I don't see why it does. Partly it notes that the Scottish case started earlier, and the English case started on the instant that the prorogation was actually announced.
And, of course, at the lower court in Scotland, the case was dismissed, and it's only the appeal that ruled against the government.
It's simply staggering that people are somehow turning this against the appellants. It's perfectly right and proper that they put their case before, in the end, all courts, and on grounds that at least partly reflected specific national concerns and laws: the Northern Ireland case was a great deal more to do with possible impact on the Good Friday Agreement. So of course it gets heard in Ireland. The Scottish Case was launched earlier because the Court was in session there and not here. Yes, some Scottish Law differences might help rather than hinder the case, but, still.
It comes down to the Supreme Court next week in any case. But it's still sad to see how determined people are to undermine legal process in this country and seek all sorts of nefarious motives, when none of this would have mattered had the underhand (although possibly legal -- as I even said I thought it was) tactic of prorogation never been used.