Title 28 › Part PART V— - PROCEDURE › Chapter CHAPTER 133— - REVIEW—MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS › § 2112
When people ask a court of appeals to review, block, or enforce an agency's order, the agency must follow the court's rules about how and when to file the record. The agency can file a certified list of the papers and keep the originals until the court asks for them, and that list counts as filing. If petitions about the same order are filed in two or more courts and the agency gets petitions in at least two courts within ten days, the agency must tell the judicial panel on multidistrict litigation (under section 1407). That panel will pick one court at random and put all the petitions there. If only one court got a timely petition, the agency files the record in that court. Courts with other cases about the same order must transfer them to the court where the record is filed, and any court may temporarily stay (pause) the order’s effect. The record must include the order being reviewed, the agency’s findings or report, and the pleadings, evidence, and hearing papers — or the parts the rules, the parties by agreement, or the court say to include. If a factual finding is challenged, all the evidence must be included unless the parties agree that some parts are not important. The court can later order more parts added if needed. The agency may send originals or certified copies; originals are returned after the case ends and may be lent back temporarily for public business. These rules do not apply to Tax Court decisions or to agency orders that by law must be reviewed in federal district courts.
Full Legal Text
Judiciary and Judicial Procedure — Source: USLM XML via OLRC
Legislative History
Reference
Citation
28 U.S.C. § 2112
Title 28 — Judiciary and Judicial Procedure
Last Updated
Apr 6, 2026
Release point: 119-73