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precedential
precedential, a. Now rare. (prɛsɪˈdɛnʃəl) [f. precedent n. or precedence, after consequential, differential, etc.] 1. Of the nature of or constituting a precedent; furnishing a guide or rule for subsequent cases.a 1641 Bp. R. Montagu Acts & Mon. (1642) 31 These were Precedentiall to their Successors...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Syllabus (legal)
Thus, future cases cannot cite them as precedential to their arguments.
References
Judicial legal terminology
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Justice Sotomayor Brutally Grills Trump Lawyer On Precedent - Mediaite
Feb 8, 2024The court is hearing an appeal by Trump to a Colorado Supreme Court ruling that removed Trump from that state's ballot under Section Three of the 14th Amendment for having engaged in ...
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precedentary
preceˈdentary, a. rare—1. [f. as prec. + -ary1.] Forming a precedent: = precedential 1.1887 Blackw. Mag. Sept. 396 Such a precedentary act as Lord Palmerston's despatch of the British fleet to the Dardanelles.
Oxford English Dictionary
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Federal Appendix
There is debate within the legal community about the desirability of designating certain judicial opinions as without precedential value.
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precedental
precedental, a. rare. (prɛsɪˈdɛntəl) [f. precedent n. + -al1.] Of or pertaining to a precedent; of the nature of, or constituting a precedent (= precedential 1); but in quots. used as = supported by precedent, precedented (cf. precedential 1 b).1642 Virginia Stat. (1823) I. 237 By abollishing condem...
Oxford English Dictionary
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Grant, vacate, remand
typically appropriate when there has been a change in legal circumstances subsequent to the lower court or agency's decision, such as a change in the law, a precedential GVR orders are designed to be efficient and thus are not full explications of the law, and have no precedential effect.
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Katherine Chen
twenty professionals from around the world named to the Facebook's independent Oversight Board, an independent body tasked with making consequential precedential
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Jesse Litvak
The case was precedential in that a trader was prosecuted for misleading statements on his own prior purchase price.
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Ex parte Gutta
Ex parte Gutta (BPAI 2009) is a precedential decision from the Board of Patent Appeals and Interferences (BPAI) of the United States Patent and Trademark
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Martyn Fonnereau
He and his younger brother Thomas were named in the will of Jane (Poyntz) Malcher, which prompted the precedential case Fonnereau v. Poyntz in 1785.
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Julie Owono
2020, Owono was one of 20 individuals from around the world named to the Facebook Oversight Board, an organization established to make consequential precedential
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Non-publication of legal opinions in the United States
An unpublished opinion is a decision of a court that is not available for citation as precedent because the court deems the case to have insufficient precedential History
In 1964, the Judicial Conference of the United States recommended that federal appellate courts publish only those decisions "which are of general precedential
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Summary order
Affirmance without opinion
The judgment or order may be affirmed or enforced without opinion when the court determines that an opinion would have no precedential
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Timothy B. Dyk
As of 2016, Dyk has written over 400 precedential majority decisions and over 170 non-precedential majority decisions for the Federal Circuit, and over 50 precedential majority decisions for the First Circuit, where he has sat by designation.
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