Party Capability versus Court Preference: Why Do the “Haves” Come Out Ahead?—An Empirical Lesson from the Taiwan Supreme Court

IF 1.3 3区 社会学 Q3 ECONOMICS
Kong‐Pin Chen, Kuo‐Chang Huang, C. Lin
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引用次数: 22

Abstract

Using civil appeals data on Taiwan’s Supreme Court (TSC), this article revisits the well-known question of whether the "haves" come out ahead in litigations. We first show that the higher-status litigants indeed mobilized stronger legal representation and obtained more victories than the lower-status litigants. However, we submit that that the party capability theory cannot fully explain the advantages the "haves" enjoyed over the "have-nots." Further analysis reveals that the TSC’s exercise of discretionary jurisdiction also played an important role by strongly favoring the governmental litigants at the agenda-setting stage. We argue that the TSC’s preference in this regard was induced by the TSC judges’ self-identification as part of government. In conclusion, our empirical investigation shows that both party capability and court preference contribute to influence the outcomes of appeals. (JEL K4)
政党能力与法院偏好:为什么“富人”会胜出?——台湾最高法院的经验教训
本文利用台湾最高法院(TSC)的民事上诉数据,重新审视了一个众所周知的问题,即“有权者”是否会在诉讼中胜出。我们首先表明,地位较高的诉讼当事人确实比地位较低的诉讼当事人动员了更强的法律代表,并获得了更多的胜利。然而,我们认为当事人能力理论并不能完全解释“富人”比“穷人”所享有的优势。进一步分析表明,TSC行使自由裁量管辖权也发挥了重要作用,在议程设置阶段强烈偏向政府诉讼当事人。我们认为,TSC法官在这方面的偏好是由TSC法官作为政府一部分的自我认同引起的。综上所述,我们的实证调查表明,当事人能力和法院偏好都对上诉结果有影响。(凝胶K4)
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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CiteScore
2.20
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0.00%
发文量
25
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