Emory School of Law Working Paper Series

Emory Legal Scholarship Working Paper Series

 

Judicial Hierarchies and the Rule-Individual Tradeoff

Hugo M. Mialon, Emory University
Paul H. Rubin, Emory
Joel L. Schrag, Emory University

Abstract

We analyze decision-making in a simple model of the judicial hierarchy. We assume that trial court judges are more concerned with ex post efficiency with respect to the individuals involved in the cases at hand, and less concerned with ex ante efficiency with respect to the precedents established for society, than are appeals court judges. This implies that the preferred decisions of appeals court judges differ systematically from those of trial court judges. Appeals court judges can enforce their preferred decisions by reversing those of the trial court judges. However, in the model, litigants do not always appeal decisions that would be reversed, both because appeals are costly and because the outcome is uncertain. Consequently, appeals court judges may prefer to enact higher level rules that reduce the discretion of all judges.

Subject Area

Judges

Recommended Citation

Hugo M. Mialon, Paul H. Rubin, and Joel L. Schrag, "Judicial Hierarchies and the Rule-Individual Tradeoff" (February 2005). Emory School of Law Working Paper Series. Emory Legal Scholarship Working Paper Series. Working Paper 3.
http://law.bepress.com/emorylwps/papers/art3

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