CAN SUITS WITH NEGATIVE EXPECTED VALUE REALLY BE PROFITABLE?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 08 September 2003
Extract
This is the second of two closely related articlesThe first is Warren F. Schwartz, Long-Shot Class Actions: Toward a Normative Theory of Legal Uncertainty, 8 LEGAL THEORY 297 (2002). challenging the widely held belief that plaintiffs, through the settlement process, are realizing “too much” from “unmeritorious” claims. No one has offered a systematic justification for this belief. It appears, however, to be based upon the effects produced by three characteristics of the settlement process: (1) the outcome of litigation is uncertain; (2) when, as in a class action, the stakes are very high for a defendant, the defendant will be very risk-averse and will consequently be prepared to pay in settlement much more than the expected value of its liability; and (3) litigation is costly.
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