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Economics of Tort Law

Economics of Tort Law. CBO Study. The Economics of U.S. Tort Liability: A Primer, October 2003. U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Justice Survey of State Courts, 2001 . Tort Law. Tort – injury to person or property We are interested in unintentional torts, inadvertent accidents.

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Economics of Tort Law

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  1. Economics of Tort Law

  2. CBO Study. The Economics of U.S. Tort Liability: A Primer, October 2003

  3. U.S. Department of Justice, Civil Justice Survey of State Courts, 2001

  4. Tort Law • Tort – injury to person or property • We are interested in unintentional torts, inadvertent accidents. • Injuries sustained by breach of contract are covered under contract law

  5. Tort liability A court imposed obligation on the tortfeasor to pay for a victim’s losses.

  6. An efficient system would minimize these elements of cost • Cost of injuries • Cost of precaution • Cost of administration • Indirect costs to economy An efficient system would internalize externalities

  7. Traditional tort liability requires three elements • Breach of Duty - The defendant’s act or failure to act must constitute the breach of a duty owed to the plaintiff by the defendant • Harm - The plaintiff must have suffered a harm • Cause - The defendant’s act or failure to act must cause the harm

  8. Breach of duty • Strict liability rule - only harm and cause are required for a tort • any harm is a breach of due care • Negligence rules require a minimum duty of care

  9. Duty of care • A legal standard prescribing the minimum acceptable level of precaution • Violation of the due care standard represents negligence • Due care standard is based upon a reasonable person

  10. Harm • There typically must be an actual harm. • Liability law does not compensate for exposure to risk • Perfect compensation would compensate for both property losses and intangible harm. • Should reimbursement occur for intangible harms? • How do we determine the value of intangible harms? (The death of a child.)

  11. Cause • “But for” test (cause in fact) • Problem when there are multiple causes (ambiguous causation) • Ex., Medical malpractice cases • Proximity in the law is imprecise • “But for” test does not distinguish between proximate causes and remote causes • Proximate cause satisfies the “but for” test and is sufficiently direct to be the determined the legal cause of the injury

  12. The economic purpose of tort law is to minimize the social cost of accidents. We will assume only cost of injury and cost of precaution x = precaution w = cost of a unit of precaution A = monetary value of the harm p(x) = probability of harm

  13. Minimize social cost

  14. Precaution • Unilateral precaution • Only the injurer or only the victim can influence the probability or severity of injury • Bilateral precaution • Both the injurer and the victim can influence the probability or severity of injury

  15. Tort law incentives • Strict liability with perfect compensatory damages gives the victim no incentive to take precaution • No liability gives the injurer no incentive to take precaution

  16. Strict liability • Appropriate when only unilateral precaution by the injurer is possible • Injurer has incentive to minimize total social cost • Assumes costs can be accurately measured and injurer will be found liable for all harms he caused

  17. Bilateral precaution When bilateral precaution is possible neither rule causes both to take the optimal level of precaution

  18. Negligence standard • Negligence rule with perfect compensation and the legal standard set to the efficient level of care gives the injurer incentives for efficient precaution. • Victim responds as if there is no liability, therefore victim has efficient incentive for precaution

  19. Negligence rules give the victim and the injurer efficient incentives for precaution • Negligence rule is preferred when there is bilateral precaution

  20. Negligence rules • Simple negligence • Negligence with defense of contributory negligence • Comparative negligence • Strict liability with defense of contributory negligence

  21. Simple negligence • Injurer at fault => injurer liable • Injurer faultless => injurer not liable • Negligence with defense of contributory negligence • Injurer at fault and victim faultless => injurer liable • Injurer faultless or victim at fault => injurer not liable

  22. Comparative negligence • Injurer at fault and victim faultless => injurer bears 100% • Injurer faultless and victim at fault => victim bears 100% • Injurer at fault and victim at fault => bear cost in proportion to negligence • Strict liability with defense of contributory negligence • Victim at fault => injurer not liable • Victim faultless => Injurer liable

  23. Activity vs. Precaution • With simple negligence the carnival operator is relieved of all liability as long as he adheres to the due standard. • However, even with inspections, mishaps can occur, passengers can be injured. • There is no incentive to limit the passengers on the ride or the number of carnivals.

  24. Activity vs. Precaution • Passengers, however, may take this into consideration. • This may limit the number of passengers (the activity level.) When they do get on the ride they might also take some precaution. They will make sure restraints are functioning and will keep their hands and feet in.

  25. Activity levels • Under a negligence rule the marginal risk of harm to others by engaging in the activity is externalized. Under strict liability, the social cost of accidents is internalized. Induces efficient precaution and efficient activity by injurers. • The party who escapes bearing the cost has an incentive for an inefficient activity level. • Efficiency requires choosing a liability rule so that the party whose activity level most affects accidents bears the residual cost of accidental harm. • Liability rules cannot provide an efficient incentive for bilateral activity levels

  26. No single rule can create efficient incentives for both bilateral precaution and bilateral activity levels.

  27. The Hand Rule for identifying efficient precaution • United States v. Carroll Towing Co., (2d Cir. 1947) • Defendant hired to move barge • The mooring lines were not correctly adjusted • A barge broke loose and sank • The tug owner argued that barge owner was also negligent because there was no bargee

  28. The Hand Rule for identifying efficient precaution • “Since there are occasions when every vessel will break from her moorings, and since, if she does, she becomes a menace to those about her; the owner's duty, as in other similar situations, to provide against resulting injuries is a function of three variables: (1) The probability that she will break away; (2) the gravity of the resulting injury, if she does; (3) the burden of adequate precautions.” • … it in algebraic terms: if the probability be called P; the injury, L; and the burden, B; liability depends upon whether B is less than L multiplied by P: i.e., whether B less than PL.

  29. The Hand Rule for identifying efficient precaution Optimal precaution If the marginal cost of precaution is less than the marginal benefit from precaution, the party is negligent. When B < PL, the party is negligent

  30. Potential errors • Errors in setting due care standard • Errors in damage award

  31. Errors – Strict Liability • Errors in setting damages under a rule of strict liability cause the injurer’s precaution to respond in the same direction as the error • Errors in failing to hold injurers liable under a rule of strict liability causes them to take less precaution

  32. Errors - Negligence • Injurer’s negligence does not respond to modest errors in setting damages under the negligence rule • Injurer’s precaution responds exactly to court errors in setting the legal standard under a negligence rule

  33. Exceptions in tort liability • Firefighter rule • Good Samaritan protection • Public policy rule

  34. Firefighter rule • Precludes a firefighter from recovering from one whose negligence causes or contributes to a fire that in turn causes injury or death to the firefighter • There is an assumption of risk • May be limited to premises liability and ordinary negligence

  35. Good Samaritan protection • Provides protection from ordinary negligence when providing emergency assistance • There may be no general duty to render assistance

  36. Public policy rule • Damages would run counter to public policy goals • A victim should not benefit from their own criminal behavior • A bomb maker sued those who sold him the gunpowder • A suit by a burglar against the homeowner for faulty stairs

  37. Alcohol related liabilities • An injured person can sue those who contributed to the injurer’s intoxication • Dram shop laws • Social host laws • There was a special duty of care because the injurer was invited to drink

  38. You’ll shoot your eye out Swix v Daisy Manufacturing, US District Court 2004 373 F.3d 678

  39. Swix v Daisy Manufacturing • After losing the use of his eye, Aaron, a minor, and his parents brought a product liability action against the manufacturer of the air rifle that his 11-year-old friend used to shoot him. The case claimed that the air rifle was defectively designed. • The lower court dismissed the claim a gun is a “simple tool” under Michigan law and the dangers of pointing it at another person are “open and obvious.” • There is no need to warn of a danger where the danger is obvious • The product itself telegraphs the precise warnings the plaintiffs claim is lacking

  40. Swix v Daisy Manufacturing • The appeals court found that gun was a simple tool. However, the lower court failed to apply the reasonable child standard. • A manufacturer who bypasses adults, upon whom the law ordinarily places responsibility, and markets a simple, but dangerous, tool directly to children may not avoid liability on the ground that the child should have known better • The fact that Daisy intended that its air rifle be used under the direct supervision of an adult and that Swix’s grandfather had the same rule does not alter the “reasonable child standard”

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