Experienced litigators have always known that the same case can move very differently depending on the judge, the parties, the firms, the venue, and the procedural posture. What has not existed until recently is a systematic way to see how those conditions have actually played out across prior cases. This article examines how computational analysis of historically comparable matters, including the work Pre/Dicta does, is changing how attorneys reason from precedent in litigation strategy.
Here is the full revised post with all em dashes removed. I rewrote the affected sentences rather than just swapping in commas or parentheses, so the rhythm holds.
Experienced litigators have always known that the same case can move very differently depending on the judge, the parties, the firms, the venue, and the procedural posture. What has not existed until recently is a systematic way to see how those conditions have actually played out across prior cases. This article examines how computational analysis of historically comparable matters, including the work Pre/Dicta does, is changing how attorneys reason from precedent in litigation strategy.
Key Takeaways
| Aspect | Description |
|---|---|
| Data Foundation | 20 years of case data, 36 million docket entries, 13 million decisions |
| Pleading-Stage Assessment | ~85% alignment with observed outcomes on motions to dismiss, retrospectively tested against historically comparable cases |
| Core Capabilities | Surfacing historically comparable cases, descriptive precedent intelligence across motion types, case duration context |
| Comparative Context | Judicial rulings in like matters, law firm activity in comparable contexts, district-level patterns |
The Foundation of Pre/Dicta’s Precedent Intelligence
Pre/Dicta’s approach rests on a comprehensive base of structured litigation history:
- 20 years of federal case data
- 10,000 judges
- 36 million docket entries
- 10 million parties and firms
- 13 million motions
Each matter in this corpus is decomposed into its judicial, party, legal, and procedural components. Those dimensions, not keyword searches, determine which historical cases are surfaced when an attorney brings a new matter to the platform. The result is a set of cases that share the same compositional structure as the matter at hand, allowing attorneys to see how courts have actually ruled when the same conditions were present.
The Pleading-Stage Assessment
The motion to dismiss stage presents an unusually stable historical question: whether comparable cases have cleared the pleading threshold and proceeded into discovery. On motions to dismiss specifically, Pre/Dicta’s pleading-stage assessment shows roughly 85% alignment with observed outcomes when retrospectively tested against historically comparable cases. The output at this stage is a directional read on whether claims with similar characteristics have typically advanced past dismissal.
This is the one place where Pre/Dicta produces a binary, directional output. It reflects the nature of the pleading-stage question, where the historical target is unusually clear.
Beyond the Pleading Stage
For other motion types, Pre/Dicta provides descriptive precedent intelligence. The platform surfaces historically comparable cases and how they have been decided across:
- Summary judgment
- Class certification
- Daubert
- Interim relief
- Motions to compel discovery
- Transfer of venue
- Remand
- Appellate posture
Across these motion types, the platform surfaces the most outcome-determinative cases and rulings from matters that share the same composition as the one in front of the attorney. Every underlying case is visible, inspectable, and verifiable.
How Comparable Cases Are Identified
Pre/Dicta decomposes each matter into its judicial, party, legal, and procedural components, and uses those dimensions to surface historically comparable cases. The resulting case lists are not research outputs in the sense an attorney would get from running queries in Westlaw or Lexis. They are empirically matched sets of prior matters that share the same compositional structure.
Key elements that enter the composition include:
- Judicial background, experience, and decision history in like matters
- Party characteristics and counsel configuration
- Claims and legal theory
- Venue and procedural posture
These are not weighted variables in a black-box scoring system. They are the conditions that experienced litigators already know shape outcomes. Pre/Dicta isolates the cases where the same conditions were present, and presents them as the evidentiary foundation for everything else the platform produces.
Case Duration in Context
Beyond surfacing comparable cases, Pre/Dicta provides context on how matters with similar composition have moved through the litigation lifecycle. The platform organizes this view across three phases:
| Pre-Discovery | Discovery | Trial Phase |
|---|---|---|
| Case dismissed via motion | Summary judgment granted | Voluntary dismissal |
| Voluntary dismissal | Voluntary dismissal | Final judgment rendered |
| Other dismissals | Other dismissals |
This context allows attorneys to set realistic expectations with clients, manage staffing and resource decisions, and frame settlement and trial conversations around how comparable matters have actually progressed, rather than around generalized averages that combine dissimilar cases.
Comparative Context on Judges and Law Firms
Pre/Dicta’s view of judicial activity and firm activity is grounded in the same compositional approach. Rather than presenting flat averages or aggregated win rates, the platform shows how judges have ruled and how firms have appeared in comparable contexts:
- Judicial rulings on motions of the same type, in matters with similar party and counsel composition
- Patterns within specific court districts
- Firm activity in matters that share the same compositional structure as the matter at hand
The point is not to rank judges or firms in the abstract. It is to give attorneys a view of how the relevant decision-makers and counsel have appeared in cases that look like the one in front of them, supporting decisions about venue, staffing, and how to read opposing counsel’s likely approach.
The Evolving Role of Computational Analysis in Legal Practice
Computational analysis of comparable cases is changing how attorneys assess matters and shape strategy, but it is designed to support legal expertise, not substitute for it. As these capabilities mature, attorneys will likely see continued development in:
- Coverage of additional motion types and procedural postures
- Real-time updates as new decisions enter the historical record
- Tighter integration of comparable-case context into the decisions attorneys are already making about cost, staffing, and client communication
The throughline across all of these developments is the same: making the conditions that shape outcomes, including the judge, the parties, the firms, the venue, and the posture, visible and usable in the matters where they actually apply.
Conclusion
Platforms like Pre/Dicta give attorneys a way to see how courts have actually ruled when the same conditions were present in prior matters, across the judge assigned, the parties involved, the firms representing them, the venue, and the procedural posture. Combined with professional judgment, that historical context supports more grounded decisions about where to file, when to move, how to staff, and what to tell clients to expect.
As the underlying corpus deepens and coverage expands, the gap will widen between attorneys who reason from comparable cases and those who continue to work from generalized averages or anecdote. The attorneys best positioned to serve their clients will be the ones who treat historically comparable cases as a routine part of how they prepare a matter, not as a separate exercise, but as an extension of the precedent-based reasoning the practice has always rested on.





