Articles Tagged: Remand


Supreme Court Reverses and Remands in No. 24-699: What the Bare Judgment Signals

In a terse entry that simply states “Judgment REVERSED and case REMANDED,” the Supreme Court has disposed of docket No. 24-699 without, at least from the information currently available, a full explanatory opinion in the case details provided. Even so, that kind of action from the Court is significant for litigants and appellate practitioners because it immediately alters the posture of the case and signals that the lower court’s judgment cannot stand.

At the most basic level, reversal means the Supreme Court concluded the decision below was wrong in some material respect.

Supreme Court Reverses and Remands in No. 24-856: What the Bare Judgment Means

The Supreme Court’s June 23, 2026 disposition in No. 24-856 is notably concise: the judgment below was reversed and the case remanded. At least from the docket entry provided, the Court has not supplied an accompanying merits opinion in the materials summarized here. Even so, that procedural posture carries real significance for lawyers tracking the case and for practitioners thinking about next steps in the lower courts.

A reversal and remand means the Supreme Court concluded the lower court’s judgment cannot stand and that further proceedings are required.

Supreme Court Reverses and Remands in No. 24-345: What Practitioners Should Watch on Remand

In a brief but consequential disposition, the Supreme Court reversed the judgment below and remanded the case for further proceedings. Even without a full merits opinion reproduced here, that procedural outcome alone is significant for litigators: a reversal and remand from the Court typically signals that the lower court applied the wrong legal framework, failed to account for controlling precedent, or resolved an issue prematurely.

At a high level, the Court’s action means the prior judgment cannot stand.

Supreme Court Reverses and Remands in No. 24-345: What Practitioners Should Watch Next

On June 11, 2026, the Supreme Court entered a judgment reversing and remanding in No. 24-345. At least from the docket entry presently available, the key takeaway is procedural rather than substantive: the Court concluded that the judgment below could not stand and sent the matter back for further proceedings consistent with its decision.

Because the public-facing case description here is limited to the judgment disposition, practitioners should be cautious about overreading the result until the full opinion is reviewed.