Court costs in American civil procedure are allocated to the loser ( loser pays ) as elsewhere in the civilized world. As Theodor Sedgwick, America\u27s first expert on damages opined, it is matter of inherent justice that the party found in the wrong should indemnify the party in the right for the expenses of litigation. Yet attorneys\u27 fees are not allocated this way in the United States: they are allowed to fall on the party that incurs them (the \u27\u27American rule, better, the American practice). According to Albert Ehrenzweig, Austrian judge, emigre and then prominent American law professor, the American practice is a festering cancer in the body of our law. This Article surveys American cost and fee allocation practices. The a...
The traditional American Rule regarding attorney fees did not allow for prevailing parties to coll...
Should the party who loses in litigation be forced to pay the legal fees of the winner? This paper s...
This article surveys the effects of legal fee shifting on a variety of decisions arising before and ...
Court costs in American civil procedure are allocated to the loser ( loser pays ) as elsewhere in th...
Court costs in American civil procedure are allocated to the loser (“loser pays”) as elsewhere in th...
The article deals with the influential mechanism of the contingent fee and the American rule on the...
This article will first analyze different approaches to compensation rates in light of various theor...
Decisions made by litigants are often not beneficial to society. A rule governing fee allocation in ...
Comparative procedural studies, even between countries with similar legal systems and a common langu...
Justice William Brennan once observed that disputes about attorneys\u27 fees are one of the least s...
There is an ongoing, robust debate about the structure of litigation, and in particular, about acces...
This article examines compliance, incentives to bring suit, and incentives to settle in a negligence...
Under the English rule, the loser pays litigation costs whereas under the American rule, each party ...
Recent years have seen a debate over litigation reform grow increasingly agitated. Attorneys, judges...
The expanding volume of lawsuits and the ballooning of legal expenditures in recent years has attra...
The traditional American Rule regarding attorney fees did not allow for prevailing parties to coll...
Should the party who loses in litigation be forced to pay the legal fees of the winner? This paper s...
This article surveys the effects of legal fee shifting on a variety of decisions arising before and ...
Court costs in American civil procedure are allocated to the loser ( loser pays ) as elsewhere in th...
Court costs in American civil procedure are allocated to the loser (“loser pays”) as elsewhere in th...
The article deals with the influential mechanism of the contingent fee and the American rule on the...
This article will first analyze different approaches to compensation rates in light of various theor...
Decisions made by litigants are often not beneficial to society. A rule governing fee allocation in ...
Comparative procedural studies, even between countries with similar legal systems and a common langu...
Justice William Brennan once observed that disputes about attorneys\u27 fees are one of the least s...
There is an ongoing, robust debate about the structure of litigation, and in particular, about acces...
This article examines compliance, incentives to bring suit, and incentives to settle in a negligence...
Under the English rule, the loser pays litigation costs whereas under the American rule, each party ...
Recent years have seen a debate over litigation reform grow increasingly agitated. Attorneys, judges...
The expanding volume of lawsuits and the ballooning of legal expenditures in recent years has attra...
The traditional American Rule regarding attorney fees did not allow for prevailing parties to coll...
Should the party who loses in litigation be forced to pay the legal fees of the winner? This paper s...
This article surveys the effects of legal fee shifting on a variety of decisions arising before and ...