concurring opinion
Noun: 1. A judicial opinion that agrees with the court's final decision but offers different or additional legal reasoning: A "concurring opinion" is a written statement by a judge or justice who agrees with the majority's ultimate ruling in a case but wishes to express separate reasoning, emphasize different points of law, or clarify their own legal perspective.
A "concurring opinion" is used in the context of appellate courts, especially supreme courts, where multiple judges decide a case. It is a formal legal document that becomes part of the case record. * It explains why a judge votes with the majority but disagrees with some or all of the majority's reasoning. * It is distinct from the "majority opinion" (the official opinion of the court) and the "dissenting opinion" (an opinion disagreeing with the court's decision).
- In a Supreme Court ruling: "Justice Smith filed a concurring opinion, agreeing that the law was unconstitutional but arguing on much narrower grounds than the majority."
- Discussing a legal decision: "While the judgment was unanimous, the presence of three separate concurring opinions revealed deep divisions in the court's legal philosophy."
- In legal analysis: "Scholars often study concurring opinions to understand potential future shifts in the court's interpretation of the law."
- "To concur in the judgment": This phrase is often used in the opening of a concurring opinion, meaning the judge agrees with the final outcome (the judgment) but not necessarily the path taken to reach it.
- Example: "I concur in the judgment but write separately to express my view on the underlying constitutional principle."
- A "concurrence" can be used as a shorter, informal noun to refer to a concurring opinion.
- Example: "Her lengthy concurrence argued for a different standard of review."
- Concur (verb): To agree or be of the same opinion. In a legal context, it specifically means to agree with a court's judgment.
- Example: "Two justices concurred with the result."
- Concurrence (noun): The act of concurring; also commonly used as shorthand for a "concurring opinion."
- Majority Opinion (noun): The opinion joined by more than half of the judges, which states the court's decision and becomes binding law.
- Plurality Opinion (noun): An opinion that receives the most votes but not a majority of the court.
- Dissenting Opinion (noun): An opinion written by a judge who disagrees with the majority's decision.
- Agreeing opinion (less common, more general)
- Separate opinion (broader term that can include both concurring and dissenting opinions)
The core function of a "concurring opinion" is to agree in result but not necessarily in rationale. It serves several purposes: 1. To express a different legal justification for the same outcome. 2. To highlight or emphasize a particular point of law that the majority opinion downplayed. 3. To lay the groundwork for a future legal argument or shift in doctrine. 4. To limit the scope of the majority's ruling by interpreting it in a narrower way.
While it does not have the binding legal authority of the majority opinion, a persuasive concurring opinion can influence future legal thinking and decisions.
- an opinion that agrees with the court's disposition of the case but is written to express a particular judge's reasoning