Final Judgment Default Under 28 U S C 1291
This trap appears as a wrong-answer choice in 2 active questions. Spotting how it is built is the repair: read each example's “why it's attractive” before the “why it's wrong.”
Subject distribution
- Civil Procedure2
Example wrong choices
18974_subscription_meal_kit_23f · CIVIL_PROCEDURE · Choice AImmediate appeal only if the case also contains a federal question.
Why it's attractive
The student treats 'federal question' as the procedural gate. The Rule 23(f) route is the same whether or not the case has a federal question. The answer text itself states a rule that is not the law.
Why it's wrong
The student treats 'federal question' as the procedural gate. The Rule 23(f) route is the same whether or not the case has a federal question. The answer text itself states a rule that is not the law.
18974_subscription_meal_kit_23f · CIVIL_PROCEDURE · Choice BAutomatic appeal as of right because class certification is important.
Why it's attractive
The student accepts the importance argument and concludes that an as-of-right appeal must exist. The breaker is the final-judgment rule plus Rule 23(f)'s narrow, permission-based carve-out; importance is not a statutory hook.
Why it's wrong
The student accepts the importance argument and concludes that an as-of-right appeal must exist. The breaker is the final-judgment rule plus Rule 23(f)'s narrow, permission-based carve-out; importance is not a statutory hook.
18974_subscription_meal_kit_23f · CIVIL_PROCEDURE · Choice DNo possible review ever, even after final judgment.
Why it's attractive
The 'no possible review ever, even after final judgment' framing is a flat overclaim. The breaker is that final-judgment review under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 is always available at the end of the case, and Rule 23(f) interlocutory review is available now.
Why it's wrong
The 'no possible review ever, even after final judgment' framing is a flat overclaim. The breaker is that final-judgment review under 28 U.S.C. § 1291 is always available at the end of the case, and Rule 23(f) interlocutory review is available now.
19337_wedding_photographer_1292b · CIVIL_PROCEDURE · Choice BYes, because important questions are automatically appealable.
Why it's attractive
The student accepts the 'important issue' footnote as the statutory hook and concludes that an as-of-right appeal must exist. The breaker is the text of Section 1292(b): a judge's footnote is not a certification, and 'importance' alone is not the statutory test; the two-step route is mandatory.
Why it's wrong
The student accepts the 'important issue' footnote as the statutory hook and concludes that an as-of-right appeal must exist. The breaker is the text of Section 1292(b): a judge's footnote is not a certification, and 'importance' alone is not the statutory test; the two-step route is mandatory.
19337_wedding_photographer_1292b · CIVIL_PROCEDURE · Choice CNo, because interlocutory appeal is impossible in federal court.
Why it's attractive
The 'interlocutory appeal is impossible in federal court' framing is a flat overclaim. The breaker is that interlocutory review does exist through a small set of permission-based routes: Section 1292(a) (injunctions), Section 1292(b) (certified question), Rule 23(f) (class certification), mandamus, and the collateral-order doctrine.
Why it's wrong
The 'interlocutory appeal is impossible in federal court' framing is a flat overclaim. The breaker is that interlocutory review does exist through a small set of permission-based routes: Section 1292(a) (injunctions), Section 1292(b) (certified question), Rule 23(f) (class certification), mandamus, and the collateral-order doctrine.
19337_wedding_photographer_1292b · CIVIL_PROCEDURE · Choice DYes, because district-court certification is unnecessary.
Why it's attractive
The student treats the district-court certification as optional. The breaker is the text of Section 1292(b): the statute expressly conditions immediate appeal on the district court's certification. Eliminating the certification step rewrites the statute; the rule stated in the answer text is not the law.
Why it's wrong
The student treats the district-court certification as optional. The breaker is the text of Section 1292(b): the statute expressly conditions immediate appeal on the district court's certification. Eliminating the certification step rewrites the statute; the rule stated in the answer text is not the law.
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