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53 Val. U. L. Rev. 1 (2018-2019)
Institutional Liability for Employees' Intentional Torts: Vicarious Liability as a Quasi-Substitute for Punitive Damages

handle is hein.journals/valur53 and id is 13 raw text is: 






                             Articles

INSTITUTIONAL LIABILITY FOR EMPLOYEES'
        INTENTIONAL TORTS: VICARIOUS
    LIABILITY AS A QUASI-SUBSTITUTE FOR
                    PUNITIVE DAMAGES

                         Catherine M. Sharkey*

                                 Abstract
    Modern day vicarious liability cases often address the liability of enterprises
and institutions whose agents have committed intentional acts. Increasingly,
when employers are sued, the line is blurred between the principal's vicarious
liability for its agent's acts and its own direct liability for hiring and/or failing to
supervise or control its agent.
    From an economic deterrence perspective, the imposition of vicarious liability
induces employers to adopt cost-justified preventative measures, including
selective hiring and more stringent supervision and discipline, and, in some
instances, to truncate the scope of their business activities. Negligence-based
direct liability likewise induces employers to adopt cost-justified preventative
measures (without constraining activity levels to the degree that strict liability
does). This raises questions. Why doesn't direct employer negligence liability
suffice, in terms of deterring employees' intentional torts? Or conversely, so long
as there is vicarious liability, is there any need for direct negligence liability at
all?
     In this Article, I argue that, as aform of strict liability, vicarious liability will
 have an edge over direct employer negligence liability to the extent that there is a
 significant risk of under-detection of the failures of an employer's preventative
 measures. Traces of this under-detection rationale for vicarious liability can be
 found in the academic literature and court decisions, but it warrants further
 elaboration. The risk of under-detection provides a strong justification for the
 expansion of the scope of institutional or employer vicarious liability.
     The under-detection rationale, moreover, has the potential to serve as a
 coherent framework for some modern doctrinal debates, including whether
 punitive damages should be imposed either vicariously or directly upon employers

     Crystal Eastman Professor of Law, New York University School of Law. This Article is
 adapted from the 2018 Monsanto Lecture, which I delivered at Valparaiso University Law
 on April 12, 2018. 1 presented earlier versions of this Article at the Berlin Wissenschaftskolleg
 Institute for Advanced Studies Seminar, Haifa University Faculty Workshop, Tel Aviv
 University Private Law Workshop, and the German-American Lawyers' Association (DAJV)
 Lecture at Freiburg University. I am grateful for comments from workshop participants,
 especially Ronen Perry, Ariel Porat, and Gerhard Wagner, and for research assistance from
 Caleb Seeley (NYU 2017) and Meghan Racklin (NYU 2019).

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