The civil justice system tolerates inconsistent outcomes in cases brought by similarly situated litigants. One reason for this is that in cases such as Wal-Mart v. Dukes, the Supreme Court has increasingly emphasized liberty over equality. The litigants’ right to a “day in court” has overshadowed their right to equal treatment. However, an emerging jurisprudence at the district court level is asserting the importance of what this Article calls “outcome equality” – equal results reached in similar cases. Taking the example of mass torts litigation, this Article explains how innovative procedures such as sampling are a solution to the problem of inconsistent outcomes. Outcome equality, achieved through statistical adjudication, is gaining for...
When the same defendant harms many people in similar ways, a plaintiff’s ability to meaningfully par...
American law should better protect people\u27s bodies from being caged than it should protect people...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
The civil justice system tolerates inconsistent outcomes in cases brought by similarly situated liti...
Traditional judicial mechanisms that preserve litigants\u27 rights to due process and a jury trial c...
In ideal circumstances, court cases are won or lost on their merits. But litigation does not proceed...
In ordinary litigation, parties often have different resources to devote to their lawsuit. This is a...
Justice does not always mean that a case should be tried. By the same token, justice does not always...
“Trial by statistics” was a means by which a court could resolve a large number of aggregated claims...
Professor Stephen Yeazell once wrote, \u27\u27A society based on the rule of law fails in one of its...
Can eighteenth-century constitutional commitments that “courts shall be open” for private rights enf...
This Article identifies and critiques a view of the criminal-procedure clauses in the Bill of Rights...
With a tiny handful of exceptions, common law jurisprudence is predicated on a “winner-take-all” pri...
From the introduction: The past few years have seen a great deal of controversy concerning the conti...
It is an interesting speculation whether an able court does not tend naturally because of its own hi...
When the same defendant harms many people in similar ways, a plaintiff’s ability to meaningfully par...
American law should better protect people\u27s bodies from being caged than it should protect people...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...
The civil justice system tolerates inconsistent outcomes in cases brought by similarly situated liti...
Traditional judicial mechanisms that preserve litigants\u27 rights to due process and a jury trial c...
In ideal circumstances, court cases are won or lost on their merits. But litigation does not proceed...
In ordinary litigation, parties often have different resources to devote to their lawsuit. This is a...
Justice does not always mean that a case should be tried. By the same token, justice does not always...
“Trial by statistics” was a means by which a court could resolve a large number of aggregated claims...
Professor Stephen Yeazell once wrote, \u27\u27A society based on the rule of law fails in one of its...
Can eighteenth-century constitutional commitments that “courts shall be open” for private rights enf...
This Article identifies and critiques a view of the criminal-procedure clauses in the Bill of Rights...
With a tiny handful of exceptions, common law jurisprudence is predicated on a “winner-take-all” pri...
From the introduction: The past few years have seen a great deal of controversy concerning the conti...
It is an interesting speculation whether an able court does not tend naturally because of its own hi...
When the same defendant harms many people in similar ways, a plaintiff’s ability to meaningfully par...
American law should better protect people\u27s bodies from being caged than it should protect people...
A crisis in civil justice has seized the lowest rungs of state court where the great majority of Ame...