Standards of Proof and Civil Litigation: A Game-Theoretic Analysis

Alice Guerra, Barbara Luppi, Francesco Parisi

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Abstract

In litigation models, the parties’ probability to succeed in a lawsuit hinge upon the merits of the parties’ claims and their litigation efforts. In this paper we extend this framework to consider an important procedural aspect of the legal system: the standard of proof. We recast the conventional litigation model to consider how alternative standards of proof affect litigation choices. We analyze the interrelation between different standards of proof, the effectiveness of the parties’ efforts, and the merits of the case. We study how these factors jointly affect the parties’ litigation expenditures, the selection of cases brought to the courts, pretrial bargain solutions and preemptive strategies. Our results show that standards of proof are not only instrumental to balancing the competing goals of access to justice and judicial truth-finding, but they also play a critical role in affecting parties’ litigation investments and settlement choices, and in sorting the mix of cases that will actually be filed and defended in courts. The understanding of the sorting effect of standards of proof sheds light on their role as a policy instrument in civil litigation.
Original languageEnglish
JournalThe B.E. Journal of Theoretical Economics
Volume19
Issue number1
Number of pages19
ISSN2194-6124
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jan 2019

Bibliographical note

Published online: 16. May 2018

Keywords

  • Litigation
  • Standard of proof
  • Litigation contest functions

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