I consider the efficiency of liability rules when courts obtain imperfect information about precautionary behavior. I ask what tort rules are consistent with socially efficient precautions, what informational requirements the evidence about the parties' behavior must satisfy, what decision rules courts should apply when faced with imperfectly informative evidence, whether these decision rules can be formulated in terms of the legal concept of standard of proof, and whether some general characterization of the efficient standard can be given. I show that court judgments provide appropriate incentives to exert care if they signal that the party prevailing at trial most likely exerted due care, neither more nor less
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This Article analyzes the interaction between the burden of proof and evidentiary discovery rules. B...
We analyze the complementarity between legal incentives (the threat of being held liable for damages...
This paper analyzes the effects of evidentiary uncertainty on people's incentives to abide by rules...
We analyze the efficiency properties of the negligence rule with liability insurance, when the tort-...
In most jurisdictions, the burden of producing evidence on a contested issue traditionally falls on ...
We analyze the design of legal principles and procedures for court decision-making in civil litigati...
Economists and lawyer-economists have extensively analyzed the efficiency of negligence rules in tor...
We incorporate the concept of evidentiary standard to the analysis of the negligence rule under liab...
Conventional wisdom in the economic analysis of tort law holds that legal errors distort incentives,...
Causation is a problematic notion, as explained by Ronald Coase regarding the “bilateral nature” of ...
Courts around the world are increasingly considering whether liability should exist in various types...
In continental Europe, each party carries the burden of proof for those elements that constitute the...
This paper discusses the economics of causation in tort law, describing precise implications for pre...
ecause factual uncertainty distorts the allocation of civil liability, this article argues that the ...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This Article analyzes the interaction between the burden of proof and evidentiary discovery rules. B...
We analyze the complementarity between legal incentives (the threat of being held liable for damages...
This paper analyzes the effects of evidentiary uncertainty on people's incentives to abide by rules...
We analyze the efficiency properties of the negligence rule with liability insurance, when the tort-...
In most jurisdictions, the burden of producing evidence on a contested issue traditionally falls on ...
We analyze the design of legal principles and procedures for court decision-making in civil litigati...
Economists and lawyer-economists have extensively analyzed the efficiency of negligence rules in tor...
We incorporate the concept of evidentiary standard to the analysis of the negligence rule under liab...
Conventional wisdom in the economic analysis of tort law holds that legal errors distort incentives,...
Causation is a problematic notion, as explained by Ronald Coase regarding the “bilateral nature” of ...
Courts around the world are increasingly considering whether liability should exist in various types...
In continental Europe, each party carries the burden of proof for those elements that constitute the...
This paper discusses the economics of causation in tort law, describing precise implications for pre...
ecause factual uncertainty distorts the allocation of civil liability, this article argues that the ...
The negligence-versus–strict liability debate is over in tort law, and negligence has clearly won. Y...
This Article analyzes the interaction between the burden of proof and evidentiary discovery rules. B...
We analyze the complementarity between legal incentives (the threat of being held liable for damages...