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113 Yale L.J. 347 (2003-2004)
Punitive Damages as Societal Damages

handle is hein.journals/ylr113 and id is 367 raw text is: Punitive Damages as Societal Damages

Catherine M. Sharkeyt
CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION.......................................................................................... 349
I. EXISTING CONCEPTIONS OF PUNITIVE DAMAGES AND PLAINTIFFS'
W  INDFALL  GAINS .......................................................................... 356
A. Punishment and Retribution: The Individual Harm Paradigm.... 359
B. Deterrence: The Societal Harm Paradigm .................................. 363
1. Economic Theory: The Internalization of Full Costs ............ 365
2. The Punitive Damages Multiplier and Its Limitations...... 367
C. The Plaintiff's Windfall as a Necessary Consequence................. 370
II. NASCENT DEVELOPMENTS IN THE STATES FOCUSING ON
DISTRIBUTION OF PUNITIVE DAMAGES AWARDS .............................. 372
A .  Split-Recovery  Legislation  ...........................................................375
B. Judicial Experimentation ............................................................. 380
C. In Search of a Justifying Theory .................................................. 386
III. A NEW CATEGORY OF COMPENSATORY SOCIETAL DAMAGES.......... 389
t Associate Professor of Law, Columbia Law School. Earlier versions of this Article were
presented at the Sloan Interdisciplinary Workshop at Georgetown University Law Center and at a
Faculty Workshop at Columbia Law School, where I received helpful comments from
participants. I am indebted to Ian Ayres, Guido Calabresi, Noah Feldman, Samuel Issacharoff,
Henry Monaghan, and John Witt for offering their encouragement, insights, and suggestions
throughout the development of this Article. I am also grateful to Robert Ahdieh, Richard
Bierschbach, Ina Bort, Elizabeth Cabraser, Jonathan Cedarbaum, Ariela Dubler, Richard Epstein,
Howard Erichson, Louis Fisher, Andrew Frey, John Goldberg, Victor Goldberg, Jeffrey Gordon,
Joseph Grinstein, Mitu Gulati, Avery Katz, Alvin Klevorick, David Leebron, Jennifer Martinez,
Gillian Metzger, Deak Nabers, Subha Narasimhan, David Schizer, Charles Silver, Susan Sturm,
Evan Tager, Rebecca Tushnet, and Kenji Yoshino for providing positive feedback, skepticism,
and criticism in conversations and comments on previous drafts. Finally, I thank Daphna Renan
and The Yale Law Journal editors for editorial assistance and the Reference Librarians at
Columbia Law School for their tremendous effort at gathering source materials. Notwithstanding
such a tremendous array of critical input, all errors remain my own.
347

Imaged with the Permission of Yale Law Journal

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