taking of any proceeding is not affected or limited by the continued existence or expiration of a term of court. The continued existence or expiration of a term of court in no way affects the power of a court to do any act or take any proceeding in any civil action which has been pending before it.
(d)Affidavits on Motions. When a motion is supported by affidavit, the affidavit shall be served with the motion; and, except as otherwise provided in Rules 56(c) and 59(c) opposing affidavits may be served not later than 7 days before the hearing, unless the court permits them to be served at some other time.

Vt. R. Civ. P. 6

Amended Dec. 11, 1980, eff. 2/2/1981; 10/21/1983, eff. 1/1/1984; 1/9/1985, eff. 3/15/1985; 11/25/1986, eff. 3/1/1987; 11/9/1987, eff. 3/1/1988; 11/4/1994, eff. 3/1/1995; 6/27/1995, eff. 9/1/1995; 10/11/2006, eff. 12/11/2006; 8/17/2010, eff. 10/1/2010; 8/30/2011, eff. 10/31/2011; amended Sept. 20, 2017, eff. 1/1/2018; amended May 9, 2022, eff. 9/6/2022.

Reporter's Notes-2022 Amendment

Rule 6(a)(4) is amended in conjunction with Rule 5(e)(5)(B) to specify that the last day for filing by email ends at midnight in the court's time zone.

Reporter's Notes-2022 Amendment

V.R.C.P. 6(e) and V.R.A.P. 26(c), which is virtually identical, are simultaneously deleted. As most recently amended in 2018, Rule 6(e) provided:

(e) Additional Time After Certain Kinds of Service. When a party may or must act within a specified time after being served and service is made under Rule 5(b)(2) (mailing), (3) (leaving with the clerk), or (4) (sending by electronic means), 3 days are added after the period would otherwise expire under Rule 6(a).

Deleting this provision is overdue, given the general simplification of counting time that occurred when the "day is a day" method of counting was adopted in 2018, see Reporter's Notes to 2018 amendment of Rule 6(a), and the widespread use of service by electronic means.

Federal Rule 6(d), which had been virtually identical to V.R.C.P. 6(e), was amended in 2016 to remove service by electronic means under F.R.C.P. 5(b)(2)(E) from the modes of service that allow 3 days to be added after the prescribed period runs. The federal amendment reflected the fact that initial concerns that electronic service might be unreliable had been alleviated by advances in technology and familiarity with it in use. See Federal Advisory Committee Notes to 2016 amendment.

Vermont trial courts, and the Vermont Supreme Court, are now fully operational under the Odyssey File and Serve system. Registered attorneys and registered self-represented litigants are required to use the system and receive service of case related documents through it. Nonelectronic service is limited to cases involving self-represented litigants who do not opt to use the Odyssey system or to special instances where electronic service is inappropriate. See 2020 V.R.E.F. 3. Timing difficulties caused by electronic filing outside of normal business hours, or arising in the limited number of cases involving nonelectronic service, can be addressed case by case by the trial court.

Reporter's Notes-2018 Amendment

Rule 6(a) is amended to adopt the "day is a day" rule, a simplified method of computing time periods, by incorporating, with minor changes, the language of a 2009 amendment to Rule 6(a) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. The amendment serves the purposes of both achieving simplicity and maintaining unifonnity with the federal practice. By simultaneous amendment, the time provisions of these and all other procedural rules promulgated by the Supreme Court have been made consistent with the new computation method. The Advisory Committee and Reporter particularly wish to express their gratitude to Elizabeth Tisher, J.D., for her essential preliminary drafting of this and other necessary amendment orders.

As the Federal Advisory Committee's Notes point out, this computation method does not apply when a statute prescribes a specific method for computing time. For clarity, amended V.R.C.P. 6(a) retains the language of the former Vermont rule making its computation provisions apply to a time period in any "applicable statute that does not specify a method of computing time" (emphasis added). By Act No. 11 of 2017, the Legislature amended a number of statutory procedural time periods of less than 10 days to be expressly "business days," thus making Rule 6(a) inapplicable to them. For consistency, "business days" has been added to a few such time periods in several rules that were taken from one of the amended statutes. Act No. 11 also amended statutory periods of 10 days to 14 days, thus making them consistent with the "day is a day" provisions of Rule 6(a).

Former V.R.C.P. 6(a) applied to a time period in "any applicable statute." The retention of "applicable" in the amended rule is intended to preserve the effect of two Vermont Supreme Court decisions making clear that the test of whether a statute is "applicable" under V.R.C.P. 6(a) is whether the statute concerns matters to which the Rules of Civil Procedure apply under V.R.C.P. 1. In Allen v. Employment Security Board, 133 Vt. 166, 168, 333 A.2d 122, 124 (1975), affirming the Board's dismissal of two appeals as untimely under applicable statutory provisions, the Court stated, "The scope of the Rules of Civil Procedure is clearly defined in V.R.C.P. 1. They govern procedure 'in the Superior Court in all suits of a civil nature' as well as causes transferred from District Court and appeals to the Superior Court, with stated exceptions. Clearly they do not apply to the cases here in issue." Appellant had argued that the statutory provisions should incorporate former V.R.C.P. 6(a) extending time periods that ended on weekends or holidays and former V.R.C.P. 6(e) adding time after service by mail. In State v. Hanlon, 164 Vt. 125, 128, 665 A.2d 603, 604 (1995), the Court found the State's appeal timely, holding that the provision of 13 V.S.A. § 7403(e) establishing a time period for the State to file an appeal in a criminal matter was an "applicable statute" under V.R.C.P. 6(a), incorporated in V.R.A.P. 26(a); thus, the statutory time period could be extended by the weekend and holiday provisions of the rule as it then stood.

The Federal Advisory Committee's Notes provide a helpful further explanation of the change:

Under former Rule 6(a), a period of 11 days or more was computed differently than a period of less than 11 days. Intermediate Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays were included in computing the longer periods, but excluded in computing the shorter periods. Former Rule 6(a) thus made computing deadlines unnecessarily complicated and led to counterintuitive results. For example, a 10-day period and a 14-day period that started on the same day usually ended on the same day and the 10-day period not infrequently ended later than the 14-day period....

Under [the amended rule], all deadlines stated in days (no matter the length) are computed in the same way. The day of the event that triggers the deadline is not counted. All other days including intermediate Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays are counted, [except that if] the period ends on a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday, then the deadline falls on the next day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday.

The phrase "legal holidays" in new Rules 6(a)(l)-(3) is defined in new Rule 6(a)(6) to include both federal and state holidays.

Of course, if the clerk's office is inaccessible on the last day or hour, or the day or hour to which the period has been extended, Rule 6(a)(3) provides that the deadline falls on the next accessible or available day or time. Inaccessibility includes failure of the electronic filing system in a case where a document is to be filed electronically. See V.R.E.F. 4(c); Federal Advisory Committee's Note to 2009 amendment adding F.R.C.P. 6(a)(3). Note that "act, event, or default" has been changed in the amended rule to "event" for brevity and simplicity. The change is not intended as a change in meaning.

Periods of less than 11 days in other provisions of the rules would be shortened by the inclusion of intermediate Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays. Accordingly, shorter time periods in other rules are being extended by simultaneous amendments, generally following guidelines stated in the Federal Advisory Committee's Notes:

Most of the 10-day periods were adjusted to meet the change in computation method by setting 14 days as the new period. A 14-day period coixesponds to the most frequent result of a 10-day period under the former computation method two Saturdays and two Sundays were excluded, giving 14 days in all. A 14-day period has an additional advantage. The final day falls on the same day of the week as the event that triggered the period the 14th day after a Monday, for example, is a Monday. This advantage of using week-long periods led to adopting 7-day periods to replace some of the periods set at less than 10 days, and 21-day periods to replace 20-day periods.

In sum, in the Vermont rules, most periods of 3 days are changed to 5 unless there is a specific reason for the shorter time. Periods of 5 to 20 days are converted to 7 or multiples of 7 for convenience. Thus, 5 days becomes 7. Seven days remains 7. Ten and 15 days become 14. Twenty days become 21. Several 10-day time periods were enlarged and changed to 28 days for consistency with the changed federal standard for motion practice. Thirty-day time periods remain unchanged. Forty-five and 50-day periods, not found in the Federal Rules, have been changed to 42 and 49 days, consistent with the "multiple of 7" simplification adopted in the Federal Rules.

Note that time periods may be either forward-looking or backward-looking. Thus, former Rule 59(b) is forward-looking, requiring a motion for new trial to be filed "not later than 10 days after the entry of judgment." Former Rule 68 is backward-looking, requiring service of an offer of judgment "[a]t any time more than 10 days before the trial begins" unless the court approves a shorter time. The last day of a period ending on a weekend or holiday should be determined by counting in the same direction that the time period runs. For example, the Federal Advisory Committee's Notes suggest, that if a filing is due within 30 days after an event, and the thirtieth day falls on Saturday, September 1, 2007, then the filing is due on Tuesday, September 4, 2007 (Monday, September 3, is Labor Day). But if a filing is due 21 days before an event, and the twenty-first day falls on Saturday, September 1, then the filing is due on Friday, August 31. If the clerk's office is inaccessible on August 31, then [the rule] extends the filing deadline forward to the next accessible day that is not a Saturday, Sunday, or legal holiday no later than Tuesday, September 4

In either the "after" or "before" situation, if the clerk's office were inaccessible on Tuesday, September 4, the extension would continue until the office was accessible.

New Rules 6(a)(4)-(6) are based on the comparable provisions of F.R.C.P. 6(a) as amended in 2009.

Rule 6(a)(7) is added consistent with Act No. 11 of 2017 discussed above to make clear that an applicable statute, or another provision of these or other court procedural rules, computing a time period in "business days" creates an exception to the "day is a day" counting method generally made applicable by Rule 6(a)(1): Intermediate Saturdays, Sundays, and legal holidays will not be counted in computing a period specified to be in "business days," contrary to the practice specified by Rule 6(a)(1) for computing periods not so labeled.

Rule 6(b) is revised to adopt the format and language of F.R.C.P. 6(b) as restyled in 2007 and amended in 2009. The one-day time period in Rule 6(d) for service of opposing affidavits on motions is changed to 7 days, consistent with F.R.C.P. 6(c)(2).

Rule 6(e) is amended to adopt the simplified language of Federal Rule 6(d) as amended in 2005 and follows the federal rule in adding the additional three days after service by electronic means if permitted or required under Rule 5(b)(4). Federal Rule 6(d) was amended effective December 1, 2016, to eliminate the three-day provision for electronic service, because, as the Federal Advisory Committee's Notes state, initial concerns with the reliability of electronic transmission "have been substantially alleviated by advances in technology and in widespread skill in using electronic transmission." In view of the relatively recent availability and use of electronic transmission in Vermont practice, the three-day provision has been retained in the present amendment.