FOR THE REPORTING OF OPINIONS 2025

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Majority Opinion. The majority opinion is an appellate opinion supporting the courts judgment (the result reached in the case) which receives a majority vote of the justices or judges hearing the case. Concurring Opinion. Dissenting Opinion. About Appeals.
Opinion journalism is journalism that makes no claim of objectivity. Although distinguished from advocacy journalism in several ways, both forms feature a subjective viewpoint, usually with some social or political purpose. Common examples include newspaper columns, editorials, op-eds, editorial cartoons, and punditry.
What is an Opinion? When a judge hears a case and arrives at a judgment, an explanation or analysis of the reasoning behind the decision is frequently written. The analysis, called an opinion, is then published in the Reporter for the court. Significant decisions are published also in other Reporters.
There are several types of court opinions that are used depending on unanimity in opinions and how many justices agree or disagree. These include majority opinions, plurality opinions, concurring opinions, per curiam opinions, and dissenting opinions.
Pending review and filing of the Supreme Courts opinion, unless otherwise ordered by the Supreme Court under (3), a published opinion of a Court of Appeal in the matter has no binding or precedential effect, and may be cited for potentially persuasive value only.
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The term reported opinion (a/k/a reported decision or reported case) generally refers to an opinion that has been included in the hardbound South Western Reporter. The South Western Reporter includes all published opinions issued before 2003. So, all published opinions issued before 2003 are reported opinions.

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