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99 Notre Dame L. Rev. Reflection 1 (2023-2024)

handle is hein.journals/ndalro99 and id is 1 raw text is: ARTICLE

A TEXTUALIST DEFENSE OF A NEW
COLLATERAL ORDER DOCTRINE
Adam Reed Moore*
As a general rule, federal appellate courts have jurisdiction over final
decisions. Though the rule seems simple enough, the Court's current approach to
interpreting final decisions, the collateral order doctrine, is anything but straight-
forward. That is because the Court has left the statutory text by the wayside. The
collateral order doctrine is divorced from statutory text and is instead based on policy
considerations.
Commentators (and, at times, the Court) have offered an alternative reading of
final decisions: the final-judgment rule. This rule would allow appeals from final
judgments only. But this alternative is not the product of close textual analysis. Nor
is it faithful to the relevant statute's original meaning. In fact, the Court has never
made a serious attempt to interpret final decisions as that phrase was understood
when enacted.
This Article fills that gap, leveraging corpus linguistics evidence to discover the
original, ordinary meaning of final decisions. Adding that corpus evidence to clues
from historical context and interstatutory analysis, neither the current collateral order
doctrine nor the final-judgment rule reflects the ordinary meaning of final deci-
sions. Instead, final decisions include final judgments, other decisions that end
litigation on the merits, and orders deciding issues that are ancillary to the merits
and will not be revisited. This is the new, text-conscious collateral order doctrine that
the Court should adopt.
© 2023 Adam Reed Moore. Individuals and nonprofit institutions may reproduce and
distribute copies of this Article in any format at or below cost, for educational purposes, so
long as each copy identifies the author, provides a citation to the Notre Dame Law
Review Reflection, and includes this provision in the copyright notice.
* Law Clerk, United States Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit. J.D., BYU Law
School. I express my gratitude to Professor Aaron Nielson and Dean David Moore for
their helpful edits on earlier drafts of this Article, former Justice Tom Lee for fascinating
classes on statutory interpretation, and the team at Becket for the work experiences that
prompted my interest in this subject matter. I also thank the skilled editing team at the
Notre Dame Law Review and, as always, Aspen Moore.

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