Incarcerated individuals who seek to challenge their imprisonment through a federal habeas petition are generally afforded one opportunity to do so. See 28 U. S. C. §§ 2254, 2244. Before a federal court can address a petitioner's second or successive federal habeas fling on the merits, the incarcerated fler must clear strict procedural hurdles that the Antiterrorism and Effective Death Penalty Act of 1996 (AEDPA) erects.
See § 2244(b).
This case presents the question of how to classify a second-in-time habeas fling when the judgment denying the frst application is under review on appeal. Does that second habeas-related submission qualify as a second or successive application, thereby triggering § 2244(b)'s stringent gatekeeping requirements?
We hold that, in general, once the district court has entered its judgment with respect to the frst habeas petition, a second-in-time application qualifes as “second or succes- Stephen J. Petrany, Solicitor General, and Justin T. Golart, Deputy Solicitor General, and by the Attorneys General for their respective States as follows: Steve Marshall of Alabama, James Uthmeier of Florida, Raúl Labrador of Idaho, Theodore E. Rokita of Indiana, Brenna Bird of Iowa, Kris W. Kobach of Kansas, Russell Coleman of Kentucky, Liz Murrill of Louisiana, Lynn Fitch of Mississippi, Andrew Bailey of Missouri, Michael T. Hilgers of Nebraska, Aaron D. Ford of Nevada, Drew H. Wrigley of North Dakota, Dave Yost of Ohio, Gentner Drummond of Oklahoma, Alan Wilson of South Carolina, Marty J. Jackley of South Dakota, Jonathan Skrmetti of Tennessee, Derek Brown of Utah, Jason Miyares of Virginia, and Patrick Morrisey of West Virginia; for the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania et al. by David W. Sunday, Jr., Attorney General of Pennsylvania, Hugh J. Burns, Jr., and Ronald Eisenberg, Senior Deputy Attorneys General, Kirsten E. Heine, Executive Deputy Attorney General, Kathleen Jen nings, Attorney General of Delaware, and Matthew J. Platkin, Attorney General of New Jersey; for the Criminal Justice Legal Foundation by Kent S. Scheidegger; and for Sen. John Cornyn by Owen J. McGovern. Igor V. Timofeyev, Stephen B. Kinnaird, Vladimir J. Semendyai, and Vanessa Omoroghomwan fled a brief for Lee Kovarsky et al. as amici curiae.
Page Proof Pending Publication sive” and is thus properly subject to the requirements of § 2244(b).
I
In 2012, a Texas state-court jury convicted petitioner Danny Rivers of continuous sexual abuse of a child, two forms of indecency with a child, and possession of child pornography. Rivers unsuccessfully sought direct appeal and state habeas relief.
In August 2017, Rivers fled his frst federal habeas petition under 28 U. S. C. § 2254, a statute that permits a federal court to evaluate a state prisoner's claim “that he is in custody in violation of the Constitution or laws or treaties of the United States.” § 2254(a). In that habeas petition, Rivers asserted, inter alia, claims of prosecutorial misconduct, ineffective assistance of trial and appellate counsel, and due process and equal protection violations.
The District Court denied Rivers's habeas petition, issuing its judgment in September 2018. Rivers then invoked the procedure that AEDPA prescribes for seeking to challenge a § 2254 habeas denial in the court of appeals: He asked the Fifth Circuit to give him what is known as a “certifcate of appealability.” 1 A Fifth Circuit Judge granted Rivers's request in July 2020, but only as to his claim for ineffective assistance of counsel.
While his appeal was pending, Rivers gained access to his own client fle, which had been in his trial counsel's possession. The fle contained a state investigator's report that discussed two computer documents Rivers believed were re1Individuals seeking to appeal the denial of a § 2254 habeas petition must receive permission to do so by obtaining such a certifcate. See § 2253(c)(1)(A) (“[A]n appeal may not be taken to the court of appeals from . . . the fnal order in a habeas corpus proceeding in which the detention complained of arises out of process issued by a State court” “[u]nless a circuit justice or judge issues a certifcate of appealability”). A certifcate of appealability can issue “only if the applicant has made a substantial showing of the denial of a constitutional right.” § 2253(c)(2). Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication lated to his convictions; one document was labeled “of interest,” while the other was specifcally described as “not child porn.” App. 94 (capitalization deleted). Rivers promptly requested to supplement the Fifth Circuit's case record with this purportedly exculpatory information, but the Fifth Circuit denied that request. Rivers then asked the appellate panel to either stay the appeal or remand the case to the District Court to allow him to present this new evidence to the lower court in the frst instance. See id., at 99 (arguing that “justice and judicial economy would best be served” if a single court considered “all grounds” for relief (capitalization deleted)). The Fifth Circuit rejected the stay-or-remand request as well and, thereafter, affrmed the District Court's denial of Rivers's § 2254 petition on the merits. This Court denied certiorari. See Rivers v. Lumpkin, 598 U. S. 1234 (2023).
Notably for present purposes, after the Fifth Circuit denied Rivers's request to supplement the record, Rivers fled another § 2254 petition with the District Court. This petition included the newly obtained state investigator's report and raised claims for relief related to that evidence. A Magistrate Judge recommended that this second-in-time habeas petition be classifed as a “second or successive” habeas application for § 2244(b) purposes. Rivers objected, arguing that his second § 2254 fling should not be construed as a new habeas application. Rather, Rivers asserted, the new fling should be treated as an amendment to his initial habeas petition, because the judgment related to that frst petition was still on appeal.
The District Court rejected Rivers's argument. It concluded that the second-in-time fling was a second or successive habeas petition subject to § 2244(b)(2) and transferred the fling to the Fifth Circuit for a determination whether § 2244(b)(2)'s gatekeeping requirements for second or successive habeas petitions had been satisfed. See Part II, infra. Rivers then appealed the District Court's transfer order, again insisting that his fling was not a second or successive habeas petition (as opposed to a motion to amend) “because his frst-in-time petition was still pending on appeal.” Riv ers v. Lumpkin, 99 F. 4th 216, 218 (CA5 2024).
The Fifth Circuit affrmed. In its view, “the timing of Rivers's second-in-time petition d[id] not permit him to circumvent the requirements for fling successive petitions under § 2244.” Id., at 221. The panel reasoned that the District Court could have treated the second-in-time fling as a request to amend under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 15 if the judgment relating to Rivers's frst petition had been vacated on appeal and the case reopened in the District Court. Ibid. But because the judgment as to the frst petition had not been so vacated, “Rivers's second-in-time habeas petition” was a “second or successive” petition that was “subject to the district court's transfer order for lack of jurisdiction absent authorization to fle.” Id., at 223.
The Fifth Circuit's decision entrenched a Circuit split over how to characterize a second-in-time habeas fling that is fled when an appeal of the judgment of the frst habeas fling is pending.2 Is the second fling a “second or successive” habeas petition for § 2244 purposes, or not? We granted certiorari to resolve that split. 604 U. S. 1041 (2024).
2The majority of Circuits to consider the issue have concluded that § 2244(b) applies to a second-in-time habeas fling as of the district court's entry of fnal judgment related to the frst application, regardless of the status of any appeal. See, e. g., Balbuena v. Sullivan, 980 F. 3d 619, 641– 642 (CA9 2020); Phillips v. United States, 668 F. 3d 433, 435–436 (CA7 2012); Ochoa v. Sirmons, 485 F. 3d 538, 540–541 (CA10 2007) (per curiam); Williams v. Norris, 461 F. 3d 999, 1003–1004 (CA8 2006). The Second Circuit, by contrast, has held that “so long as appellate proceedings following the district court's dismissal of the initial petition remain pending when a subsequent petition is fled, the subsequent petition does not come within AEDPA's gatekeeping provisions for `second or successive' petitions.” Whab v. United States, 408 F. 3d 116, 118 (2005) (emphasis added); see also United States v. Santarelli, 929 F. 3d 95, 105 (CA3 2019) (“join[ing] the Second Circuit”).
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II
Habeas petitioners are generally entitled to “one fair opportunity” to litigate the merits of their postconviction claims in federal court. Banister v. Davis, 590 U. S. 504, 507 (2020); see also Slack v. McDaniel, 529 U. S. 473, 485–486 (2000); Stewart v. Martinez-Villareal, 523 U. S. 637, 643 (1998). When a person seeks to bring a subsequent federal habeas challenge to his detention, “the road gets rockier.” Banister, 590 U. S., at 509. AEDPA contains several signifcant procedural barriers that strictly limit a court's ability to hear “claim[s] presented” in any “second or successive habeas corpus application.” §§ 2244(b)(1), (2).
Several of those barriers are relevant to the issue presented in this case. First, § 2244 prohibits habeas applicants from fling a subsequent petition that relitigates the merits of previously denied claims. See § 2244(b)(1) (stating that any claim that “was presented in a prior application shall be dismissed”). Second, even if the subsequent petition presents a new claim, the second-in-time application can only proceed if it “falls within one of two narrow categories”: The claim must “rel[y] on a new and retroactive rule of constitutional law” or “alleg[e] previously undiscoverable facts that would establish [the petitioner's] innocence.” Banister, 590 U. S., at 509; see also § 2244(b)(2). Additionally, a petitioner cannot bring a second or successive habeas application directly to the district court. Instead, he must frst go to the court of appeals and make a “prima facie showing” that the petition satisfes one of § 2244(b)(2)'s exceptions, and that court has to grant authorization for the petitioner to proceed in district court. § 2244(b)(3). And then, even when such leave is granted, the district court must independently confirm that the petition satisfies the requirements of § 2244(b)(2). See § 2244(b)(4).
These rules apply to second-in-time habeas flings even if the fling is not styled as a § 2254 habeas application by the Page Proof Pending Publication fler—so long as the document is a § 2254 petition in substance. For example, a self-styled “motion” that “seeks to add a new ground for relief” or “attacks the federal court's previous resolution of a claim on the merits” can be construed as a second or successive petition and forced to face the gauntlet of § 2244(b), no matter how it is labeled. Gon zalez v. Crosby, 545 U. S. 524, 532 (2005) (emphasis deleted).
III
Respondent presents two arguments for why we lack jurisdiction over today's dispute about how Rivers's second-intime habeas fling should be characterized: frst, that Rivers lacks standing because his injury is not redressable; and second, that the Court lacks habeas jurisdiction because Riv- ers's child-pornography sentence has expired. For his part, Rivers makes two alternative arguments about the merits. He maintains that the second-in-time habeas petition does not trigger the second-or-successive requirements of § 2244(b) because his appeal of the frst petition was pending when he fled the second one. Alternatively, he argues that his second-in-time fling should be construed as a motion to amend—and, so construed, does not qualify as an “application” to which § 2244(b)'s requirements apply.
A
We begin our analysis by quickly disposing of respondent's contention that we lack jurisdiction. Respondent frst insists that Rivers lacks standing because the Fifth Circuit has now affrmed the District Court's judgment denying the initial habeas petition on the merits, and this Court lacks the authority to reopen that judgment in this separate litigation. But a favorable decision from this Court would redress Riv- ers's alleged injury—namely, that the District Court inappropriately transferred his second-in-time habeas application to the Fifth Circuit for review under § 2244(b). Rivers Page Proof Pending Publication therefore has appellate standing with respect to that legal claim.
See Food Marketing Institute v. Argus Leader Media, 588 U. S. 427, 433 (2019).
Respondent is also mistaken regarding the contention that the Court lacks habeas jurisdiction because Rivers is no longer in custody on the child-pornography conviction that the second habeas fling challenges. See § 2254(a) (permitting an application from an individual “in custody”). The record establishes that the newly discovered evidence Rivers wants the federal courts to consider implicates the sexual- abuse sentences for which Rivers remains incarcerated, too. Thus, we retain habeas jurisdiction to review his claims.
B
Turning to the parties' merits arguments concerning Riv- ers's second-in-time habeas fling, we note, to start, that the phrase “second or successive . . . application” as it appears in §2244(b)(2) is a “term of art”—that is, it does not necessarily “ `refer' to all habeas flings made `second or successively in time,' following an initial application.” Banister, 590 U. S., at 511 (quoting Magwood v. Patterson, 561 U. S. 320, 332 (2010)). Instead, the second-or-successive moniker applies only to “claim[s]” that have been presented in subsequently fled “applications.” § 2244(b)(2). A “claim,” as that term is used in §2244(b), is “an asserted federal basis for relief” from the judgment of conviction. Gonzalez, 545 U. S., at 530. And an “application” is “a fling that seeks `an adjudication' ” of one of those claims “ `on the merits.' ” Ibid. (quoting Woodford v. Garceau, 538 U. S. 202, 207 (2003); emphasis deleted); see also Gonzalez, 545 U. S., at 533 (explaining that motions that do not “substantively addres[s] federal grounds for setting aside the movant's state conviction,” for example, are not subject to the second-or-successive bar). Rivers acknowledges that his second-in-time fling “raised several new claims” that he had not presented previously to Page Proof Pending Publication the District Court. Pet. for Cert. 12. Still, in his petition for certiorari—and, to a lesser extent, his merits brief—Rivers argues that this fling did not qualify as a second or successive application triggering § 2244(b) because it was submitted during the pendency of his appeal of the judgment related to his frst habeas petition. Id., at 24; Brief for Petitioner 37. We do not agree with that proposition. Our case law establishes instead that whether a fling qualifes as a second or successive application generally turns on the existence of a fnal judgment with respect to the frst petition, not the status of an appeal.
We have noted, for example, that “an amended petition, fled after the initial one but before judgment, is not second or successive” for § 2244(b) purposes precisely because fnal judgment has not issued. Banister, 590 U. S., at 512 (emphasis added). On the other hand, we have determined that a motion for relief from judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 60(b) (fled, obviously, after the judgment has issued) counts as a second or successive application if that fling “attacks the federal court's previous resolution of a claim on the merits” or “seeks to add a new ground for relief” not addressed by the judgment. Gonzalez, 545 U. S., at 532 (emphasis deleted).
Pointing to Banister, Rivers insists that this Court has already rejected a moment-of-judgment rule for distinguishing between second-in-time flings that qualify as second or successive applications and those that do not. But our ruling in Banister related to a materially different fling submitted in a materially different context. There, the Court considered whether a motion to alter or amend a judgment under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 59(e)—i.e., a motion fled within 28 days that seeks to correct an error in the District Court's judgment prior to an appeal—should be construed as a second or successive fling under § 2244(b). 590 U. S., at 511. To be sure, the respondent in that case had “urged this Court to hold that `[e]ntry of fnal judgment is Page Proof Pending Publication the dividing line between a frst and second application,' ” as Rivers notes. Brief for Petitioner 37 (quoting Brief for Respondent in Banister v. Davis, O. T. 2019, No. 18–6943, p. 18; alteration in original). But Rule 59(e) motions present a unique variant to the otherwise generally applicable rule that entry of fnal judgment separates frst from second or successive habeas flings.
Specifcally, unlike a Rule 60(b) motion for relief from judgment, which seeks to challenge an extant judgment, a successful Rule 59(e) motion merely “suspends fnality” of the original judgment so that the district court can “fx any mistakes and thereby perfect its judgment before a possible appeal.” Banister, 590 U. S., at 516. A Rule 59(e) motion is “a limited continuation of the original proceeding—indeed, a part of producing the fnal judgment granting or denying habeas relief.” Id., at 521. As a result, disposition on a Rule 59(e) motion “merges into the fnal judgment” of the initial habeas fling. Id., at 516.
In other words, Rule 59(e) motions are “attendant on the initial habeas application” itself and “hel[p] produce a single fnal judgment for appeal.” Id., at 515–516. Thus, they are not themselves properly considered to be second or successive flings under AEDPA. Id., at 517; see also id., at 518–520 (contrasting this with second-in-time flings that “collaterally attack [the District Court's] already completed judgment” and from which appeal is “independent of the appeal of the original petition”). When properly understood, then, our decision in Banister actually supports the rule that Rivers resists.
Rivers also maintains that it undermines the purposes of AEDPA, and diverges from historical habeas doctrine and practice, to conclude that second-in-time applications fled during the pendency of an appeal trigger § 2244(b). See id., at 512–513 (explaining that these factors are relevant to the second-or-successive inquiry). But purpose and history do Page Proof Pending Publication not push us in the direction of adopting Rivers's preferred interpretation either.
As we have said before, “[t]he point of § 2244(b)'s [gatekeeping] restrictions . . . is to conserve judicial resources, reduce piecemeal litigation, and lend fnality to state court judgments within a reasonable time.” Id., at 512 (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). Rivers argues that his interpretation advances these aims by, for example, steering new claims to district courts, which have the “tools and experience that appellate courts lack” to terminate suits and thereby “haste[n] fnality.” Brief for Petitioner 34 (capitalization and boldface deleted). But the reality is quite the opposite. If the second-or-successive line is drawn at the end of the appellate-review period, a petitioner could fle any number of new applications raising new claims during the pendency of appeal or certiorari review, thereby prolonging the case seemingly indefnitely. So, as a practical matter and in the mine-run case, Rivers's theory would promote ineffciency by encouraging piecemeal litigation, and would thus make it substantially more diffcult to “produce a single fnal judgment for appeal.” Banister, 590 U. S., at 516.
Rivers tries to bolster his congressional-intent-related arguments by pointing to other postconviction provisions that pin “fnality” to the end of appellate review, not to the entry of judgment. See, e.g., § 2244(d)(1)(A) (running the 1-year deadline to fle a §2254 petition from “the date on which the judgment became fnal by the conclusion of direct review or the expiration of the time for seeking such review”). We note, however, that these provisions are buoyed by different animating purposes. The 1-year deadline for fling a § 2254 petition, for example, promotes exhaustion of claims and respects state-court processes, whereas AEDPA's second-orsuccessive restrictions “constitute a modifed res judicata rule,” Felker v. Turpin, 518 U. S. 651, 664 (1996), that “balance[s] . . . fnality and error correction,” Jones v. Hendrix, 599 U. S. 465, 491 (2023). “It is thus hardly `strange' that Page Proof Pending Publication rules governing exhaustion and the statute of limitations for purposes of bringing an initial application differ from those governing a successive application.” Brief for Respondent 38. With AEDPA's second-or-successive bar, Congress chose to promote fnality by requiring authorization from the court of appeals to fle successive petitions; the question before us today is merely when that requirement kicks in.
Rivers's appeal to historical habeas doctrine fares no better because, prior to AEDPA, there was no clear or consistent practice regarding how new habeas-related flings were treated during the pendency of an appeal. Some courts would consider new habeas flings on the merits, and deny them, when the frst-in-time habeas petition was under appellate review.3 But others would dismiss such flings without reaching the merits, on the ground that they were second or successive petitions not subject to review.4 It is diffcult to know what to make of these inconsistent practices, especially when Rivers fails to point to any case in which a court actually granted habeas relief on a subsequent petition while the frst was on appeal. The historical picture is thus far too murky to be dispositive. Cf. Banister, 590 U. S., at 514– 515 (relying on historical case law that indicated an overwhelming consensus in favor of the petitioner's view). As such, Rivers's history and policy arguments do not move the needle in our analysis.
In short, we reject Rivers's focus on the timing of his successive fling relative to the pendency of his appeal, and we conclude instead that it is the fnal judgment related to the 3See, e. g., Giarratano v. Procunier, 891 F. 2d 483, 485–487 (CA4 1989) (affrming the denial of a mid-appeal Rule 60(b) motion on the merits); Schewchun v. Edwards, 1987 WL 36402, *1–*2 (CA6, Feb. 19, 1987) (same). 4See, e. g., Behringer v. Johnson, 75 F. 3d 189, 189–190 (CA5 1996) (per curiam) (affrming denial of a Rule 60(b) motion containing new claims fled while the frst petition was pending on appeal as a successive habeas petition); Hunt v. Nuth, 57 F. 3d 1327, 1331, 1338–1339 (CA4 1995) (same).
Page Proof Pending Publication initial habeas fling that matters. Once the judgment has been entered with respect to the initial habeas petition, a second-in-time fling that makes new habeas claims generally qualifes as a second or successive petition for § 2244(b) purposes.5
IV
Rivers's petition for certiorari posited the question we've answered above. See Pet. for Cert. 1 (asking “whether 28 U. S. C. § 2244(b)(2)'s rules for `second or successive' habeas petitions apply to a habeas fling made after the district court has denied an initial petition but before an appellate court has weighed in”).6 But Rivers's merits briefng pivots to articulate an additional theory, in the alternative: that second-in-time flings that request amendment of the initial habeas petition under Rule 15 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure do not—by their nature—qualify as second or successive flings under § 2244(b). See Brief for Petitioner 23 (“[A]n `amendment' is not a new and independent application, but rather something that happens to an existing application”); see also id., at 31 (describing Rule 15 motions as “part and parcel of the initial application” (boldface deleted)). We decline to address this argument today for two reasons.
First, Rivers failed to present this argument in his petition for certiorari or to the courts below. This new theory for 5Although we hold today that an application is second or successive under § 2244(b) if a judgment on the merits has issued as to a frst-in-time petition even if the case remains pending on appeal, we neither decide nor comment on whether the classifcation of a second-in-time petition must occur while the appeal is pending.
That is, we take no position on whether, in a case where the facts support doing so, a subsequent fling can be held in abeyance until the frst-in-time appeal has concluded, as is the common practice in some Circuits. See, e.g., Santarelli, 929 F. 3d, at 105–106.
6See also Pet. for Cert. 2 (claiming that “[t]he Fifth Circuit's decision deepen[ed] a circuit confict over when § 2244(b)(2) kicks in”); id., at 24 (“Section 2244(b)(2) does not apply until appellate review of the frst habeas application is exhausted” (boldface deleted)).
Page Proof Pending Publication why his successive fling does not trigger § 2244(b) does not operate on the timing of the fling (i.e., whether, when an appeal is pending, the fling is “second or successive”), but, rather, on its nature (i.e., whether, when submitted under Rule 15, the fling counts as an “application” at all). Rivers did not cite § 2242—the source of authority upon which he relies for this alternative argument—until his opening merits brief in this Court. We have often said that “ `[w]e are a Court of review, not of frst view.' ” Moody v. NetChoice, LLC, 603 U. S. 707, 726 (2024) (quoting Cutter v. Wilkinson, 544 U. S. 709, 718, n. 7 (2005)). Rivers's alternative argument thus “suffers from the legally fatal problem that it makes its frst appearance here in this Court in the briefs on the merits.” Ohio Forestry Assn., Inc. v. Sierra Club, 523 U. S. 726, 738 (1998).
Second, and in any event, we note that the factual predicate necessary for Rivers's Rule 15 argument to help him in this case is lacking. The District Court could not have granted Rivers's Rule 15 motion to amend (assuming, ar guendo, that we treat his second-in-time fling as such) while his habeas claims were being considered on appeal, since jurisdiction had shifted to the Court of Appeals. See Coinbase, Inc. v. Bielski, 599 U. S. 736, 740 (2023). Recognizing this, Rivers asserts that the District Court could have issued an indicative ruling on this motion under Rule 62.1, which, in turn, might have persuaded the Fifth Circuit to remand the case to the District Court for consideration of the amendment. But there is one more missing piece (and it is crucial): Rivers never asked the District Court in this case for such an indicative ruling. Nor does he argue that the District Court abused its discretion by failing to issue one sua sponte. Meanwhile, the Fifth Circuit considered— and denied—the actual remand motion that Rivers fled with that court; he asked the Circuit to send the matter back to the District Court for consideration of the newly discovered Page Proof Pending Publication evidence, and we now lack jurisdiction to review its refusal to do so.7 Thus, even if Rivers's fling in the District Court could have been construed as a Rule 15 motion to amend, the District Court was powerless to grant it while his case was on appeal, and the Fifth Circuit had no proclivity to remand the matter to the District Court in any event. This means that Rivers's alternative theory is of no use to him, and, as such, we decline to address it.
* * * A second-in-time § 2254 petition generally qualifes as a second or successive application, triggering the requirements of § 2244(b), when an earlier fled petition has been decided on the merits and a judgment exists. Because the Fifth Circuit correctly applied this straightforward rule, we affrm.
It is so ordered.
7That Fifth Circuit ruling was associated with Rivers's frst habeas petition and is memorialized in a separate docket than the case which is now on appeal. See App. 9–12. We denied certiorari on April 3, 2023. See Rivers v. Lumpkin, 598 U. S. 1234.
Page Proof Pending Publication Page Proof Pending Publication Reporter’s Note The attached opinion has been revised to refect the usual publication and citation style of the United States Reports. The revised pagination makes available the offcial United States Reports citation in advance of publication. The syllabus has been prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader and constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court. A list of counsel who argued or fled briefs in this case, and who were members of the bar of this Court at the time this case was argued, has been inserted following the syllabus. Other revisions may include adjustments to formatting, captions, citation form, and any errant punctuation. The following additional edits were made: p. 453, line 16 from bottom: “the” is changed to “a”