

 
 Legal Sidebari 
 
The “Shadow Docket”: The Supreme Court’s 
Non-Merits Orders 
Updated August 27, 2021 
The evening of Friday, August 20, 2021, saw significant activity on the Supreme Court’s non-merits 
docket. That evening, the Biden Administration filed an application for stay pending appeal in Biden v. 
Texas, seeking to pause a Texas district court order blocking the rescission of a Trump Administration 
immigration policy known as the “Migrant Protection Protocols” (MPP). After 11 p.m. that evening, 
Justice Alito issued a temporary administrative stay of the Texas court’s decision, pausing the order 
requiring enforcement of the MPP until the full Court could consider whether a longer stay was 
warranted. Also on the evening of August 20, in Alabama Association of Realtors v. Department of Health 
and Human Services, a group of landlords and real estate trade associations challenging the Centers for 
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) eviction moratorium filed an emergency application for a 
Supreme Court order that would immediately bar enforcement of the moratorium. Shortly after the 
application was docketed in Alabama Association of Realtors, Chief Justice Roberts ordered the 
government to file a response by noon on Monday, August 23, 2021; the Court did not otherwise 
immediately act on the application. Both cases received significant news coverage, even before the full 
Court ruled in either matter. Later the same week, the full Court issued an order requiring implementation 
of the MPP and an unsigned opinion blocking enforcement of the eviction moratorium. 
The Supreme Court’s non-merits or motions docket, sometimes informally called the Court’s “shadow 
docket,” has recently attracted attention from legislators, legal commentators, and the popular press. 
While the Supreme Court’s motions docket has existed almost as long as the Court itself, many observers 
believe that in recent years the Court has increasingly disposed of high-profile matters via non-merits 
rulings, and some have raised legal questions and concerns about that trend. This Legal Sidebar provides 
an overview of the Supreme Court’s non-merits docket and discusses selected related considerations for 
Congress. 
Supreme Court Motions Practice and the Non-Merits Docket 
Discussion of Supreme Court cases often focuses on the Court’s merits decisions—opinions that the 
Court issues after full briefing and oral argument. However, the Supreme Court also issues many orders 
outside the context of merits decisions, including orders granting or denying petitions for a writ of 
certiorari; rulings in emergency matters, such as requests to stay lower court decisions pending appeal; 
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and orders setting deadlines and other procedures for litigation before the Court. Most decisions on the 
Court’s non-merits docket involve either granting or denying certiorari or routine procedural questions, 
but some of the Court’s non-merits orders in emergency matters have a major impact on high-profile 
litigation. Emergency litigation before the Supreme Court often concerns requests for preliminary 
injunctive relief. In theory, such relief is designed to preserve the status quo while a case is pending and 
remains in effect only until the courts can fully consider the merits of the case. However, emergency 
matters are often subject to rigid real-world deadlines, and sometimes the federal courts are not able to 
consider the merits in full before those deadlines pass. In those cases, a decision to grant or deny a 
preliminary injunction (or a stay of a preliminary injunction issued by a lower court) may effectively 
resolve the case. 
The Supreme Court’s procedures in non-merits matters differ significantly from its procedures in merits 
cases. In merits cases, the Court typically considers briefs and oral argument from the parties. In addition, 
the Court often receives input from non-parties known as amici curiae, who raise additional issues and 
arguments potentially relevant to the case. For non-merits matters, the Court generally does not hear oral 
argument and receives limited input from non-parties. Briefs from the parties are generally shorter than 
merits briefs, may be prepared on a very tight timeline, and may be based on a limited factual record; in 
some cases, the Court does not wait for a full briefing before issuing an order.  
The Supreme Court’s decisions generally take different forms in merits cases and in non-merits matters. 
When issuing a merits decision, the Court usually publishes a written opinion that explains the Court’s 
reasoning and notes which Justice authored the opinion and which Justices joined it. Justices may also file 
separate opinions concurring or dissenting in full or in part; those separate opinions are also signed by 
their authors and any other Justices who joined them. By contrast, the Court frequently decides non-
merits matters using summary orders. While those orders sometimes include a brief explanation of the 
legal reasoning underlying the decision, they often lack legal analysis. Nor do summary orders typically 
reveal how the Justices voted. As with merits decisions, Justices may concur in or dissent from non-merits 
decisions, and may elect to file separate statements explaining their position. 
Recent Trends on the Court’s Non-Merits Docket 
Commentators generally agree that, in recent years, the Court has issued more orders on its non-merits 
docket that concern high-profile litigation relating to issues of public interest, and they offer several 
possible reasons for the change. Some point to the litigation strategy of parties, and particularly the 
federal government, noting that the Justice Department under the Trump Administration sought 
emergency relief from the Supreme Court far more often than prior administrations. It remains to be seen 
whether that practice will continue under the Biden Administration: at the time of writing, the Biden 
Administration has sought emergency relief from the Supreme Court once, in Biden v. Texas. 
Some observers trace the increase in high-profile non-merits rulings to changes in the Court itself, citing 
possible changes in how the Justices apply the legal test for emergency relief. One scholar contends that 
use of the non-merits docket is driven in significant part by lower courts’ issuance of nationwide 
injunctions—court orders that bar a party (often the federal government) from taking a certain action not 
only against other parties to the litigation, but also against anybody else. Nationwide injunctions have 
garnered considerable attention in recent years, and two members of the Court have authored separate 
opinions disapproving of such orders, so it is possible that some of the Court’s non-merits decisions seek 
to curb the practice. Another scholar notes that appeals involving nationwide injunctions comprise “only 
one modest slice of the shadow docket” and thus do not fully explain the increase in high-profile non-
merits decisions. 
During its October 2020 term, the Supreme Court has issued non-merits orders in high-profile cases 
involving the 2020 U.S. Census, the 2020 presidential election, the death penalty, immigration law, and 
  
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government policies intended to prevent the spread of COVID-19. The following subsections outline 
selected recent cases in each of those areas. 
Census Litigation 
In April 2020, the U.S. Census Bureau extended certain deadlines, including the schedule for collecting 
2020 Census data, in response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Then, in August 2020, the Bureau announced 
a revised plan that reduced the extended timeframe for data collection by half, so that collection would 
end on September 30. Several individuals and organizations sued, arguing that the abbreviated collection 
period would yield inaccurate results, and sought an injunction preventing the government from 
implementing the revised deadlines. The district court granted the injunction, and the Ninth Circuit 
declined to stay the district court’s decision as to the data collection deadline. On October 13, 2020, the 
Supreme Court stayed the district court’s decision in its entirety. The stay order effectively allowed 
Census data collection to cease almost immediately. 
Election Litigation 
Because Election Day imposes a rigid deadline for resolving disputes related to voting procedures, 
election cases often proceed on an expedited basis and arrive on the Court’s emergency docket. During 
the 2020 election season, the COVID-19 pandemic spurred additional election-related litigation as 
election officials and courts considered various measures designed to ensure voters could cast their ballots 
safely. (Non-merits litigation related to the 2020 election also reached the Court during the 2019 term.) 
Non-merits election cases from the Court’s 2020 term included: 
  Andino v. Middleton, in which the Court partially stayed a district court’s preliminary 
injunction, thus allowing South Carolina to enforce a requirement that another individual 
witness a voter’s signature on an absentee ballot envelope; 
  Merrill v. People First of Alabama, in which the Court stayed a district court injunction, 
thus preventing Alabama counties from implementing curbside voting for voters with 
disabilities during the COVID-19 pandemic; and  
  Republican Party of Pennsylvania v. Boockvar, in which the Court declined to stay a state 
supreme court order permitting mail-in votes that were mailed on or before Election Day 
to be counted as long as they were received by November 6. 
Death Penalty Litigation 
Like election cases, parties often litigate death penalty cases on an emergency basis, and such cases have 
long featured prominently on the Court’s non-merits docket. This may be because prisoners raise new 
claims at the last minute seeking to avoid execution, because prisoners have longstanding legal challenges 
pending in state or federal court that gain new urgency once an execution is scheduled, or because some 
challenges to a death sentence cannot be brought until an execution date is set, often just weeks in 
advance. One case of note from the 2020 term is Dunn v. Smith. In Smith, a death row inmate challenged 
on free exercise grounds the State of Alabama’s refusal to allow his spiritual adviser into the execution 
chamber during his execution. After the Eleventh Circuit entered an injunction blocking the execution 
unless the inmate could have his pastor with him, the Supreme Court rejected the State’s request to vacate 
the injunction and allow the execution to proceed as planned.  
Some observers have asserted that the Court’s decision in Smith is difficult to reconcile with previous 
orders from the Court’s non-merits docket involving free exercise claims from condemned individuals. 
While there were differences between those cases that might explain the varying outcomes, disposition of 
  
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the cases through summary orders means that lower courts and the public do not have comprehensive 
legal analysis from the Court to help draw distinctions between them. 
Immigration Litigation 
The Supreme Court has recently considered multiple non-merits matters involving immigration policy, 
including the MPP. Originally announced in 2018 and also known as the “Remain in Mexico” policy, the 
MPP allowed Customs and Border Protection to require many non-U.S. nationals who arrived at the 
southern border seeking asylum or related protections to wait in Mexico while U.S. immigration courts 
processed their cases. Litigation related to the MPP previously reached the Supreme Court during the 
Court’s 2019 term. As outlined in an earlier Legal Sidebar, a California district court issued a preliminary 
injunction setting aside the MPP on the grounds that the plaintiffs had shown a likelihood of success on 
their claims, and the Ninth Circuit ultimately affirmed in February 2020 and issued an order that would 
have blocked the MPP in California and Arizona. However, on March 11, 2020, the Supreme Court 
granted the government a stay of the preliminary injunction, preventing the Ninth Circuit order from 
taking effect and allowing the MPP to continue while litigation on the merits remained pending. 
After President Biden took office, the Secretary of Homeland Security decided to terminate the MPP. That 
decision was challenged in court, and on August 13, 2021, the district court vacated the Secretary’s 
decision and issued a nationwide injunction requiring DHS “to enforce and implement [the] MPP in good 
faith” (emphasis in original). The district court and the Fifth Circuit both declined to stay that ruling 
pending appeal. The Biden Administration then filed its request for emergency relief from the Supreme 
Court in Biden v. Texas. On the evening of August 24, 2021, the full Supreme Court issued a summary 
order denying the application for stay because the government “failed to show a likelihood of success on 
the claim that the memorandum rescinding the Migrant Protection Protocols was not arbitrary and 
capricious.” The Administration is now required to implement the MPP, though it retains substantial 
discretion over how to administer the MPP and other authorities for processing migrants at the border. 
COVID-19 Policies 
Multiple cases involving measures intended to prevent the spread of COVID-19 appeared on the Supreme 
Court’s non-merits docket during the 2019 and 2020 terms, including two cases involving California 
policies. The first case, South Bay United Pentecostal Church v. Newsom, involved a challenge to 
statewide COVID-19 restrictions that prohibited indoor worship. In a summary order accompanied by 
several separate opinions, the Supreme Court enjoined the state from enforcing the indoor worship 
provision, but declined to block a separate capacity limitation and a prohibition on singing and chanting. 
Several weeks later, in Gateway City Church v. Newsom, the Court considered a county regulation that 
prohibited indoor worship services during the coronavirus pandemic. The Court enjoined application of 
the regulation, issuing a brief summary order that stated in part, “The Ninth Circuit’s failure to grant relief 
was erroneous. This outcome is clearly dictated by this Court’s decision in South Bay United Pentecostal 
Church v. Newsom.” 
More recently, the Supreme Court has issued non-merits decisions related to challenges to the CDC’s 
federal eviction moratorium. As outlined in a previous Legal Sidebar, in June 2021, the Court denied a 
motion to vacate a stay, allowing the eviction moratorium to remain in effect until it expired on August 1, 
2021. The CDC subsequently extended the moratorium until October 3, 2021, in counties experiencing 
substantial and high levels of COVID-19 transmission. In Alabama Association of Realtors, the Court 
considered an application to vacate a stay pending appeal, which asked the Supreme Court to give 
immediate effect to a district court order barring enforcement of the moratorium. On August 26, 2021, the 
Court vacated the stay, effectively blocking the moratorium. The unsigned per curiam opinion did not 
finally resolve the merits of the case, though the Court stated that the parties challenging the moratorium 
  
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were “virtually certain to succeed on the merits of their argument that the CDC has exceeded its 
authority.”  
Considerations for Congress 
As noted above, the vast majority of orders on the Supreme Court’s non-merits docket concern routine 
procedural matters; those routine procedural orders are generally uncontroversial. On the other hand, 
some commentators have raised legal questions and concerns about high-profile non-merits orders such as 
those outlined in the previous section. 
One key legal question concerns the precedential effect of the Supreme Court’s non-merits orders. Merits 
decisions issued by a majority of the Supreme Court carry precedential weight, meaning that they dictate 
the outcome of future cases that raise the same issues. Non-merits orders and other preliminary orders, in 
contrast, have traditionally not been treated as binding on the lower courts. Recently, the Court’s use of its 
prior non-merits orders has increased uncertainty over the precedential value of non-merits orders beyond 
the case in which they are issued. In its order in Gateway City Church, discussed above, the Court wrote 
that the lower court’s “failure to grant relief was erroneous,” because the right to injunctive relief was 
“clearly dictated” by the Court’s prior summary order in South Bay United Pentecostal Church. However, 
if the Court cites its own non-merits orders as a basis for finding lower court decisions “erroneous,” that 
raises the question of how lower courts and others should interpret and apply those orders. Even if the 
Court’s non-merits decisions are not directly binding in a particular case, observers may look to the 
Court’s summary orders in an attempt to divine how the Court might rule in similar cases. The disposition 
of high-profile matters through summary orders may create challenges for lower courts and policymakers 
as they seek to determine the legal standards to apply, particularly when the orders do not include a 
substantive majority opinion.  
Some commentators take issue with the Court’s procedures for handling important matters through non-
merits decisions. They note that because many non-merits matters are litigated on an emergency basis in 
the trial court and on appeal, the factual and legal record may not be fully developed. Appellate courts 
often grant or deny stays with little or no explanation, making it difficult for observers to tell whether 
courts are applying the legal tests for emergency relief consistently. Such deficiencies may be exacerbated 
once cases reach the Supreme Court, where emergency matters generally involve limited briefing by the 
parties, no oral argument, and limited opportunity for participation by amici. Moreover, when these 
appeals arise from orders issued very early in the litigation process, the Court may unnecessarily reach 
issues that would have become moot or otherwise dropped out of the litigation had it proceeded on a non-
expedited basis. Some also argue that the expedited timeline of emergency litigation allows the Court less 
time to consider the issues, reach a well-reasoned decision, and seek compromise when appropriate. 
Some of the foregoing concerns apply to all emergency litigation, but others are unique to the Supreme 
Court’s non-merits docket. For instance, some commentators assert that the Supreme Court has become 
too willing to overrule lower courts by summary order in cases where the lower courts had more 
opportunity to consider the issues presented. Some note that it is unclear how the Court selects 
discretionary matters that appear on the non-merits docket, such as summary reversals. Others contend 
that the Court’s non-merits decisions lack transparency because those decisions do not always indicate 
which Justices voted for or against the disposition. The lack of recorded votes may reduce accountability 
for the individual Justices and remove an incentive for them to ensure that their votes are consistent over 
time. Moreover, the lack of published legal reasoning from the majority in many non-merits cases may 
“make[] it impossible to scrutinize the merits of the Court’s action” or to determine whether the Court as 
a whole remains consistent across cases. Those procedural concerns may, in turn, give rise to broader 
concerns about judicial legitimacy. Some commentators note that it may undermine public confidence in 
the judiciary when the Supreme Court sets aside a lower court decision containing extensive legal 
analysis through a brief summary order. Another scholar downplays many of the concerns around the
  
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 Supreme Court’s non-merits decisions, asserting that “the orders list and the procedures governing it 
reflect how the Supreme Court conducts most of its business.”  
Scholars and legislators have advanced numerous recent proposals that could address the Supreme 
Court’s issuance of consequential decisions through summary orders. Some commentators assert that it 
would be most appropriate for the Court itself to address the issue, which would accord deference to the 
courts on how to manage their dockets and avoid any possible constitutional issues related to the 
separation of powers. To the extent the rise of the “shadow docket” stems from the federal government’s 
litigation strategy, the Executive Branch could also play a role in reform. However, some argue that 
Congress also has authority to act in this area, and Congress has explored the issue, including through a 
February 2021 hearing on the “shadow docket” in the House Subcommittee on Courts, Intellectual 
Property, and the Internet. 
Judicial procedures are generally based on court-created rules rather than constitutional mandates, and 
Congress can alter those procedures through legislation. For example, Congress could enact legislation 
intended to limit nationwide injunctions, potentially reducing the need for the Supreme Court to review 
far-reaching lower court orders on an expedited basis. Congress could also allow transfer of cases seeking 
nationwide injunctions to the federal courts in the District of Columbia to mitigate forum-shopping 
concerns, or speed up the appeals process for cases involving injunctions against government action, in 
order to “tak[e] pressure off of the shadow docket.”  
Congress might also consider reforms targeting specific types of cases, such as enacting procedures for 
death penalty litigation that might forestall some emergency litigation or establishing standards for the 
Court to apply in those cases. Another proposal would limit the use of summary orders in certain voting 
rights litigation by requiring any court vacating or staying an order of injunctive relief to make specific 
findings with respect to the public interest and provide a written explanation for its ruling. More 
generally, commentators have suggested that Congress could codify the legal test for emergency relief. 
 
Author Information 
 
Joanna R. Lampe 
   
Legislative Attorney 
 
 
 
 
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