Weiss on Trial Court Decisions as Settlement Offers

Uri Weiss (Polonsky Academy, Van Leer Jerusalem Institute) has posted Rethinking Appeals (Touro Law Review, Vol. 37, No. 3, 2021) on SSRN.  Here is the abstract:

This paper makes the point that a court decision that is open to an appeal is akin to a take-it-or-leave-it settlement proposal for both parties. For the case to not be appealed, both parties need to “take,” i.e., accept, this proposal. Thus, on one hand, if both parties cannot achieve a settlement by themselves, they usually benefit from the right to appeal. On the other hand, a right to appeal activates the regressive effects that characterize settlements, which also applies to lower-court decisions. For example, legal uncertainty has a regressive effect on lower-court decisions: if the judge wishes to block appeals to protect one party's interest, his or her own self-interest, or the system's interest, the lower court judge’s decision will be regressively biased relative to the higher-court decision. In fact, this could also occur without strategic judges, but this would be an evolutionary process.