Under an "offer of settlement " rule, a party to a lawsuit may make a special offer to settle with the other party, such that if the other party rejects this offer, then this offer (unlike an ordinary offer) becomes part of the record in the case and may affect the allocation of litigation costs. Specifically, if the parties litigate to judgment, then the allocation of litigation costs may depend on how the judgment compares with the special offer. This paper develops model of bargaining under offer-of-settlement rules that can be used to analyze the effect that such rules have on the terms of settlement. The analysis first sets forth a general principle that identifies the settlement amount under any such rule. We then apply this...
The different interests of the plaintiff and the defendant represent the fundamental mechanism that ...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and $N$ plaintiffs when ther...
When two litigants resolve a dispute through out-of-court settlement rather than trial, they realize...
Under an "offer-of-settlement" rule, if a party to a lawsuit makes a formal offer to settle which th...
Perhaps the most widely discussed topic in the economics of legal procedure is the relation between ...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between one defendant and two plaintiffs when the defen...
Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is the only rule of procedure devoted exclusively to...
Analysis of data on civil litigation claims reveals two puzzles. First, despite the large costs of n...
Conventional wisdom says that economic surplus is created when the cost of litigation is foregone in...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there ...
Conventional wisdom says that economic surplus is created when the cost of litigation is foregone in...
Conventional wisdom says that economic surplus is created when the cost of litigation is foregone in...
Legal rules for allocating the private costs of civil litigation, or "fee-shifting" rules, provide p...
Although their express purpose is to adjudicate disputes, courts by their institutional design encou...
Defendant offers into court is common procedural device aimed at increasing the probability that pre...
The different interests of the plaintiff and the defendant represent the fundamental mechanism that ...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and $N$ plaintiffs when ther...
When two litigants resolve a dispute through out-of-court settlement rather than trial, they realize...
Under an "offer-of-settlement" rule, if a party to a lawsuit makes a formal offer to settle which th...
Perhaps the most widely discussed topic in the economics of legal procedure is the relation between ...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between one defendant and two plaintiffs when the defen...
Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is the only rule of procedure devoted exclusively to...
Analysis of data on civil litigation claims reveals two puzzles. First, despite the large costs of n...
Conventional wisdom says that economic surplus is created when the cost of litigation is foregone in...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there ...
Conventional wisdom says that economic surplus is created when the cost of litigation is foregone in...
Conventional wisdom says that economic surplus is created when the cost of litigation is foregone in...
Legal rules for allocating the private costs of civil litigation, or "fee-shifting" rules, provide p...
Although their express purpose is to adjudicate disputes, courts by their institutional design encou...
Defendant offers into court is common procedural device aimed at increasing the probability that pre...
The different interests of the plaintiff and the defendant represent the fundamental mechanism that ...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and $N$ plaintiffs when ther...
When two litigants resolve a dispute through out-of-court settlement rather than trial, they realize...