Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/33150
Title: Filtering Tort Accidents
Authors: DE MOT, Jef 
Depoorter, Ben
Miceli, Thomas J
Issue Date: 2020
Publisher: 
Source: American Law and Economics Review, 22 (2) , p. 377 -396
Abstract: Conventional wisdom in the economic analysis of tort law holds that legal errors distort incentives, causing behavior to depart from the optimum. If potential injurers know that courts err, they may engage in less or more than optimal precaution. This article revisits the effect of judicial error on the incentives of potential injurers by identifying a heretofore-neglected filtering effect of uncertainty in settings of imperfect judicial decision-making. We show that when courts make errors in the application of the liability standards, uncertainty about erroneous decision-making filters out the most harmful torts but leaves unaffected less harmful accidents. Our insight applies to various procedural and institutional aspects of legal adjudication, including the randomization of case assignment, the strength of precedent, and the use of standards versus rules.
Keywords: litigation;torts;uncertainty;filtering
Document URI: http://hdl.handle.net/1942/33150
ISSN: 1465-7252
e-ISSN: 1465-7260
DOI: 10.1093/aler/ahaa006
ISI #: WOS:000612526000004
Category: A1
Type: Journal Contribution
Validations: ecoom 2022
Appears in Collections:Research publications

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