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Informational externalities and settlements in mass tort litigations
Authors:Bruno Deffains  Eric Langlais
Affiliation:1.University Panthéon-Assas, Paris II, ERMES EAC 4441 CNRS,Paris,France;2.EconomiX, CNRS-Paris Ouest University, and LEF-INRA-AgroParisTech Nancy,Nanterre Cedex,France
Abstract:This paper elaborates on a basic model of mass tort litigation, highlighting the existence of positive informational externalities afforded by the discovery process (as a general technology of production of evidences) in order to study when a class action is formed, or when a sequence of individual trials is more likely. We illustrate the argument that when several plaintiffs file individually a lawsuit against the same tortfeasor, the resolution of the various cases through repeated trials produces positive informational externalities. When class actions are forbidden, these externalities only benefit to the later plaintiffs (through precedents, jurisprudence...). When they are allowed, the first filer may have an incentive to initiate a class action as far as it enables him to benefit from these externalities, through the sharing of information with later filers. We provide sufficient conditions under which a class action is formed, assuming a perfect discovery process. We also show that when contingent fees are used to reward attorneys’ services, plaintiffs become neutral to the arrival of new information on their case.
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