How two wrongs may make a right, but four do not – The interesting case of Dutch employers’ liability

IF 1.1 Q2 LAW
L. Visscher
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Dutch employers’ liability for workplace accidents is a very interesting topic, not only from a legal perspective, but also from a law and economics one. It is one of the few systems in Europe where liability is still based on the fault of the employer, whereas most countries apply a form of strict/no-fault liability or a system of no-fault insurance. It is interesting because the Dutch Civil Code explicitly refers to prevention of work-related losses. Law and economics focuses exactly on the behavioural incentives that are provided by tort liability, instead of on the compensation aspect. In this article, I provide an answer to the question of how Dutch employers’ liability compares to the law and economics desiderata. At first glance, the design of this type of liability (fault liability) is contrary to what law and economics would advocate (strict liability). In addition, the level of care that courts require from the employer seems to be excessively high. Interestingly, both characteristics together result in a situation which, from a law and economics perspective, is almost indistinguishable from the desired strict liability. So, two wrongs may make a right: the ‘wrong’ choice for fault liability combined with the ‘wrong’ level of due care results in the ‘right’ application of (quasi) strict liability. Therefore, at least in theory, employers receive the correct behavioural incentives, which induce them to take the optimal level of care and activity. However, when we subsequently turn our attention to employees, things look less perfect. Law and economics scholars argue that in situations where not only the tortfeasor but also the victim can influence accident probability, both parties should receive behavioural incentives. This implies that a rule of strict liability should be accompanied by a defence of contributory or comparative negligence. The Dutch employer liability regime contains a defence of intent or wilful recklessness on the part of the employee. From a law and economics perspective, this defence provides inadequate incentives to the employee, which is a third wrong. An often-heard response to this line of reasoning is that tort victims will receive behavioural incentives for fear of being involved in an accident in the first place, so the lack of a full defence of contributory or comparative negligence is not problematic. If this is true, then the damages the victims receive do not make them ‘whole’, which introduces a fourth wrong: uncompensated losses. This second set of two wrongs does not make a right, because if victims receive incomplete compensation, tortfeasors do not fully pay for the losses they have caused. This may reduce the behavioural incentives the tortfeasors receive, who may hence not choose optimal levels of care and activity after all.
两个错误怎么可能变成一个正确,四个错误怎么可能变成一个正确——荷兰雇主责任的有趣案例
荷兰雇主对工伤事故的责任是一个非常有趣的话题,不仅从法律角度来看,从法律和经济学角度来看也是如此。它是欧洲为数不多的仍以雇主过错为责任基础的制度之一,而大多数国家都采用严格/无过错责任或无过错保险制度。这很有趣,因为《荷兰民法典》明确提到了预防工伤损失。法律和经济学恰恰关注侵权责任所提供的行为激励,而不是赔偿方面。在这篇文章中,我回答了荷兰雇主的责任与法律和经济需求相比如何的问题。乍一看,这类责任(过失责任)的设计与法律和经济学所提倡的(严格责任)相悖。此外,法院要求雇主提供的照顾水平似乎过高。有趣的是,从法律和经济学的角度来看,这两个特征加在一起导致了一种情况,这种情况与所期望的严格责任几乎无法区分。因此,两个错误可能构成一个正确:对过错责任的“错误”选择加上“错误”的应有注意程度,导致(准)严格责任的“正确”适用。因此,至少在理论上,雇主得到了正确的行为激励,这促使他们采取最佳水平的护理和活动。然而,当我们随后将注意力转向员工时,事情看起来就不那么完美了。法律和经济学学者认为,在不仅侵权人而且受害者都能影响事故概率的情况下,双方都应该获得行为激励。这意味着,严格赔偿责任规则应附带对共同过失或相对过失的辩护。荷兰雇主责任制度包含对雇员故意或故意鲁莽行为的辩护。从法律和经济学的角度来看,这种辩护对员工的激励不足,这是第三个错误。人们经常听到的对这一推理的回应是,侵权行为受害者首先会因为害怕卷入事故而受到行为激励,因此缺乏对共同过失或相对过失的充分辩护是没有问题的。如果这是真的,那么受害者所得到的损害并不能使他们“完整”,这就引入了第四个错误:未赔偿的损失。第二组两个错误并不意味着正确,因为如果受害者得到了不完全的赔偿,侵权者就不会全额赔偿他们造成的损失。这可能会减少侵权者获得的行为激励,因此他们可能根本无法选择最佳的护理和活动水平。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.60
自引率
28.60%
发文量
29
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