Shifting victorious plaintiffs' fees to defendants and increasing damage awards are alternative ways to achieve similar results: increasing plaintiffs' incentives to sue and raising defendants' expected payments. This article shows that relying on higher damage awards is more efficient than shifting plaintiffs' fees. The reason is that fee shifting is more valuable for plaintiffs with higher litigation costs. Thus, it is possible to substitute higher damage awards for fee shifting in a manner that leaves deterrence unaffected while eliminating the suits of plaintiffs with the highest litigation costs
In his recent article, Protection of Investors in the Wake of the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis: Do Cla...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there ...
In New York State, there has been a rapid increase in personal injury litigation over the recent pas...
Shifting victorious plaintiffs' fees to defendants and increasing damage awards are alternative ways...
We study the effect of fee shifting rules on litigation. First, we build a model to study the theore...
When plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the American rule (...
It is uncontroversial that litigation is too expensive. Controversy abounds, however, over who is to...
We study the effect of fee shifting rules on litigation. First, we build a model to study the theore...
This article will first analyze different approaches to compensation rates in light of various theor...
In an effort to strengthen private enforcement of federal law, Congress regularly employs plaintiff-...
In the past couple of decades, scholars have predominantly employed rent-seeking models to analyze l...
Litigation costs could be conceived as a bribe to parties to reach a contractual agreement settling ...
This essay reports and discusses the implications of an experimental study involving punitive damage...
Section 285 of the Patent Act authorizes courts to award attorney fees to the prevailing party in pa...
Legal rules for allocating the private costs of civil litigation, or ''fee-shifting'' rules, provide...
In his recent article, Protection of Investors in the Wake of the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis: Do Cla...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there ...
In New York State, there has been a rapid increase in personal injury litigation over the recent pas...
Shifting victorious plaintiffs' fees to defendants and increasing damage awards are alternative ways...
We study the effect of fee shifting rules on litigation. First, we build a model to study the theore...
When plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the American rule (...
It is uncontroversial that litigation is too expensive. Controversy abounds, however, over who is to...
We study the effect of fee shifting rules on litigation. First, we build a model to study the theore...
This article will first analyze different approaches to compensation rates in light of various theor...
In an effort to strengthen private enforcement of federal law, Congress regularly employs plaintiff-...
In the past couple of decades, scholars have predominantly employed rent-seeking models to analyze l...
Litigation costs could be conceived as a bribe to parties to reach a contractual agreement settling ...
This essay reports and discusses the implications of an experimental study involving punitive damage...
Section 285 of the Patent Act authorizes courts to award attorney fees to the prevailing party in pa...
Legal rules for allocating the private costs of civil litigation, or ''fee-shifting'' rules, provide...
In his recent article, Protection of Investors in the Wake of the 2008-2009 Financial Crisis: Do Cla...
This paper considers settlement negotiations between a single defendant and N plaintiffs when there ...
In New York State, there has been a rapid increase in personal injury litigation over the recent pas...