Special Incentives to Sue

IF 3 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW Minnesota Law Review Pub Date : 2010-01-26 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.1474923
M. Lemos
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引用次数: 10

Abstract

In an effort to strengthen private enforcement of federal law, Congress regularly employs plaintiff-side attorneys’ fee shifts, damage enhancements, and other mechanisms that promote litigation. Standard economic theory predicts that these devices will increase the volume of suit by private actors, which in turn will bolster enforcement and encourage more voluntary compliance with the law. This Article challenges the conventional wisdom. I use empirical evidence to demonstrate that special incentives to sue do not dependably generate more litigation. More crucially, when such incentives do work, they often trigger a judicial backlash against the very rights that Congress sought to promote. This dynamic has been neglected in the academic commentary to date, which has focused on litigant behavior alone while ignoring the role that judges play in any enforcement regime that depends on litigation. I show that caseload pressures and concerns about excessive litigation have driven judges to adopt procedural rules that dampen the effects of fee shifts and damage enhancements. Furthermore, judges have offset incentives to sue by narrowly interpreting the relevant substantive provisions of federal law.
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起诉的特别奖励措施
为了加强联邦法律的私人执行,国会定期采用原告一方律师的费用转移、损害赔偿提高和其他促进诉讼的机制。标准的经济理论预测,这些手段将增加私人行为者的诉讼数量,这反过来将加强执法,鼓励更多的自愿遵守法律。这篇文章挑战了传统智慧。我用经验证据来证明,特殊的诉讼激励并不一定会产生更多的诉讼。更关键的是,当这些激励措施发挥作用时,它们往往会引发司法上对国会试图促进的权利的强烈反对。这种动态在迄今为止的学术评论中被忽视了,这些评论只关注诉讼行为,而忽视了法官在任何依赖于诉讼的执行制度中所起的作用。我表明,案件数量的压力和对过度诉讼的担忧促使法官采用程序规则,以抑制费用转移和损害赔偿增加的影响。此外,法官通过狭义地解释联邦法律的相关实质性条款来抵消起诉的动机。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
1
期刊介绍: In January 1917, Professor Henry J. Fletcher launched the Minnesota Law Review with lofty aspirations: “A well-conducted law review . . . ought to do something to develop the spirit of statesmanship as distinguished from a dry professionalism. It ought at the same time contribute a little something to the systematic growth of the whole law.” For the next forty years, in conjunction with the Minnesota State Bar Association, the faculty of the University of Minnesota Law School directed the work of student editors of the Law Review. Despite their initial oversight and vision, however, the faculty gradually handed the editorial mantle over to law students.
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