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66 Vand. L. Rev. 1807 (2013)
Fee Shifting and the Free Market

handle is hein.journals/vanlr66 and id is 1869 raw text is: Fee Shifting and the Free Market
Jonathan T. Molot*
I.    INTRODUCTION        ....................................... 1807
II.   WHY FEE SHIFTING ALONE CANNOT WORK ............. 1815
III.   COMBINING FEE SHIFTING WITH MARKET MECHANISMS:
THE U.K. EXAMPLE       ................................... 1819
IV.   ADAPTING MARKET MECHANISMS AND FEE SHIFTING FOR
THE U.S. MARKET      ............................. ....... 1824
V.     CONCLUSION.......................................... 1829
I. INTRODUCTION
It is uncontroversial that litigation is too expensive. Controversy
abounds, however, over who is to blame and what is to be done about
the problem. Plaintiffs and defendants each accuse the other of
pursuing weak or meritless litigation positions that inflict needless
expense. This Article suggests that regardless of who is correct-and
who is more often at fault-the same set of solutions may be available
to assuage the problem. The Article embraces a combination of
procedural reforms and market mechanisms designed to improve
matters for both sides and to make it less likely that a party with a
meritorious litigation position will fall victim to an adversary's sharp
tactics. Specifically, I embrace an English-style approach, one which
combines a loser-pays, fee-shifting regime with a market-based, risk-
allocation mechanism designed to counterbalance the evils of fee
shifting and to protect risk-averse litigants against losing a meritorious
case and being forced to bear their opponents' legal fees as well as their
own.

1807

*    Professor of Law, Georgetown University Law Center. My thanks to John Didday for
research assistance and to participants of the Institute for Law & Economic Policy 19th Annual
Symposium on The Economics of Aggregate Litigation, held on April 11-12, 2013, in Naples,
Florida.

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