1. Determinants of the Duration of European Appellate Court Proceedings in Cartel Cases
- Author
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Patrice Bougette, Florian Smuda, and Kai Hüschelrath
- Subjects
European Union law ,Economics and Econometrics ,Law of the case ,Appeal ,Cartel ,Original jurisdiction ,16. Peace & justice ,General Business, Management and Accounting ,Law ,Political Science and International Relations ,media_common.cataloged_instance ,Remand (court procedure) ,Business ,Business and International Management ,European union ,Court of record ,media_common - Abstract
The duration of appellate court proceedings is an important determinant of the efficiency of a court system. We use data of 234 firm groups that participated in 63 cartels convicted by the European Commission between 2000 and 2012 to investigate the determinants of the duration of the subsequent one- or two-stage appeals process. We find that while the speed of the firststage appellate court decision depends on the court’s appeals-related workload, the complexity of the case, the degree of cooperation by the firms involved and the clarity of the applied rules and regulations, the second-stage appellate court proceedings appear to be largely unaffected by those drivers. We take our empirical results to derive conclusions for both firms that plan to file an appeal as well as public policy makers.
- Published
- 2015
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