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The Role of Experts in Assessing Damages – A Law and Economics Account
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 January 2017
Abstract
In this contribution we focus on the role of experts in the assessment of tort damages from an economic point of view. We distinguish two different aspects.
First, we examine the role which economists might play in assessing damages in tort cases. This approach focuses on the insights that Law and Economics provides regarding the correct assessment of damages. We pay specific attention to two problematic forms of losses where economic insights may play an important role: pure economic loss and personal injury damage (both loss of income and compensation for immaterial losses due to fatal and non-fatal accidents).
Second, we investigate from a Law and Economics point of view the role of experts in general (not only economists) in the assessment of damages. We discuss i.a. the question why experts may be involved in the assessment of damages, the potential problems (and the possible solutions) when using experts, and differences between party appointed experts and court appointed experts.
It turns out that the economic analysis can provide a different, insightful viewpoint in some respects, such as the fact that market based mechanisms may help to provide incentives to party appointed experts to provide an accurate and objective damage assessment.
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References
1 Verkerk explains that in common law countries the expert is often called an “expert witness”, and in continental jurisdictions an “expert”. This is caused by the fact that the former jurisdictions are more adversarial and the latter more non-adversarial. See Verkerk, Remme, “Comparative aspects of expert evidence in civil litigation”, 13 The International Journal of Evidence and Proof (2009), pp. 167 et sqq., at pp. 167, 170CrossRefGoogle Scholar; see also Verkerk, Remme, Fact Finding in Civil Litigation. A Comparative Perspective (Antwerp: Intersentia, 2010), at p. 160.Google Scholar
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78 Associatie van Belgische Experten (ABEX).
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91 This is strongly related to the behavioural bias of the “anchoring effect” discussed above.
92 Tomlin and Cooper, “When Should Judges Appoint Experts”, supra note 53, at pp. 12, 13.
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95 Sales and Shuman, Experts in Court, supra note 58, at p. 132.
96 Verkerk, Comparative aspects, supra note 1, at pp. 168 et sqq.
98 Ibid., at p. 175.
98 Ibid., at p. 180.
99 Ibid., at p. 193.
100 Mandel, “Going for the Gold”, supra note 5, at p. 119.
101 Posner, “Economic Expert Witness”, supra note 69, at pp. 94, 95.
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107 Tomlin and Cooper, “When Should Judges Appoint Experts”, supra note 53, at p. 32.
108 Alemanno, Alberto, “Science and Risk Regulation: The Role of Experts in Decision-Making and Judicial Review”, in Vos, Ellen (ed.), European Risk Governance – Its Science, its Inclusiveness and its Effectiveness, CONNEX Report Series Nr 06 (2008), pp. 37 et sqq., at pp. 65 et sqq.Google Scholar
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