Posts by ShubhoRoy:

    India: Reducing delays in litigation by reshaping the incentives of litigants

    August 20th, 2015

    By Shubho Roy.

     

    Judicial delays are a major problem in India. There have been a number of attempts to solve these through introducing new legislation or tweaking existing laws. The tweaks usually involve putting ad-hoc numerical limits on the number of proceedings or delays. This approach has failed. A different approach is to create incentives for parties to not delay legal proceedings. This approach has been used worldwide with success. One example we show here, from the US, is Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Procedure which sets up an interesting game to speed up litigation.

    The problem

    In enforcing contracts, India ranks 186 out of 189 countries. Judicial delays in criminal cases probably cause even more harm. To solve this problem the government has tried quite a few things. Amongst them are:

    1. The Arbitration Act and Conciliation Act, 1996 was made with the objective of providing litigating parties (mostly in commercial disputes) a system outside the court system through arbitrators, but within a legal system of the Arbitration Act. This law succeeded an older law of 1940 and was supposed to make India’s law aligned with international law of arbitration.
    2. The Code of Civil Procedure which governs court proceedings in civil disputes was amended in 1999 (effective from 2002) requiring courts provide a maximum of three adjournments to a party in a case (times a party can delay a court proceeding for the day). This rule appears to be followed more in its breach. Similarly the costs imposed on parties for adjournments are puny compared to the actual costs in an adjournment. E.g.  Bombay caps costs for each days proceeding at Rs.100.

    These attempts have not resulted in improved arbitration or reduced court delays. As a recent arbitration order against India in an arbitration under a bilateral investment treaty notes: An international investor could not enforce the arbitration award (i.e. legally collect the award) afterwinning the arbitration for a period of 8 years.

    The government proposed an ordinance to amend the Arbitration Act, 1996 to speed up the process of arbitration. Amongst other changes, two key proposals are:

    1. A time of limit of 9 months for arbitrators to finish proceedings. If the time for proceedings exceeds the limit, the arbitrator will have to apply to the High Court to get an extension. The High Court may prevent arbitrators with long delays from taking up new proceedings.
    2. The government will cap total fees payable to an arbitrator.

    These quantitative restrictions and price controls have three features:

    1. They are not new, and have been tried multiple number of times before.
    2. They have been a resounding failure in the past.
    3. They have many unintended consequences.

    While speeding up arbitration is a step in the right direction, at the end if the losing party does not cooperate, the coercive power of the state has to be exercised. The Ease of Doing Business report notes that a contract enforcement in India involves 46 steps. Arbitration proceedings constitute only a fraction of those steps.

    This award is symptomatic of what is wrong with squeezing the balloon in one place. We just create incentives for parties who want to litigate and delay to move their delaying tactics to other areas including:

    1. Appointment of arbitrators: When parties disagree whether an arbitration is required or who should be an arbitrator, the courts have to step in to start arbitration proceedings or appoint arbitrators. Parties unwilling to cooperate, will just use the same old delaying tactics in Indian courts to delay the appointment of arbitrators.
    2. Execution of arbitration awards: After winning an arbitration, the winning party still has to go to the court to force an unwilling losing party to pay up. Only a court order can block and transfer money out of a bank account or hold auction for a property of the loser. Again, this requires the winning party to go file an application before the court to get court official to assist in forcible takeover of properties, or get bank account records changed (usually calledexecution proceedings). The losing party can again use time tested delaying tactics in execution proceedings to lengthen out the suffering of the winning party.

    Emphasising a single bad metric may have many bad unintended consequences. Arbitration proceedings should not be judged solely on the basis of time taken for the award. The quality of the award is also an important desirable feature of an arbitration. Arbitrary limits on time and fees work against the quality of the awards.

    With the nine month deadline in the mind of arbitrators and a probable reduction of fees, the arbitrator will have the incentive to:

    1. Hurriedly finish arbitrations and push out a low quality award. Which will then be challenged in appeal before courts, thereby burdening the judiciary again.
    2. Take up more number of arbitrations to have the same level of income as before. This will have the same effect of pushing down the time and effort an arbitrator allocates to each case.

    A single cost cap for arbitrator fees also ignores the complexity of modern arbitrations. Arbitrations today are not just limited to legal questions, complicated contracts in engineering, construction, high end services require specialist arbitrators with technical knowledge. Capping costs has a high risk of driving out competent and therefore expensive aribtrators outside India.

    Reshaping incentives

    In order to make progress, we should look deeper. We should understand the incentives of the parties to a litigation and then use policy interventions to modify these incentives. One useful example is from the US: Rule 68 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. This is a more nuanced approach which discourages parties to litigate.

    Rule 68: Winner beware

    Rule 68 involves civil cases where the plaintiff (the suing party) is seeking monetary damages against the defendant (the party being sued). The rule has the following proposition:

    At any time before the trial starts, the defendant can make an offer to the plaintiff to settle the case. Two copies of the offer terms are made. The plaintiff can accept or reject the offer. If the plaintiff accepts the offer, the cost of the trial is eliminated.

    If the plaintiff rejects the offer, the judge is informed about the rejection but not the terms of the offer that was rejected (this is kept in a sealed copy with the court). If the plaintiff wins, there can be two scenarios at this point:

    1. The sum awarded in the judgment is higher than the sum offered by the defendant before the trial started.
    2. The sum awarded in the judgment is lower than the sum offered by the defendant before the trial started.

    In the second case, the plaintiff has to bear the entire litigation costs incurred by the defendant from the date the offer was made by the defendant. The offer is not seen by the judge before the trial to prevent the judge’s final determination from getting coloured by the offer of the defendant. The judge comes to the determination of judgment amount through the independent judicial process.

    This rule is an elegant way to reduce litigation. At the beginning of a case, the judge has very little information about the merits of the case: In contrast, the parties know much more, having lived through the dispute. They are also in a better position to understand the true value of their economic loss. However, every plaintiff (who believes she will win) has an incentive to ask for more damages than actually suffered. Conversely, every defendant who knows that he has a weak case still has some incentive in drawing out a litigation, thereby delaying the eventual payout she has to make.

    When an offer is made to settle, every plaintiff takes it as a signal about what the defendant thinks about the merits of her case. A high offer is interpreted by the plaintiff as that the defendant considers that the plaintiff is on strong legal grounds to win. This may push the plaintiff to continue with the trial, with the hope of getting a higher award in judgment rather than the settlement. However, by transferring the trial costs in case of a lower judgment value, a good counter incentive is created for the plaintiff. The plaintiff has to think hard about the offer and cannot reject it summarily.

    Similarly, defendants have an incentive to offer lower settlement amounts because it may be used as a signal that the defendant has a good case. However, this rule gives an incentive to the defendant to make a fair and generous offer, knowing that if the court gives a lower amount the defendant will make significant savings in litigation costs.

    The rule thus sets up an economic game where there is a strong incentive for both parties to avoid judicial systems without doing injustice and reducing the burden on the state.

    Conclusion

    Few problems are as important to India’s emergence as a mature market economy and successful liberal democracy, as the problem of making courts work better. One element of this is a fresh approach to the administrative aspects of how courts work. The second element is to rethink rules in a way that is grounded in thinking about incentives. Compare and contrast the sophistication of Rule 68 with the 9 month and price capping rules that we are proposing in our arbitration law.

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