Parties engaged in a litigation generally enter the discovery process with different informations regarding their case and/or an unequal endowment in terms of skill and ability to produce evidence and predict the outcome of a trial. Hence, they have to bear different legal costs to assess the (equilibrium) plaintiff's win rate. The paper analyses pretrial negotiations and revisits the selection hypothesis in the case where these legal expenditures are private information. This assumption is consistent with empirical evidence (Osborne, 1999). Two alternative situations are investigated, depending on whether there exists a unilateral or a bilateral informational asymmetry.\ Our general result is that efficient pretrial negotiations select cas...
This paper reviews the use of cost shifting devices intended to encourage pre-trial settlement. Both...
A persistently troubling question in the legal-economic literature is why cases proceed to trial. Li...
Settling a legal dispute involves some costs that the parties have to incur ex ante for the pretrial...
Parties engaged in a litigation generally enter the discovery process with different informations re...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
This paper analyzes asymmetrically informed litigants' incentives to settle when they anticipate the...
This paper analyzes a stylized model of pretrial settlement negotiations in a personal-injury case. ...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
Settling a legal dispute involves some costs that the parties have to incur ex ante for the pretrial...
The law and economics literature on suit and settlement has tended to focus on two alternative conce...
This paper presents a cradle-to-grave model of tort liability, incorporating the decision to comply ...
This paper studies the signaling role of the litigation/settlement selection under asymmetric inform...
Why do agents engage in costly dispute resolution such as litigation and arbitration when costless s...
Litigation seems to be a Pareto-ineffcient outcome of pretrial bargaining; however, this paper shows...
We develop a model of bargaining and litigation in the context of patent licensing (or any contractu...
This paper reviews the use of cost shifting devices intended to encourage pre-trial settlement. Both...
A persistently troubling question in the legal-economic literature is why cases proceed to trial. Li...
Settling a legal dispute involves some costs that the parties have to incur ex ante for the pretrial...
Parties engaged in a litigation generally enter the discovery process with different informations re...
What explains the decision to litigate rather than settle a dispute? The standard theoretical approa...
This paper analyzes asymmetrically informed litigants' incentives to settle when they anticipate the...
This paper analyzes a stylized model of pretrial settlement negotiations in a personal-injury case. ...
There exist evidence that asymmetrical information do exist between litigants: not in a way supporti...
Settling a legal dispute involves some costs that the parties have to incur ex ante for the pretrial...
The law and economics literature on suit and settlement has tended to focus on two alternative conce...
This paper presents a cradle-to-grave model of tort liability, incorporating the decision to comply ...
This paper studies the signaling role of the litigation/settlement selection under asymmetric inform...
Why do agents engage in costly dispute resolution such as litigation and arbitration when costless s...
Litigation seems to be a Pareto-ineffcient outcome of pretrial bargaining; however, this paper shows...
We develop a model of bargaining and litigation in the context of patent licensing (or any contractu...
This paper reviews the use of cost shifting devices intended to encourage pre-trial settlement. Both...
A persistently troubling question in the legal-economic literature is why cases proceed to trial. Li...
Settling a legal dispute involves some costs that the parties have to incur ex ante for the pretrial...