Guha, Brishti (2016): Malicious Litigation.
Preview |
PDF
MPRA_paper_69544.pdf Download (544kB) | Preview |
Abstract
It has long been recognized that some plaintiffs sue defendants out of malice, but malicious litigation has not been previously modeled in the law and economics literature. I construct a simple model of malicious litigation, wherein malice is defined by the plaintiff’s obtaining some utility whenever the defendant incurs costs. When plaintiffs are malicious, they are more likely to file even non-meritorious suits; both probability of filing and the plaintiff’s settlement payoff increase in the plaintiff’s malice. However, if the defendant is also malicious, obtaining utility when the plaintiff incurs litigation expenses, settlements may fail even with complete information. Two-sided malice deters filing over a certain parameter range; outside it, it raises the ratio of cases that go to trial instead of being resolved through settlement. Giving the defendant the right to call for a bar on settlement is less effective at deterring malicious lawsuits relative to non-malicious “negative-expected-value” (NEV) or “nuisance” suits. However, combining the optional settlement bar with a “commitment requirement” stipulating that the plaintiff commit to going to trial (rather than withdraw) whenever the defendant opts to defend discourages malicious litigation for a wider range of parameters.
Item Type: | MPRA Paper |
---|---|
Original Title: | Malicious Litigation |
Language: | English |
Keywords: | Malice, lawsuits, settlement, withdrawal, trial. |
Subjects: | K - Law and Economics > K1 - Basic Areas of Law > K10 - General K - Law and Economics > K4 - Legal Procedure, the Legal System, and Illegal Behavior K - Law and Economics > K4 - Legal Procedure, the Legal System, and Illegal Behavior > K41 - Litigation Process |
Item ID: | 69544 |
Depositing User: | Dr Brishti Guha |
Date Deposited: | 15 Feb 2016 17:24 |
Last Modified: | 28 Sep 2019 21:05 |
References: | Abbink, K and B. Herrmann (2011) “The Moral Costs of Nastiness”, Economic Inquiry 49: 631-633. Abbink, K and A Sadrieh (2008) “The Pleasure of Being Nasty”, Economics Letters 105: 306-308. Albert, M and V Mertins (2008) “Participation and decision making: a three-person power-to-take experiment”. Joint Discussion Paper Series in Economics Working Paper No 05-2008. Bebchuk, L. (1988) “Suing solely to extract a Settlement Offer”, Journal of Legal Studies 17: 437-450. Bebchuk, L. (1996) “A new theory concerning the Credibility and Success of Threats to Sue”, Journal of Legal Studies 25: 1-26. Bebchuk, L. and A. Clement (2012) “Negative-Expected-Value Suits” in Procedural Law and Economics, Vol 8, Encyclopedia of Law and Economics.Ed C.W. Sanchirico. Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd, UK, USA. Beckman, S.R, J.P Formby, W. James Smith and B. Zheng (2002) “Envy, malice and Pareto efficiency: an experimental examination”, Social Choice and Welfare 19: 349-367. Bosman, R and F. van Winden (2002) “Emotional hazard in a power-to-take experiment”, Economic Journal 112: 146-169. Bosman, R., H. Hennig-Schmidt and F. van Winden (2006) “Exploring group decision-making in a power-to-take experiment”, Experimental Economics 9: 35-51. Campbell, W. (1979) “Groudless Litigation and the Malicious Prosecution Debate: a Historical Analysis” Yale Law Journal 88: 1218-1237. Chen, Z. (2006) “Nuisance Suits and Contingent Attorney Fees”, Review of Law and Economics 2: 363-370. Guha, B. (2011) “Preferences, Prisoners and Private Information: Was Socrates Rational at His Trial?” European Journal of Law and Economics 31: 249-264. Guha, B. (2014a) “Reinterpreting King Solomon’s Problem: Malice and Mechanism Design”, Journal of Economic Behavior and Organization 98: 125-132. Guha, B. (2014b) “Testing for Malice in King Solomon’s Problem”, working paper, Singapore Management University. Hansen, M.H. (1991): The Athenian Democracy in the Age of Demosthenes: Structure, Principles and Ideology. Oxford, UK and Cambridge, USA: Blackwell. Kaplow, L. and S. Shavell (2002) “Economic Analysis of Law”, Handbook of Public Economics 3: 1661-1784. Katz, A. (1990) “The Effect of Frivolous Lawsuits on the Settlement of Litigation”, International Review of Law and Economics 10: 3-27. Klement, A. (2003) “Threats to Sue and Cost Divisibility Under Asymmetric Information”, International Review of Law and Economics 23: 261-272. Miceli, T.J (1993) “Optimal Deterrence of Nuisance Suits by Repeat Defendants”, International Review of Law and Economics 13: 135-144. Pollock, F. and F. Maitland (1898) :The History of English Law Before the Time of Edward I. Second Edition.Reissued 1968 by the Cambridge University Press. Rasmusen, E. (1998) “Nuisance Suits”, The New Palgrave Dictionary of Economics and the Law. Ed. Peter Newman.London, MacMillan Press. Rosenberg, D. and S. Shavell (1985) “A model in which Lawsuits are brought for their Nuisance Value”, International Review of Law and Economics 5: 3-13. Rosenberg, D. and S. Shavell (2006) “A solution to the problem of Nuisance Suits: the Option to have the Court Bar Settlement”, International Review of Law and Economics 26: 42-51. Sanbar, S.S (2007): Legal Medicine. Elsevier Health Sciences. Schwartz, W.F and A.L Wickelgren (2009) “Advantage Defendant: Why Sinking Litigation Costs Makes Negative-Expected-Value Defenses but not Negative-Expected-Value Suits Credible”, Journal of Legal Studies 38: 235-253. Zizzo, D.J and A.J Oswald (2001) “Are people willing to pay to reduce others’ incomes?” Annales d’ Economieet de Statistique63: 39-65. |
URI: | https://mpra.ub.uni-muenchen.de/id/eprint/69544 |