Supreme Court decisions are referred to as "opinions." When the Court issues a ruling, it typically releases a majority opinion, which explains the reasoning behind the decision, as well as any concurring opinions from justices who agree with the outcome but may have different reasoning. Dissenting opinions are also published, expressing the views of justices who disagree with the majority. Collectively, these opinions form the legal precedent that guides future cases.
The US Supreme Court's decisions (or verdicts) are called opinions.
The explanation for the US Supreme Court's decision is called the opinion.
No. The decisions of the Texas Supreme Court are binding on trial courts in Texas. That is why it is called the Supreme Court.
US Supreme Court decisions are called "Opinions."
US Supreme Court decisions are called opinions.
Supreme Court Report Annotated is the name of the bound series of legal decisions of the Philippines Supreme Court. There is no publication specifically listed as Supreme Court Annotated Decisions or Supreme Court Decisions Annotated, except for a few US historical documents listed as Supreme Court Decisions [annotated].You didn't specify whether you were looking for official documentation for the Philippines or the United States. In the United States, the comparable, annotated volumes of Supreme Court decisions is called US Supreme Court Reports, lawyers' edition.
Only the Supreme Court itself has the authority to overturn its own decisions through a process called "overruling."
No, the Supreme Court reviews decisions of lower (inferior) courts under its appellate jurisdiction.
No, Congress cannot override decisions made by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court is the highest court in the United States and its decisions are final and binding.
Yes, the Supreme Court has the power to reverse its own decisions through a process called overruling.
No, Congress cannot directly overrule decisions made by the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court's decisions are final and cannot be overturned by Congress.
The Supreme Court itself has the authority to overturn its own decisions through a process called "overruling."