This paper compares the relative merits of adversarial and inquisitorial systems of civil procedure in the presence of evidence suppression. Each party has the incentive to suppress evidence that may damage her case, and to reveal any evidence that strengthens her case. I model the decision of a litigant to suppress evidence. The court conditions its action (transfers between the parties) upon the evidence which is revealed. Enforcement costs, which are the cost of suppression and the cost of requesting evidence, are a loss to the relationship and form the basis for my evaluation of the relative merits of each system. I find that neither system always outperforms the other. The strength of the inquisitorial system is that it allows for rand...
In this article, Judge Richard A. Posner presents the first comprehensive economic analysis of the l...
In this article, we characterize adversarial decision making as a choice between competing interpret...
Contract theory identifies verifiability as a critical determinant of the incompleteness of contract...
A companion paper, Sanchirico (1997) introduces the concept of "endogenous cost evidence" in a model...
In this paper, we compare deterrence, settlement, and litigation spending under adversarial and inqu...
In order to evaluate fully the advantage claimed for the adversary model we sought to add a third el...
We analyze the design of legal principles and procedures for court decision-making in civil litigati...
The relationship between legal offenses and punishment is well studied by scholars of sociology, eco...
We develop a model of statistical evidence with a sophisticated Bayesian fact-finder. The context is...
An arbiter can decide a case on the basis of his priors, or the two parties to the conflict may pres...
In this paper, we characterize adversarial decision-making as a choice between competing interpretat...
This paper analyzes how the adversarial and inquisitorial evidence collection procedures affect fina...
We develop a stylized game theoretic model of litigant behavior to study the effects of increased pl...
Recent game-theoretic analyses of the adversarial process have focused on the ability of courts to ...
An arbiter can decide a case on the basis of his priors or he can ask for further evidence from the ...
In this article, Judge Richard A. Posner presents the first comprehensive economic analysis of the l...
In this article, we characterize adversarial decision making as a choice between competing interpret...
Contract theory identifies verifiability as a critical determinant of the incompleteness of contract...
A companion paper, Sanchirico (1997) introduces the concept of "endogenous cost evidence" in a model...
In this paper, we compare deterrence, settlement, and litigation spending under adversarial and inqu...
In order to evaluate fully the advantage claimed for the adversary model we sought to add a third el...
We analyze the design of legal principles and procedures for court decision-making in civil litigati...
The relationship between legal offenses and punishment is well studied by scholars of sociology, eco...
We develop a model of statistical evidence with a sophisticated Bayesian fact-finder. The context is...
An arbiter can decide a case on the basis of his priors, or the two parties to the conflict may pres...
In this paper, we characterize adversarial decision-making as a choice between competing interpretat...
This paper analyzes how the adversarial and inquisitorial evidence collection procedures affect fina...
We develop a stylized game theoretic model of litigant behavior to study the effects of increased pl...
Recent game-theoretic analyses of the adversarial process have focused on the ability of courts to ...
An arbiter can decide a case on the basis of his priors or he can ask for further evidence from the ...
In this article, Judge Richard A. Posner presents the first comprehensive economic analysis of the l...
In this article, we characterize adversarial decision making as a choice between competing interpret...
Contract theory identifies verifiability as a critical determinant of the incompleteness of contract...