Akademik

dictum
dic·tum /'dik-təm/ n pl dic·ta /-tə/ [Latin, utterance, from neuter of dictus, past participle of dicere to say]: a view expressed by a judge in an opinion on a point not necessarily arising from or involved in a case or necessary for determining the rights of the parties involved – called also obiter dictum; compare holding, judgment, precedent, stare decisis
◇ Dicta have persuasive value in making an argument, but they are not binding as precedent.

Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary of Law. . 1996.