Compensation As A Tort Norm
Compensation As A Tort Norm
Compensation As A Tort Norm
9-1-2013
Recommended Citation
Geistfeld, Mark A., "Compensation as a Tort Norm" (2013). New York University Public Law and Legal Theory Working Papers. Paper
419.
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COMPENSATION AS A TORT NORM
Mark A. Geistfeld*
Introduction
In this passage from one of the first treatises on tort law, Sir
Frederick Pollock invoked a compensatory rationale to explain the
development of tort law. As Percy Winfield subsequently explained,
Pollock consistently adopted the view that tort liability is based
on the principle that all injuries done to another person are torts,
*
Sheila Lubetsky Birnbaum Professor of Civil Litigation, New York University
School of Law. Copyright 2012 Mark A. Geistfeld. All rights reserved. Im grateful
to Ronald Dworkin for his helpful input on an earlier iteration of this project, and
for the helpful comments on this iteration that I received from John Goldberg,
Henry Smith, and participants in the Private Law Workshop at Harvard Law
School. Financial support was provided by the Filomen DAgostino and Max E.
Greenberg Research Fund of the New York University School of Law.
1
Frederick Pollock and James Avery Webb, A Treatise on the Law of Torts (St.
Louis: F.H. Thomas Law Book Co., 3d ed. 1894), vol. 1 at 12-13. The term
injury was employed by early legal scholars such as Blackstone to refer to a
completed wrong that has been committed by one person against another. John
C.P. Goldberg, Two Conceptions of Tort Damages: Fair v. Full Compensation,
55 DePaul L. Rev. 435 (2006), 437. By equating injury with harm, however,
Pollock referred to the other meaning of injury increasingly used by legal
scholars and courts throughout the nineteenth century and commonly used today,
namely, a loss or setback that a person has suffered. Id.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 2
2
Percy H. Winfield, The Province of the Law of Tort (New York: MacMillan,
1931), 32-33.
3
Id. at 36.
4
G. Edward White, Tort Law in America: An Intellectual History (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1980), 14647.
5
John C. P. Goldberg, Twentieth-Century Tort Theory, 91 Geo. L. J. 513 (2003),
525.
6
Emily Sherwin, Compensation and Revenge, 40 San Diego L. Rev. 1387 (2003),
1388.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 3
7
See generally Mark A. Geistfeld, Tort Law: The Essentials (New York: Walters
Kluwer, 2008) (hereinafter Tort Law).
8
John C. Gardner, What Is Tort Law For? Part I. The Place of Corrective Justice,
30 Law & Phil. 1 (2011), 8 (defining norms of justice in these terms).
9
For more sustained argument on this point, see Mark A. Geistfeld, The
Coherence of Compensation-Deterrence Theory in Tort Law, 61 DePaul L. Rev.
383 (2012).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 4
A. Equality of Resources
10
Thomas Nagel, Equality and Partiality (New York: Oxford University Press,
1991), 106.
11
Ronald Dworkin, What is Equality? Part 2: Equality of Resources, 10 Phil. &
Pub. Aff. 283 (1981), 311.
12
Ronald Dworkin, Sovereign Virtue: The Theory and Practice of Equality
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000), 12.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 5
13
Id.
14
Id. at 65-119.
15
Id. at 76.
16
Id. at 149.
17
Id. at 143.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 6
18
Id. at 147.
19
Id. at 149.
20
Id. at 151.
21
Id. at 148-149.
22
Id. at 149.
23
Id. at 157.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 7
24
Ronald Dworkin, Laws Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press,
1986), 303 (emphasis added).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 8
the dutyholder is the loser, but her opportunity cost (the lost benefit
of the risky activity) is necessarily less than the opportunity cost that
would otherwise be created by the conduct in question (measured by
the total compensatory obligation owed to the rightholder). Once
again, the rule of strict liability minimizes the loss or opportunity cost
that must be incurred by at least one of the parties, thus satisfying the
principle of comparative harm as formulated by Dworkin.
The appeal of no-fault tort compensation is not limited to
Dworkins formulation of liberal egalitarianism. According to Will
Kymlicka, liberal egalitarianism can be generally characterized in
terms of an abstract principle of the type developed by Dworkin:
Treating people with equal concern requires that people pay for the
costs of their own choices.25 This abstract principle provides a
morally coherent role for a compensatory tort obligation for reasons
that are fully illustrated by Dworkins conception of equality of
resources.
To be sure, tort law does not ordinarily entitle accident victims to
compensatory damages. Compensation, however, is not wholly
defined by the compensatory damages remedy. Within the context of
a nonconsensual interaction or forced exchange, a compensatory
payment is comprised of the resources required to satisfy a
compensatory obligation. Ones compensatory obligation, in turn, is
defined by the correlative compensatory entitlement held by the other
party. The attributes of a compensatory tort right accordingly
determine the compensatory properties of tort law, and so until that
right has been fully specified, it is an open question whether tort law
can implement a compensatory norm without granting an entitlement
to compensatory damages in all cases.
25
Will Kymlicka, Contemporary Political Philosophy: An Introduction (New York:
Oxford University Press, 1990), 75.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 9
26
Restatement (Second) of Torts, 1 (1965), cmt. b.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 10
27
See Richard Wright, Justice and Reasonable Care in Negligence Law, 47 Am. J.
of Jurisprudence 143 (2002), 17094 (explaining why leading justice theorists
reject the utilitarian approach of weighing all interests equally and instead maintain
that rights-based tort rules prioritize the individual interest in physical security over
the conflicting liberty and economic interests of others). See also text
accompanying note 21.
28
Losee v. Buchanan, 51 N.Y. 476, 485 (1873).
29
Restatement (Second) of Torts 901(a).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 11
30
See generally Mark A. Geistfeld, Punitive Damages, Retribution, and Due
Process, 81 S. Cal. L. Rev. 263 (2008) (discussing the role of punitive damages
within a compensatory tort system and showing that this role persuasively explains
the relevant tort rules).
31
Loren E. Lomasky, Compensation and the Bounds of Rights, 33 Nomos 13
(John W. Chapman (ed.), 1991), 34 (discussing cases of necessity).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 12
32
For more extended discussion of this conception of individual responsibility, see
Stephen R. Perry, Responsibility for Outcomes, Risk, and the Law of Torts, in
Gerald Postema (ed.), Philosophy and the Law of Torts (New York: Cambridge
University Press, 2001), 9293.
33
The maxim means [u]se your own property in such a manner as not to injure that
of another. Blacks Law Dictionary (St. Paul, MN: West Publishing Co, 5th ed.
1979), 1238. As applied to risky behavior not involving the use of property, the
maxim yields a principle that under the common law a man acts at his peril.
Oliver Wendell Holmes, The Common Law (Boston, MA: Little, Brown & Co.,
1881), 82 (stating that some of the greatest common law authorities held this
view). See also Commonwealth ex rel. Attorney Gen. v. Russell, 33 A. 709, 711
(Pa. 1896) (Sic utere tuo non alienum ldas expresses a moral obligation that
grows out of the mere fact of membership of civil society. In many instances it has
been applied as a measure of civil obligation, enforceable at law among those
whose interests are conflicting.).
34
See, e.g., Perkins v. F.I.E. Corp., 762 F.2d 1250, 125456 (5th Cir. 1985) (noting
that the sic utere maxim is the basis for the rule of strict liability governing
ultrahazardous activities under Louisiana law).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 13
35
Compare Geistfeld, Tort Law (note 7) at 9395 (explaining why the autonomous
choices made by a rightholder, such as the decision not to drive automobiles, would
violate the principle of equal treatment if these choices were to determine
unilaterally whether the dutyholder would be subject to negligence or strict liability,
thereby justifying a rule that evaluates reciprocity in the objective terms of whether
the activity is common in the community); with Restatement (Third) of Torts:
Liability for Physical and Emotional Harms, 20 (2010), cmt. j (Whenever an
activity is engaged in by a large fraction of the community, the absence of strict
liability can be explained by considerations of reciprocity.).
36
For more rigorous demonstration, see Mark Geistfeld, Placing a Price on Pain
and Suffering: A Method for Helping Juries Determine Tort Damages for
Nonmonetary Injuries, 83 Cal. L. Rev. 773 (1995), 851-52.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 15
this baseline, the consumer pays for the full cost of tort liability, as
the equilibrium product price must cover all of the sellers costs,
including its liability costs. Consumer interests are the only ones that
factor into the distributive analysis required by the normatively
justified tort rule, explaining why products liability law recognizes
that it is not a factor . . . that the imposition of liability would have a
negative effect on corporate earnings or would reduce employment in
a given industry.39 For risks not threatening injury to bystanders,
product cases only implicate an intrapersonal conflict of consumer
interests: those involving physical security, liberty (regarding product
use), and money (product price and other financial costs of product
use).40
In comparing her own security and liberty interests, the
consumer gives no special priority to either one. The consumer
prefers to pay for product safety only if the benefit of risk reduction
(borne by the consumer) exceeds the cost of the safety investment
(also borne by the consumer via the associated price increase or
decrease of product functionality). Consumers reasonably expect
product-safety decisions to be governed by a cost-benefit calculus
because that decisional rule maximizes consumer welfare. A product
that does not satisfy reasonable consumer expectations is defective
and subjects the seller to liability under the widely adopted rule of
strict products liability.41 This rule does not entitle consumers to
compensatory damages in all cases. Due to the relatively high cost of
tort compensation as compared to other forms of insurance,
In a wide range of cases, the negligence rule can attain the ideal
compensatory outcome by distributing risk to maximize the net
benefit that a rightholder expects to derive from the risky interaction,
so the rightholder is not made worse off, ex ante, than she would
otherwise be in a world without the risk (and the associated benefit to
be gained from the risky activity). The only remaining cases involve
rightholders who are not in a contractual relationship with a
dutyholder who creates an objectively defined nonreciprocal risk of
physical harm. In these cases, the negligence rule can still distribute
risk in the manner reasonably required by the compensatory tort right,
but the compensation is not ideal, even when supplemented by a rule
of strict liability.
These cases involve activities that are not common in the
community and create risks above the ordinary level of background
42
See id. at 61-67.
43
See id. at 256-66 (explaining why consumers do not reasonably expect to receive
compensatory damages for pure economic loss and stand-alone emotional harms
caused by defective products).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 18
44
See Geistfeld, Tort Law (note 7) at 92-97.
45
See Romo v. Ford Motor Co., 6 Cal. Rptr. 3d 793, 811 (Ct. App. 2003) (ruling on
a punitive damages award in a wrongful death case involving an award of zero
compensatory damages); Edward A. Adams, Venue Crucial to Tort Awards: Study:
City Verdicts Depend on Counties, N.Y.L.J., Apr. 4, 1994, at 1, 5 (reporting results
of empirical study finding, among other things, that the average tort award in New
York City between 1984 and 1993 was three times higher for brain damage rather
than wrongful death, which was only twice as much as the average damage award
for a herniated disc).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 19
46
For more rigorous discussion of the argument in this paragraph, see Mark A.
Geistfeld, Reconciling Cost-Benefit Analysis with the Principle that Safety
Matters More than Money, 76 N.Y.U. L. Rev. 114 (2001).
47
This reasoning explains why a strictly liable dutyholder who reprehensibly rejects
the duty to exercise reasonable care is subject to punitive damages. Cf. Owens-Ill.,
Inc. v. Zenobia, 325 Md. 420, 601 A.2d 633, 653 (1992) (adopting majority rule
requiring proof of actual malice to justify punitive damages under strict products
liability).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 20
48
See Part II.A.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 21
49
See Restatement (Second) of Torts, 903 (1965), cmt. a (stating that a damage
award for the loss of lifes pleasures is not supposed to restore the injured person
to his previous position but should instead only give to the injured person some
pecuniary return for what he has suffered or is likely to suffer).
50
Mark A. Geistfeld, The Principle of Misalignment: Duty, Damages, and the
Nature of Tort Liability, 121 Yale L. J. 142 (2011), 164 (discussing the rule of
irreparable injury and explaining why it ordinarily encompasses damages to real or
tangible property).
51
See Mark A. Geistfeld, Tort Law and the Inherent Limitations of Monetary
Exchange: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and the Negligence Rule, 4 J. Tort
Law, No. 1, Art. 4 (2011), at http://www.bepress.com/jtl/vol4/iss1/art4.
52
Geistfeld, The Principle of Misalignment (note 50) at 165-69 (identifying the
types of behavior prohibited by the negligence rule and providing citations to cases
Compensation as a Tort Norm 22
holding that a defendant who engaged in such behavior cannot avoid liability for
punitive damages even if fully willing and able to pay compensatory damages).
53
John C.P. Goldberg and Benjamin Zipursky, Torts as Wrongs, 88 Tex. L. Rev.
917 (2010), 942 (arguing in favor of interpretations of tort law that can incorporate
this framework of moral thought that people deploy regularly in their daily lives).
54
John Norton Pomeroy, A Treatise on Equity Jurisprudence as Administered in the
United States of America (San Francisco, CA: A.L. Bancroft & Co., 1883), 389; see
also Douglas Laycock, The Death of the Irreparable Injury Rule, 103 Harv. L.
Rev. 687 (1990), 699 (Judges act on these premises, whether or not they
consciously acknowledge all that Pomeroy imputed to them.).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 23
55
Cf. Laycock, The Death of the Irreparable Injury Rule (note 54) at 732-39
(discussing the rule that monetary damages provide the remedy for harms that
would otherwise be irreparable when equitable relief would interfere with
countervailing rights or impose undue hardship on the dutyholder).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 24
56
Jules L. Coleman, The Practice of Principle (New York: Oxford University
Press, 2001), 32.
57
Benjamin Zipursky, Civil Recourse, Not Corrective Justice, 91 Geo. L. J. 695
(2003).
58
Barbara H. Fried, The Limits of a Nonconsequentialist Approach to Torts, 18
Legal Theory 231 (2012), 231.
59
Jody S. Kraus, Transparency and Determinacy in Common Law Adjudication:
A Philosophical Defense of Explanatory Economic Analysis, 93 Va. L. Rev. 287
(2007), 304.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 25
60
Cf. Fried, The Limits of a Nonconsequentialist Approach to Torts (note 58) at
244, 250 (recognizing that contradictions or paradoxes inherent in deontological
accounts of tort law do not exist for a compensatory account); Zipursky, Civil
Recourse, Not Corrective Justice (note 57) at 710-12 (arguing that corrective
justice provides a conceptually uninteresting description of tort law if the
recognition of a right of action in tort is not isomorphic with the recognition of a
duty of repair).
61
See Part II.B-C.
62
See Geistfeld, Tort Law (note 7) at 191-204.
63
See Gardner, What Is Tort Law For? Part I. The Place of Corrective Justice
(note 8) at 34.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 26
67
Id. at 33.
68
If the compensatory entitlement cannot be adequately protected by a rule of strict
liability, the resultant compensatory shortfall can be eliminated by redirecting that
compensatory obligation into the standard of reasonable care, illustrating the
inherent relation between the remedy of strict liability and the underlying obligation
to exercise reasonable care. See Part II. C. For more rigorous argument showing
that negligence and strict liability can be constitutive elements of a single
entitlement, see Geistfeld, Tort Law and the Inherent Limitations of Monetary
Exchange: Property Rules, Liability Rules, and the Negligence Rule (note 51).
69
Compare notes 30 and 52 (explaining how punitive damages protect the integrity
of a compensatory right) with Ernest J. Weinrib, Civil Recourse and Corrective
Compensation as a Tort Norm 28
Justice, 39 Fl. St. L. Rev. 273 (2011), 290 (Punitive damages are inconsistent
with corrective justice for reasons both of structure and content
70
See Part II.C.
71
Peter Jaffey, Duties and Liabilities in Private Law, 12 Legal Theory 137
(2006), 153.
72
Ernest J. Weinrib, The Idea of Private Law (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University
Press, 1995), 177 (italics added).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 29
73
E.g., Spano v. Perini Corp., 250 N.E.2d 31, 34 (N.Y. 1969) (explaining that the
plaintiffs claim of strict liability does not seek to exclude the defendant from
blasting but instead merely seek[s] compensation for the damage). If these
activities were presumptively unreasonable and prohibited, the mere choice to
engage in them would subject the dutyholder to punitive damages. See note 52.
74
Jaffey, Duties and Liabilities in Private Law (note 71) at 153 (identifying the
impossibility of engaging in risky behavior without ever harming another as the
reason why strict liability is widely thought to be unjust).
75
A liability rule exclusively relies on the compensatory damages remedy to
protect the rightholders interests, unlike a property rule that immunizes these
interests from harm absent the rightholders consent and accordingly employs
injunctive relief as a remedy. See Guido Calabresi and A. Douglas Melamed,
Property Rules, Liability Rules, and Inalienability: One View of the Cathedral, 85
Harv. L. Rev. 1089 (1972). For reasons discussed in the text, the rule of strict
liability criticized by Weinrib is a property rule rather than a liability rule.
Compensation as a Tort Norm 30
76
See Part II.A.
77
Restatement (Second) of Torts, 520(f) (1965) & cmt. k.
78
See Geistfeld, Tort Law (note 7), at 91-97; Mark A. Geistfeld, Social Value as a
Policy-Based Limitation of the Ordinary Duty to Exercise Reasonable Care, 44
Wake Forest L. Rev. 781 (2009).
Compensation as a Tort Norm 31
Conclusion
79
For more rigorous demonstration, see Mark A. Geistfeld, Efficiency, Fairness,
and the Economic Analysis of Tort Law, in Mark D. White (ed.), Theoretical
Foundations of Law and Economics (New York: Cambridge University Press,
2009), 234-52.