要么全有,要么全无——私法中的比例责任

Q1 Social Sciences Theoretical Inquiries in Law Pub Date : 2021-01-01 DOI:10.1515/til-2021-0008
Omer Pelled
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引用次数: 3

摘要

法官和陪审团通常会在事实存在争议且没有明确证据的情况下做出事实性裁决。尽管存在这种普遍的不确定性,但判决被认为有明确的赢家和输家——要么原告获胜并获得全额赔偿,要么被告获胜而原告一无所获。在私人纠纷中,事实发现者根据证据的优势来确定他们的二元事实。然而,有几个理论允许部分补救,由于事实支持原告案件的可能性,鉴于现有的证据(比例责任)。本文提出了私法比例责任的一般理论。它确定了三种类型的事实不确定性——相互不确定性、单边不确定性和制度不确定性,并表明法律经济学家应该支持比例责任,当不确定性状态由当事人和法院共享(相互不确定性)时,他们应该采用全有或全无的规则,无论信息是可观察的,但无法验证(制度不确定性)。在一方拥有私人信息(单边不确定性)的情况下,比例责任有时(但并非总是)优于全有或全无规则。
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All-or-Nothing, or Something – Proportional Liability in Private Law
Abstract Judges and juries often make factual decisions even if the facts are disputed and there is no clear-cut evidence available. Despite this common state of uncertainty, verdicts are thought of as having clear winners and losers––either the plaintiff wins and receives a full remedy, or the defendant wins and the plaintiff gets nothing. In private disputes, factfinders base their binary factual determinations on the preponderance of the evidence. There are, however, several doctrines that allow for partial remedy, discounted by the probability that the facts support the plaintiff’s case, given the available evidence (proportional liability). This Article offers a general theory for proportional liability in private law. It identifies three types of factual uncertainty—mutual uncertainty, unilateral uncertainty, and institutional uncertainty—and shows that legal economists should support proportional liability when the state of uncertainty is shared by the parties and the court (mutual uncertainty), and they should adopt an all-or-nothing rule whenever the information is observable but unverifiable (institutional uncertainty). In cases where one party holds private information (unilateral uncertainty), proportional liability is sometimes, but not always, superior to an all-or-nothing rule.
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来源期刊
Theoretical Inquiries in Law
Theoretical Inquiries in Law Social Sciences-Law
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
0.00%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: Theoretical Inquiries in Law is devoted to the application to legal thought of insights developed by diverse disciplines such as philosophy, sociology, economics, history and psychology. The range of legal issues dealt with by the journal is virtually unlimited, subject only to the journal''s commitment to cross-disciplinary fertilization of ideas. We strive to provide a forum for all those interested in looking at law from more than a single theoretical perspective and who share our view that only a multi-disciplinary analysis can provide a comprehensive account of the complex interrelationships between law, society and individuals
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