Articles Tagged: Precedential Opinion


Third Circuit Issues Precedential Opinion in Appeal No. 25-1545

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit issued a precedential opinion on June 30, 2026, in appeal No. 25-1545, signaling that the panel intended its ruling to guide future litigants and district courts within the circuit. Because the opinion is designated precedential, practitioners should treat it as binding circuit authority unless and until it is limited by a later en banc decision, superseded by statute, or reversed by the Supreme Court.

At this stage, the key practical takeaway is the opinion’s status and timing: a precedential Third Circuit ruling can quickly affect briefing strategy, preservation arguments, and how lawyers frame issues both in district court and on appeal.

Sixth Circuit Issues Precedential Opinion in Appeal No. 25-1602

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a precedential opinion in appeal No. 25-1602 on May 12, 2026, signaling that the panel intended its ruling to carry weight beyond the immediate dispute. For practitioners, that designation alone matters: unlike an unpublished disposition, a precedential Sixth Circuit opinion is binding on district courts within the circuit and will likely shape briefing strategy in future appeals.

At a high level, the court resolved the issues presented in a published format, which means the panel concluded the case addressed a legal question significant enough to warrant a citable, authoritative ruling.

Sixth Circuit Issues Precedential Opinion in Case 25-1873: What Practitioners Should Watch

The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit issued a precedential opinion on May 8, 2026, in docket number 25-1873. Although the docket information currently identifies the matter only as “Precedential Opinion,” the designation alone is significant for litigators: unlike unpublished dispositions, a precedential Sixth Circuit ruling becomes binding authority within the circuit and is likely to shape briefing, motion practice, and district court decision-making going forward.

At a minimum, practitioners should treat this opinion as one requiring immediate review for any issue overlap with active matters in Kentucky, Michigan, Ohio, and Tennessee.