Discretionary review and undesired cases

Courts sometimes face cases that may result in adverse post-judgment official or public reactions. Such real-world repercussions—e.g., open defiance by public officials—can be more costly for the court than the benefit of hearing and deciding the case. In these situations the court may be better off...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of law and economics 2017-10, Vol.44 (2), p.265-285
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description Courts sometimes face cases that may result in adverse post-judgment official or public reactions. Such real-world repercussions—e.g., open defiance by public officials—can be more costly for the court than the benefit of hearing and deciding the case. In these situations the court may be better off not taking the case from the outset. This paper examines how courts deal with such cases when they can avoid adjudication—discretionary dockets. Using a stylized screening model, the paper examines the implications of such discretion. In particular, it shows that some undesired real-world outcomes are inevitable; and that broad control over their dockets should lead judges to take fewer cases in which the government is involved. Further, the paper discusses this logic from a comparative design perspective. The two prevalent models of judicial review, the American and the European, seem to take opposing stances on discretionary review; however, both narrow supreme courts’ control over their dockets, either by directly limiting their discretionary jurisdiction or by decentralizing judicial review.
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subjects Commercial Law
Court calendars
Court decisions
Decentralization
Defiance
Economics
Economics and Finance
European Integration
Hearing
Judges & magistrates
Judicial discretion
Judicial process
Judicial reviews
Jurisdiction
Law and Economics
Public Finance
Public officials
State court decisions
Supreme courts
title Discretionary review and undesired cases
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