Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful on appeal than are losing defendants who appeal. The studies attribute this to a perception by appellate judges that trial courts are biased in favor of plaintiffs. However, at least two alternative explanations exist. First, losing plaintiffs may appeal at higher rates independent of the potential merits. Second, if plaintiffs tend to pur-sue to trial lawsuits where they should win on the merits less than half the time, then potentially reversible outcomes at trial will be more likely to be adverse to defendants. This study revisits the analysis of the appellate process with a statistical model that ties together win rates at trial, appeals ...
The Priest-Klein model predicts that a decline in the plaintiff win rate might be explained by a cha...
Every state provides appellate review of criminal judgments, yet little research examines which fact...
General Observations on Interpreting Win-Rate Data Properly. Many empirical legal studies use data o...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Federal data sets covering district court and appellate court civil cases for cases terminating in f...
The prevailing expert opinion is that jury verdicts are largely immune to appellate revision. Usin...
Prior federal and state civil appeals studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more t...
One of the most striking features of appellate courts in the United States is also one of the least ...
A recent study of appellate outcomes reveals that defendants succeed significantly more often than p...
We analyze a litigation contest in which plaintiff and defendant seek to win in trial court, and the...
Prior federal civil appellate studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more than benc...
Two findings dominate prior empirical studies of federal civil appeals. First, appeals courts are mo...
The Priest-Klein model predicts that a decline in the plaintiff win rate might be explained by a cha...
Every state provides appellate review of criminal judgments, yet little research examines which fact...
General Observations on Interpreting Win-Rate Data Properly. Many empirical legal studies use data o...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Multiple studies find that plaintiffs who lose at trial and subsequently appeal are less successful ...
Federal data sets covering district court and appellate court civil cases for cases terminating in f...
The prevailing expert opinion is that jury verdicts are largely immune to appellate revision. Usin...
Prior federal and state civil appeals studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more t...
One of the most striking features of appellate courts in the United States is also one of the least ...
A recent study of appellate outcomes reveals that defendants succeed significantly more often than p...
We analyze a litigation contest in which plaintiff and defendant seek to win in trial court, and the...
Prior federal civil appellate studies show that appeals courts overturn jury verdicts more than benc...
Two findings dominate prior empirical studies of federal civil appeals. First, appeals courts are mo...
The Priest-Klein model predicts that a decline in the plaintiff win rate might be explained by a cha...
Every state provides appellate review of criminal judgments, yet little research examines which fact...
General Observations on Interpreting Win-Rate Data Properly. Many empirical legal studies use data o...