Punitive Damages: Should Juries Decide?

IF 2.2 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Texas Law Review Pub Date : 2003-10-03 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.453240
C. Sharkey
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

How Juries Decide is a pathbreaking work of empirical scholarship based on experiments conducted with more than 8,000 jury-eligible citizens and more than 600 mock juries. Its basic premise - that cognitive flaws in human decisionmaking, especially those affecting the translation process by which moral judgments are transformed into dollar awards, lead to erratic and unprincipled punitive damages awards - has already had an important impact not only on scholarly literature but also on judicial decisionmaking in high profile suits. This Review offers a methodological, doctrinal, and institutional critique of this widely influential study, with particular emphasis on the discrepancies between the empirical data presented and the policy reforms advanced - which include, at the extreme, a call to banish the jury from punitive damages decisionmaking. The Review examines critically the authors' conclusions that jurors are intuitive retributionists and unable (or unwilling) to follow instructions based on the non-retributive optimal deterrence theory of punitive damages. More fundamentally, the Review challenges the authors' rigid separation between retributive-based punitive damages, which are linked to jurors' moral evaluations, from remedial-based compensatory damages (including pain and suffering), which are not. Although the authors fashion a seemingly narrowly tailored attack on jurors' assessments of punitive damages, in fact they raise fundamental questions about the civil jury system as a whole, questions that are in no relevant way confined to punitive damages. Conversely, to the extent that there is any non-retributive component to punitive damages, their attack upon the jury's ability to assess punitive damages might not be warranted across the board. What emerges is the distinct possibility that a system of non-retributive punitive damages might survive the authors' empirical challenges. Finally, How Juries Decide pays too little attention to institutional context and wholly overlooks potentially effective reforms within the existing jury system, such as those that take into account anchoring effects and regional differences among jurors - reforms that are clearly supported by their empirical findings.
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惩罚性损害赔偿:陪审团应该决定吗?
《陪审团如何决定》是一本开创性的实证学术著作,它基于对8000多名符合陪审团资格的公民和600多个模拟陪审团进行的实验。它的基本前提——人类决策中的认知缺陷,特别是那些影响道德判断转化为美元奖励的翻译过程的缺陷,导致了不稳定和无原则的惩罚性损害赔偿——不仅对学术文献产生了重要影响,而且对高调诉讼中的司法决策也产生了重要影响。这篇评论对这一影响广泛的研究提出了方法论、理论和制度上的批评,特别强调了所提供的经验数据与所推进的政策改革之间的差异——其中包括,在极端情况下,呼吁将陪审团从惩罚性损害赔偿决策中驱逐出来。《评论》批判性地考察了作者的结论,即陪审员是直觉报应主义者,不能(或不愿)遵循基于惩罚性损害赔偿的非报应性最佳威慑理论的指示。更根本的是,《评论》挑战了作者对基于报复性的惩罚性损害赔偿(与陪审员的道德评价有关)和基于补偿性损害赔偿(包括痛苦和折磨)的严格区分。虽然作者对陪审员对惩罚性损害赔偿的评估进行了看似狭隘的攻击,但实际上他们提出了关于整个民事陪审团制度的基本问题,这些问题与惩罚性损害赔偿无关。相反,如果惩罚性损害赔偿中存在任何非报复性成分,那么他们对陪审团评估惩罚性损害赔偿能力的攻击可能就没有全面的理由。出现的是一种明显的可能性,即一种非报复性惩罚性损害赔偿制度可能经受住作者的经验挑战。最后,《陪审团如何决定》对制度背景的关注太少,完全忽视了现有陪审团制度中可能有效的改革,比如那些考虑到锚定效应和陪审员之间的地区差异的改革——这些改革显然得到了实证研究结果的支持。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
6.20%
发文量
0
期刊介绍: The Texas Law Review is a national and international leader in legal scholarship. Texas Law Review is an independent journal, edited and published entirely by students at the University of Texas School of Law. Our seven issues per year contain articles by professors, judges, and practitioners; reviews of important recent books from recognized experts, essays, commentaries; and student written notes. Texas Law Review is currently the ninth most cited legal periodical in federal and state cases in the United States and the thirteenth most cited by legal journals.
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