TY - JOUR
T1 - Using Statistical Techniques to Predict Non-Pecuniary Damage Awards in Personal Injury Cases
AU - Effron, Jack
AU - Forster, John
PY - 1989/4/1
Y1 - 1989/4/1
N2 - The real issue in personal injury cases is often damages. Our concepts and law relating to negligence and other aspects of personal injury are sufficiently developed that parties can often agree upon who is at fault. Yet damages law, for all the cases and principles which have been decided, remains the least intelligible and thus the least predictable for parties and their counsel. When parties have to go to trial in a personal injury case, it is often primarily to decide who should pay what.
AB - The real issue in personal injury cases is often damages. Our concepts and law relating to negligence and other aspects of personal injury are sufficiently developed that parties can often agree upon who is at fault. Yet damages law, for all the cases and principles which have been decided, remains the least intelligible and thus the least predictable for parties and their counsel. When parties have to go to trial in a personal injury case, it is often primarily to decide who should pay what.
KW - statistics
KW - personal injury cases
KW - non-pecuniary damage
KW - negligence
KW - damages law
UR - https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/dlj/vol12/iss1/7
UR - https://digitalcommons.schulichlaw.dal.ca/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1545&context=dlj
M3 - Article
JO - Dalhousie Law Journal
JF - Dalhousie Law Journal
IS - 1.0
ER -