This paper investigates whether and how litigant peer stock ownership by federal district judges affects characteristics of case outcomes for large corporate litigants. We find that industry-peer stock ownership by district judges is associated with the following outcomes for corporate litigants named in their assigned cases: 1) an increased likelihood of judgments for the corporate litigants, 2) a decrease in the amount received by the parties suing these corporate litigants, and 3) a decrease in the length of the litigation proceedings. The random assignment of district judges to cases provides exogenous variation in the judge stock ownership. We further identify the association outlined in our base results by examining appellate court re...
Using three exogenous shocks to ex ante litigation risk, including federal judge ideology and two i...
In the first chapter (“Governance by Litigation”) I study the role of shareholder litigation rights ...
This dissertation’s first subject area considers the impact of legal proceedings on corporate valuat...
This paper investigates whether and how litigant peer stock ownership by federal district judges aff...
Conventional wisdom is that shareholder derivative suits are dead. Yet this death knell is decidedly...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for 7,824 private companies across 13 courts ...
Drawing on the political theory of judicial decision making, our paper proposes a new and parsimonio...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...
We collect data on the record of every action in over one thousand cases involving public companies ...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
This paper examines whether shareholder litigation contributes to the decline in the number of U.S. ...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
This Article examines how the stock market reacts to the filing of lawsuits against mergers and acqu...
Using three exogenous shocks to ex ante litigation risk, including federal judge ideology and two i...
In the first chapter (“Governance by Litigation”) I study the role of shareholder litigation rights ...
This dissertation’s first subject area considers the impact of legal proceedings on corporate valuat...
This paper investigates whether and how litigant peer stock ownership by federal district judges aff...
Conventional wisdom is that shareholder derivative suits are dead. Yet this death knell is decidedly...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for 7,824 private companies across 13 courts ...
Drawing on the political theory of judicial decision making, our paper proposes a new and parsimonio...
We exploit a new data set of judicial rulings on motions in order to investigate the relationship be...
We collect data on the record of every action in over one thousand cases involving public companies ...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
This paper examines whether shareholder litigation contributes to the decline in the number of U.S. ...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
This paper uses case information on Chapter 11 filings for almost 5000 private companies across five...
This Article examines how the stock market reacts to the filing of lawsuits against mergers and acqu...
Using three exogenous shocks to ex ante litigation risk, including federal judge ideology and two i...
In the first chapter (“Governance by Litigation”) I study the role of shareholder litigation rights ...
This dissertation’s first subject area considers the impact of legal proceedings on corporate valuat...