In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every state legislature has enacted some version of tort reform that is intended to curb extravagant damage awards. One of the most important and controversial reforms involves capping (or limiting) the maximum punitive damage award. We conducted a jury analogue study to assess the impact of this reform. In particular, we examined the possibility that capping punitive awards would cause jurors to inflate their compensatory awards to satisfy their desires to punish the defendant, particularly in situations where the defendant’s conduct was highly reprehensible. Relative to a condition in which punitive damages were unlimited, caps on punitive damag...
Using one year of jury trial outcomes from 45 of the nation\u27s most populous counties, this articl...
This article assesses the relation between punitive and compensatory damages by combining two data s...
Little guidance is provided to fact-finders in arriving at awards for pain and suffering and punitiv...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
This paper presents the first empirical anatysis that demonstrates that juries differ from judges in...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
The state of punitive damages in the United States has been a controversial topic for more than thre...
Capping punitive damages awards is a centerpiece of the tort reform movement. According to the Ameri...
Fueled by anecdotal instances of extremely large damage awards, there has been significant public co...
Empirical studies have consistently shown that punitive damages are rarely awarded, with rates of ab...
Punitive damages occupy a special place in the U.S. legal system. Courts award them in very few case...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation’s most populous counties as...
Juries in most American jurisdictions can inflict punitive damages awards against tortfeasors who ha...
This Article, the first broad-based analysis of punitive damages in judge-tried cases, compares judg...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation\u27s most populous counties...
Using one year of jury trial outcomes from 45 of the nation\u27s most populous counties, this articl...
This article assesses the relation between punitive and compensatory damages by combining two data s...
Little guidance is provided to fact-finders in arriving at awards for pain and suffering and punitiv...
In response to concerns that jury awards in tort cases are excessive and unpredictable, nearly every...
This paper presents the first empirical anatysis that demonstrates that juries differ from judges in...
Punitive damages have prompted much academic and political debate during the last twenty years. In t...
The state of punitive damages in the United States has been a controversial topic for more than thre...
Capping punitive damages awards is a centerpiece of the tort reform movement. According to the Ameri...
Fueled by anecdotal instances of extremely large damage awards, there has been significant public co...
Empirical studies have consistently shown that punitive damages are rarely awarded, with rates of ab...
Punitive damages occupy a special place in the U.S. legal system. Courts award them in very few case...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation’s most populous counties as...
Juries in most American jurisdictions can inflict punitive damages awards against tortfeasors who ha...
This Article, the first broad-based analysis of punitive damages in judge-tried cases, compares judg...
We analyze thousands of trials from a substantial fraction of the nation\u27s most populous counties...
Using one year of jury trial outcomes from 45 of the nation\u27s most populous counties, this articl...
This article assesses the relation between punitive and compensatory damages by combining two data s...
Little guidance is provided to fact-finders in arriving at awards for pain and suffering and punitiv...