Articles Tagged: Nonprecedential Disposition
The Seventh Circuit has entered a final judgment in Appeal No. 25-1963 through a nonprecedential disposition, according to the court’s June 16, 2026 order.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In practical terms, a “final judgment filed per nonprecedential disposition” means the court concluded the appeal and issued its decision in an unpublished or nonprecedential format rather than through a published opinion.


Stay Connected