The Litigation Superpower's Case Management Cure for Adversarial Ills

Civil Case Management in the Twenty-First Century: Court Structures Still Matter (P. Chan & C. H. van Rhee, eds., Springer, 2021)

UC Hastings Research Paper No. 404

17 Pages Posted: 8 Jun 2021

Date Written: 2021

Abstract

This contribution examines how adversarial excesses in the American system are contained through judicial case management. It begins with an introduction to the US court system and an explanation of American exceptionalism in procedure. America's unique procedural attributes, while linked by many to a 'litigation explosion', also created the need for managerial judging. The contribution then examines the role of judicial settlement promotion in American courts. In some state courts, 'settlement weeks' became prominent; rather than hold one or two trials to resolve cases, judges would instead convene numerous settlement conferences to hammer out agreed resolutions. Indeed, judges command a special authority that, if used properly, could set parties on the right course in settlement negotiations. The contribution highlights both the innovations in judicial management and the results of judicial settlement promotion during the last half century. It concludes that the overall experience of judicial case management has been positive.

Suggested Citation

Marcus, Richard, The Litigation Superpower's Case Management Cure for Adversarial Ills (2021). Civil Case Management in the Twenty-First Century: Court Structures Still Matter (P. Chan & C. H. van Rhee, eds., Springer, 2021), UC Hastings Research Paper No. 404, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3861911

Richard Marcus (Contact Author)

UC Law, San Francisco ( email )

200 McAllister Street
San Francisco, CA 94102
United States
415-565-4829 (Phone)
415-565-4865 (Fax)

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
55
Abstract Views
256
Rank
811,047
PlumX Metrics