Articles Tagged: Final Judgment
The Tenth Circuit’s July 7, 2026 decision in Opinion, No. 25-8071, is a useful reminder that appellate outcomes often turn as much on procedure as on the merits. Although the precise factual posture is case-specific, the opinion centers on a recurring issue for federal practitioners: whether the order under review was properly appealable and, if so, what standard governs the appellate court’s review of the district court’s ruling.
The court’s analysis focuses on the boundaries of appellate jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 and related doctrines governing finality.
The Seventh Circuit has entered a final judgment in Appeal No. 25-1963 through a nonprecedential disposition, according to the court’s June 16, 2026 order. While the docket entry itself is brief, the procedural posture is still significant for appellate practitioners: the case has been resolved on the merits in a form that binds the parties but does not create precedential law for future litigants.
In practical terms, a “final judgment filed per nonprecedential disposition” means the court concluded the appeal and issued its decision in an unpublished or nonprecedential format rather than through a published opinion.


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