Abstract
We study the effect of fee shifting rules on litigation. First, we build a model to study the theoretical effect of a change in cost-recovery rules on case filings, (post-filing) settlement, win rates, and plaintiffs' average litigation expenditures. We then undertake an empirical analysis of the introduction of an intermediate cost shifting rule that falls between the English and American Rules: a reform that limits the size of fee awards to successful litigants in cases decided by the Intellectual Property Enterprise Court (IPEC), one of two venues where IP cases may be filed in England and Wales. Our empirical analysis takes advantage of heterogeneity among case types and compares IPEC cases with intellectual property cases litigated at the High Court of England and Wales, which was not subject to this reform. We find that patent case filings increased following the IPEC’s shift from a pure English Rule to a rule that caps costs awards. Consistent with our model's predictions, we also find evidence that smaller plaintiffs both won less often and settled more often post-reform, as well as evidence that larger plaintiffs spent less on litigation post-reform.
Keywords
Litigation; Fee Shifting; Intellectual Property; Court Reform; UK;
JEL codes
- K10: General
- K30: General
- K41: Litigation Process
Replaces
Christian Helmers, Yassine Lefouili, Brian Love, and Luke McDonagh, “The Effect of Fee Shifting On Litigation: Evidence from a Policy Innovation in Intermediate Cost Shifting”, TSE Working Paper, n. 16-740, December 2016, revised January 2021.
Reference
Christian Helmers, Yassine Lefouili, Brian Love, and Luke McDonagh, “The Effect of Fee Shifting On Litigation: Evidence from a Policy Innovation in Intermediate Cost Shifting”, American Law and Economics Review, vol. 23, n. 1, 2021, pp. 56–99.
See also
Published in
American Law and Economics Review, vol. 23, n. 1, 2021, pp. 56–99