Optimal Awards and Penalties When the Probability of Prevailing Varies Among Plaintiffs
30 Pages Posted: 1 Feb 1997
There are 3 versions of this paper
Optimal Awards and Penalties When the Probability of Prevailing Varies Among Plaintiffs
Optimal Awards and Penalties When the Probability of Prevailing Varies Among Plaintiffs
Optimal Awards and Penalties When the Probability of Prevailing Varies Among Plaintiffs
Abstract
This article derives the optimal award to a winning plaintiff and the optimal penalty on a losing plaintiff when the probability of prevailing varies among plaintiffs. Optimality is defined in terms of achieving a specified degree of deterrence of potential injurers with the lowest litigation cost. Our main result is that the optimal penalty on a losing plaintiff is positive, in contrast to common practice in the United States. By penalizing losing plaintiffs and raising the award to winning plaintiffs (relative to what it would be if losing plaintiffs were not penalized), it is possible to discourage relatively low-probability-of-prevailing plaintiffs from suing without discouraging relatively high-probability plaintiffs, and thereby to achieve the desired degree of deterrence with lower litigation costs.
JEL Classification: K13
Suggested Citation: Suggested Citation
Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?
Recommended Papers
-
By Lucian A. Bebchuk and Howard F. Chang
-
Optimal Awards and Penalties When the Probability of Prevailing Varies Among Plaintiffs
-
Comparative Analysis of Litigation Systems: An Auction-Theoretic Approach
By Michael R. Baye, Dan Kovenock, ...
-
Shifting Plaintiffs' Fees Versus Increasing Damage Awards
By Louis Kaplow
-
The Effect of offer-of-Settlement Rules on the Terms of Settlement
By Lucian A. Bebchuk and Howard F. Chang
-
The Effect of offer-of-Settlement Rules on the Terms of Settlement
By Lucian A. Bebchuk and Howard F. Chang
-
Licensing in the Presence of Competing Technologies
By Ashish Arora and Andrea Fosfuri
-
Fee-Shifting Rules in Litigation with Contingency Fees
By Kong-pin Chen and Jue-shyan Wang