U.S. Department of Justice Office of Justice Programs Bureau of Justice Statistics Civil Trial Cases and Verdicts in Large Counties, 2001 April 2004, NCJ 202803 -------------------------------------------------------------- This file is text only without graphics and many of the tables. A Zip archive of the tables in this report in spreadsheet format (.wk1) and the full report including tables and graphics in .pdf format are available from: http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/abstract/ctcvlc01.htm This report is one in a series. More recent editions may be available. To view a list of all in the series go to http://www.ojp.usdoj.gov/bjs/pubalp2.htm#civil --------------------------------------------------------------- By Thomas H. Cohen, J.D., Ph.D. Steven K. Smith, Ph.D. BJS Statisticians ------------------------------------ Highlights In 2001 plaintiffs in the 75 largest counties won just over half the 12,000 general civil cases at trial, with 442 or 4% awarded $1 million or more * During 2001 a jury decided almost 75% of the 12,000 tort, contract, and real property trials in the Nation's 75 largest counties. Judges adjudicated the remaining 24%. Tort cases (93%) were more likely than contract cases (43%) to be disposed of by jury trial. * The 11,908 civil trials disposed of in 2001 represents a 47% decline from the 22,451 civil trials in these counties in 1992. * In jury trials, the median award decreased from $65,000 in 1992 to $37,000 in 2001 in these counties. * Two-thirds of disposed trials in 2001 involved tort claims, and about a third involved contractual issues. * Overall, plaintiffs won in 55% of trials. Plaintiffs won more often in bench trials (65%) than in jury trials (53%), and in contract trials (65%) more than in tort (52%) or real property trials (38%). * An estimated $4 billion in compensatory and punitive damages were awarded to plaintiff winners in civil trials. Juries awarded $3.9 billion to plaintiff winners while judges awarded $368 million. The median total award for plaintiff winners in tort trials was $27,000 and in contract trials $45,000. * Punitive damages, estimated at $1.2 billion, were awarded to 6% of plaintiff winners in trials. The median punitive damage award was $50,000. * Plaintiffs prevailed in about a fourth (27%) of medical malpractice trials. Half of the 311 plaintiffs who successfully litigated a medical malpractice claim won at least $422,000, and in nearly a third of these cases, the award was $1 million or more. ----------------------------------------------------- State courts of general jurisdiction in the Nation's 75 largest counties disposed of almost 12,000 tort, contract, and real property cases by jury or bench trial during 2001. Juries decided almost three-fourths of these cases, while judges resolved about a fourth of them. Plaintiffs won in 55% of trials and were awarded a total of about $4 billion in compensatory and punitive damages. The median total award was $33,000, and the amounts awarded to plaintiff winners ranged from under $10 to $454 million. Tort claims comprised 67% of trials disposed. The majority of trials (62%) were disposed of in less than 2 years. These are some of the findings from a study of civil trials in State courts involving tort, contract, and real property cases in the Nation's 75 largest counties. This study is part of a series examining general jurisdiction court civil cases resolved through trials.***Footnote 1: Courts of general jurisdiction may handle many types of civil cases including estate, domestic relations, probate, and small claims. This report only examines general civil cases (that is, tort, contract, and real property) in courts of general jurisdiction.*** The sample of civil cases included tort, contract, and real property cases. Federal trials, trials in counties outside the 75 most populous counties, and trials in State courts of limited jurisdiction were excluded from the sample. Cases that reach trial During calendar year 2001 State courts of general jurisdiction in the Nation's 75 most populous counties disposed of an estimated 11,908 tort, contract, and real property trial cases. Previous studies conducted by the Bureau of Justice Statistics found that a majority of tort, contract, and real property cases are resolved prior to going to trial and that only a small percentage (about 3%) are actually disposed of by jury or bench trial verdict.*** Footnote 2: See Tort Cases in Large Counties, NCJ 153177, April 1995 and Contract Cases in Large Counties, NCJ 156664, February 1996.*** Civil trials, however, are crucial because it is through these cases that important information on civil case components such as compensatory award amounts, punitive damages, and case processing times are known. In the majority of civil cases that settle, the terms of settlement agreements and other key case information may not be publicly available. Most (67%) of the civil cases disposed of by trial in the Nation's 75 most populous counties during 2001 involved a tort claim, in which plaintiffs alleged injury, loss, or damage from the negligent or intentional acts of defendants. Cases dealing with allegations of breach of contract (contract cases) accounted for 31% of trials and real property cases about 2%. The most frequent kinds of civil cases disposed of by trial were automobile accident cases (36%); premises liability cases, alleging harm from inadequately maintained or dangerous property (11%); seller plaintiff cases, involving payment owed by a buyer or borrower (10%); and medical malpractice cases in which the plaintiff claimed harm from a doctor, dentist, or other health care provider (10%). Cases involving the purchasers of goods or services seeking a return on their money (buyer plaintiff) and cases that arose due to the intentional or negligent misrepresentation of a product or company (fraud) accounted for 7% and 5% respectively, of all civil trials. Product liability cases represented less than 2% of all civil trials. Types of cases disposed of by trial Generally, juries decided civil cases involving issues of personal injury or harm, such as automobile or medical malpractice. For example, juries were more likely to decide tort cases (93%) than contract cases (43%) or real property cases (27%). Judges disposed of business-related civil trials such as contract (57%) and real property cases (73%) more often than juries (not shown in a table). Over 90% of medical malpractice and premises liability cases were decided by jury trial. Among the sampled product liability cases, 100% of asbestos and 93% of the other product liability cases were disposed of by jury trial. The majority of automobile tort cases were also adjudicated by jury trial. Among contract cases, bench trials disposed of 77% of seller plaintiff cases, 77% of rental lease cases, and 53% of fraud cases. Only in employment discrimination suits was a substantial majority of contract cases (89%) decided by a jury (not shown in a table). Comparing jury and bench trials The cases before judges and juries differ in terms of case type, plaintiff win rates, damage awards, case processing times, and other trial characteristics. Type of litigants: Plaintiffs In 83% of all trial cases, the plaintiff was an individual. ***Footnote 3: Each civil trial case, regardless of the number of plaintiff types involved, was assigned one of four plaintiff designations from the following hierarchy: hospital, business, government, and individual. A case with multiple plaintiffs received the designation of whichever type appeared first in the hierarchy.*** Businesses were plaintiffs in 16% of all trials, government agencies, 1% and hospitals, 0.3%. Because tort litigation primarily involves personal injury, over 97% of tort trials had an individual as the plaintiff (not shown in a table). As contract cases often involved business disputes, businesses comprised a substantial percentage (44%) of all contract plaintiffs. Government agencies represented a majority of plaintiffs (69%) in eminent domain property cases (not shown in a table). Type of litigants: Defendants Defendants in all trials were primarily divided between individuals (47%) and businesses (42%). ***Footnote 4: A case with multiple defendants was assigned the defendant type that appeared first in the hierarchy.*** Hospitals were named as the defendant in 6% of all trials and governments 5%. In jury trials, 47% of defendants were individuals and 40% were businesses. Defendants in bench trials were evenly represented by businesses (50%) and individuals (47%). Who sues whom? The most common type of civil trial involved an individual suing either another individual (42%) or a business (31%). Businesses sued each other in about 11% of all civil trials. Among bench trials, a larger proportion of businesses were more likely to be plaintiffs suing either businesses (27%) or individuals (14%) (not shown in a table). Multiple plaintiffs and defendants Over 42,000 litigants were involved in the 12,000 tort, contract, and real property trials disposed of in the Nation's 75 largest counties in 2001. Cases with multiple defendants were more prevalent than cases with multiple plaintiffs. About three-fourths (73%) of all trials had only one plaintiff while about half (56%) had only one defendant (not shown in a table). Trial outcomes Overall, plaintiffs won in 55% of trials. The rate of plaintiff success varied according to the type of case litigated. Plaintiffs were more likely to win in contract cases (65%) than in either tort (52%) or real property cases (38%). * Among tort trials plaintiffs prevailed in over half of animal attack (67%), automobile (61%), and asbestos (60%) cases. Plaintiffs won in less than a third of medical malpractice (27%) cases. * For contract trials the estimated win rate surpassed 70% in seller plaintiff (77%) and mortgage foreclosure (73%) cases and exceeded 60% in buyer plaintiff (62%), rental lease (65%), and subrogation (67%) cases. Conversely, plaintiffs prevailed in 44% of employment discrimination cases and 46% of partnership disputes. Trial awards During 2001 plaintiff winners in civil trials were awarded an estimated $4.4 billion in compensatory and punitive damages in the Nation's 75 largest counties. Slightly over half the estimated total amount ($2.3 billion) was awarded in tort cases. The median amount awarded to plaintiff winners for all trial cases was $33,000. Contract cases garnered higher median awards ($45,000) compared to tort ($27,000) cases. -------------------------------------- Class action lawsuits A class action lawsuit requires that (1) the number of persons be so numerous that it would be impractical to bring them all before the court, (2) the named representatives can fairly represent all of the members of the class, and (3) the class members have a well defined common interest in the questions of law or fact to be resolved (Black's Law Dictionary). Of the 11,908 civil trials litigated in 2001, only 1 could be classified as a class action. This lawsuit, "Bell v. Farmers Insurance Exchange," resulted from the decision of Farmers Insurance Exchange to classify their claims' representatives as administrative personnel, which exempted the insurance company from having to pay overtime. The suit was certified as a class action because it involved over 2,400 California claims adjustors. The jury trial took place in Oakland, California, and a finding was entered for the plaintiffs. The award totaled $124.5 million of which $90 million was for uncompensated overtime, $1.2 million for double time, and $34.5 million for prejudgment interest. The case took almost 5 years from filing to verdict to litigate. Source for additional case details: The National Law Journal (February 2002) Vol. 24, No. 22 (Col. 3). -------------------------------------- About 18% of plaintiff winners were awarded over $250,000 in total damages while an estimated 7% were awarded $1 million or more. Among particular types of cases, asbestos product liability trials had the highest median awards, with half of the 19 asbestos cases receiving at least $1.7 million in damages. These cases averaged a higher number of plaintiffs (3.2 plaintiffs per case) compared to the typical tort case (1.4 plaintiffs per case). Among the non- asbestos product liability cases, plaintiffs recovered a median award of $311,000. Plaintiff winners in medical malpractice trials received a median award of $422,000, with 1 in 3 receiving awards of $1 million or more. Among contract trials, employment discrimination suits had median awards of $166,000, with 14% garnering awards of $1 million or more. Jury awards versus bench awards The data reveal that final award amounts also varied by whether the case was decided by a jury or a judge. ------------------------------------- Largest damage award Of the 11,908 civil trials studied, the largest damage award involved a business dispute between several parties in Texas and Mexico. A company in Texas attempted to franchise several stores in Mexico. Under Mexican law this company could not establish franchise con- tracts without a Mexican business partner. The company sought assistance from several Mexican business partners who initially expressed an interest in the deal; however, the company contended that these business associates broke off negotiations and used the insider information gained to directly buy the franchise for $800 million. The plaintiff accused their Mexican business associates and the seller of reneging on the contractual deal. A jury in Dallas, Texas, found for the plaintiff corporation and awarded $90 million in actual damages for lost profit and $364.5 million in punitive damages. The case, from filing to disposition, took 3½ months to process; the trial lasted 17 days. The $454 million total award was reduced to $121 million on appeal. Sources for additional case details: Los Angeles Times, February 9, 2001; Houston Chronicle, May 19, 2001. ------------------------------------------------- This was particularly true for contract cases where juries awarded a median amount of $81,000 compared to the $30,000 median amount awarded by judges. Among the employment discrimination cases, plaintiff winners received a median award of $218,000 from juries and a median award of $40,000 from judges. In seller plaintiff cases, juries awarded a median of $68,000 to plaintiffs compared to $29,000 by judges (not shown in a table). Punitive damage awards Punitive damages were awarded in 6% of the 6,487 trial cases in which the plaintiff won damages. Punitive damages totaled over $1.2 billion and accounted for about 28% of the $4.4 billion awarded to plaintiffs overall. The median punitive damage amount awarded to plaintiff winners who received a punitive damage award was $50,000. Twenty-three percent of punitive damage awards were over $250,000, and 12% were $1 million or more. Among tort cases punitive damages were awarded more frequently to plaintiff winners in slander/libel cases (59%), intentional tort cases (36%), and false arrest/imprisonment cases (26%). Contract cases recorded the highest estimated punitive awards in partnership disputes (21%), employment discrimination (18%), and fraud cases (17%). Compensatory versus punitive damage awards In civil trials that received punitive damages, substantial differences can occur between the amount awarded in punitive and compensatory damages.*** Footnote 5: The U.S. Supreme Court ruled on the compensatory to punitive damages ratio, after this sample of civil trials was collected, in "State Farm Insurance v. Campbell" in which the Court overturned a punitive damage award that if considered "grossly excessive." While the Supreme Court did not delineate a bright line ratio of punitive to compensatory damages, it did not delineate a bright line ratio of punitive to compensatory damages, it did suggest that punitive damages "more than four times the amount of compensatory damages might come close to the line of constitutional impropriety." (State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company v. Campbell, April 7, 2003, 123 S. Ct. 1513: 1524.) In 39% of civil trials that awarded punitive damages to the plaintiff winner, the amount of punitive damages exceeded the amount awarded for compensatory damages. Punitive awards exceeded compensatory awards in 40% of tort trials and in 37% of contract trials. ---------------------------------------- Federal civil trials Federal district courts exercise jurisdiction in civil actions that -- (1) deal with a Federal question arising out of the U.S. Constitution, (2) are between parties that reside in different States or countries and that exceed $75,000 at issue, (3) are initiated by the U.S. Government, or (4) are brought against the U.S. Government. (See Federal Tort Trials and Verdicts, NCJ 172855, February 1999, and "The Jurisdiction of the Federal Courts," , viewed 3/9/2004.) * In fiscal year 2001 Federal district courts disposed of 1,964 tort, contract, and real property cases by jury or bench trial. * As in State courts, a small percentage (2%) of the 87,852 terminated Federal tort, contract, and real property cases reached trial. * A jury verdict disposed of a majority (67%) of Federal tort, contract, and real property trials. * Federal tort cases (79%) were more likely to be decided by jury trial than contract (50%) and property (26%) cases. * In about half of Federal tort, contract, and real property trials, the plaintiff won the decision. Plaintiffs won 51% of jury trials and 56% of bench trials. * The median amount awarded to plaintiff winners was larger in Federal district courts than in the sampled State courts. The median award for plaintiff winners was $216,000 for all Federal tort, contract, and real property cases disposed of by trial. The median award was $228,000 for jury trials and $177,000 for bench trials. --------------------------------------- Case processing time Among all trials the average case processing time from filing of the complaint to verdict or judgment was 24.2 months, with half the civil trials taking a minimum of 20.2 months to dispose (not shown in a table). * Tort trials reached a verdict or judgment in an average of 25.6 months compared to 21.7 months for real property cases and 21.5 months for contract cases. * Among tort cases, non-asbestos product liability trials had one of the longest case processing times, averaging 35.1 months from filing to verdict or judgment, followed by medical malpractice cases with an average of 33.2 months. * The 31 asbestos product liability cases had one of the shortest average case processing times (16.8 months). Number of days in trial General civil trials conducted in the Nation's 75 most populous counties lasted 3.7 days on average.***Footnote 6: Trial days involve the actual number of business days that a case is in trial. Weekends and holidays are not counted.*** Asbestos cases took about 3 weeks on average to process (14.1 days), while the other product liability trials were disposed within nearly 2 weeks (8.1 days). Medical malpractice and employment discrimination cases took between 1 and 2 weeks on average to dispose. The average number of days in trial for automobile cases, the most common civil case, was 2.9 days. A bench or jury disposition also affected the length of time in trial. Jury trials lasted 4.3 days on average compared to 1.9 days for bench trials. The longest jury trial recorded in the sample lasted 70 days, and the longest bench trial, 18 days (not shown in a table). Trends in civil trials The total number of civil trials declined from 1992 to 2001 The number of civil trials decreased 47%, from 22,451 to 11,908 cases, since 1992. Tort cases decreased the least (-32%), while real property (-80%) and contract (-61%) cases registered the largest declines. Among tort cases, product and premises liability saw the sharpest declines, while medical malpractice and automobile torts had insignificant decreases.***Footnote 7: Civil cases disposed of in 1992 and in 1996 are part of the earlier BJS studies on this topic. See Civil Jury Cases and Verdicts in Large Counties, 1992, NCJ 154346, July 1995, and Civil Trial Cases and Verdicts in Large Counties, 1996, NCJ 173426, September 1999.*** The growing use of alternative dispute resolution (ADR) as a diversion from trial, and other statutory reforms aimed at limiting damage awards, contributed to the decline in civil trials. In addition, the National Center for State Courts reports that the number of tort filings declined by 9% in 30 States during the 1992-2001 period. Contract filings, in comparison, rose nearly 21% in 17 States after 1995; however, because contract cases account for a smaller proportion of civil trials, their impact is less substantial than the tort filings.***Footnote 8: The sources for these findings are Tort Reform Record, American Tort Reform Association, 2003 and B. Ostrom, N. Kauder, and R. LaFountain, Examining the Work of State Courts, 2002: A National Perspective from the Court Statistics Project, 2003.*** The percentage of tort plaintiff winners remained stable in civil trials during the 1992 to 2001 period In 1992 and 1996, 52% of plaintiffs were successful at trial, while in 2001, that percentage was 55%. Among tort cases, around half the plaintiffs prevailed at trial from 1992 (47%) to 2001 (52%). Contract case plaintiff win rates rose from 1992 (57%) to 2001 (65%). Conversely, the percentage of prevailing plaintiffs in real property cases dropped from 56% to 38% during the 1992 to 2001 period (not shown in a table). From 1992 to 2001 the overall median awards in jury trials declined When adjusted for inflation, the median jury trial award for civil cases in 1992 and 1996 was $65,000 and $40,000, respectively. *** Footnote 9: The inflation adjustment was calculated by utilizing the inflation calculator on the U.S. Department Labor's website at .*** The median award imposed by juries in 2001 was $37,000. Some civil case categories had marked increases in their median jury awards This trend was particularly apparent in product liability trials in which the median award amounts were at least 3 times higher in 2001 than in 1992. The median award amounts also doubled for medical malpractice cases.***Footnote 10: The inflation rate for medical services between 1992 and 2001 explains some of the increase in medical malpractice awards. The inflation rate for medical services can be calculated on the U.S. Department of Labor's website at .*** Punitive damages awarded in a small percentage of jury trials Since 1992 the number of jury trials with punitive damage awards has remained stable (4% to 6%). Between 1992 and 2001 the median amounts awarded for plaintiff winners with punitive damages decreased from $63,000 to $50,000; this decline, however, was not statistically significant (not shown in a table). ------------------------------------- Civil trials involving a wrongful death claim Civil cases in which a party alleges that the defendant's negligent action or wrongdoing resulted in a death comprised a small number of civil trials. These trials, however, can involve large damage awards. Of the 11,908 civil trials, 452 had a wrongful death claim. Nearly two-thirds (65%) were medical malpractice cases. The remaining involved automobile (16%), intentional (6%), other torts (6%), premises liability (5%), and product liability (2%). The majority of wrongful death claims (93%) were adjudicated by jury trial. Plaintiffs prevailed in about a third (36%) of all wrongful death cases including 25% of wrongful death cases involving a medical malpractice action. In comparison, at least half the estimated plaintiffs successfully litigated the small number of wrongful death cases with an automobile, premises liability, product liability, intentional tort, and other tort claim. Half the plaintiffs who prevailed in a wrongful death case were awarded at least $961,000. The estimated median awards were above $2 million for the product liability and other tort cases and over $1 million for the intentional tort cases. Wrongful death cases with estimated median awards below $1 million included medical malpractice, premises liability, and automobile torts. ------------------------------------------------ Methodology Definitions of disposition types: Jury trial: A trial held before and decided by a group of laypersons selected according to the law presided over by a judge culminating in a verdict for the plaintiff(s) and/or defendant(s). Bench trial (nonjury trial): A trial held in the absence of a jury and decided by a judge culminating in a judgment for the plaintiff(s) or defendant(s). Directed verdict: In a case in which the party with the burden of proof has failed to present a prima facie case for jury consideration, a trial judge may order the entry of a verdict without allowing the jury to consider it, because, as a matter of law, there can be only one such verdict. Judgment notwithstanding the verdict: ("JNOV" or Judgment non obstante veredicto): A judgment rendered in favor of one party despite the finding of a jury verdict in favor of the other party. Jury trials for defaulted defendants: Some States make provisions for a jury to be impaneled even if the defendants in a case fail to appear and enter a defense. The purpose of a trial is typically to decide issues such as amount of damages. Definitions of civil case types: Torts: Claims arising from personal injury or property damage caused by negligent or intentional acts of another person or business. Specific tort case types include: automobile accident; premises liability (injury caused by the dangerous condition of residential or commercial property); medical malpractice (by doctor, dentist, or medical professional); other professional malpractice (such as by lawyers, engineers, and architects); product liability (injury or damage caused by defective products; injury caused by toxic substances such as asbestos); libel/slander (injury to reputation); intentional tort (vandalism, intentional personal injury); animal attack (the negligent supervision of a dog or other animal resulting in an attack); conversion (unauthorized use or control of another person's personal property); false arrest/imprisonment (an arrest or imprisonment without the proper legal authority); and other negligent acts (negligence against another party for an act not represented by the other case categories). Contracts: Cases that include all allegations of breach of contract. Specific case types include seller plaintiff (sellers of goods or services, including lenders seeking payment of money owed by a buyer or borrowers); buyer plaintiff (purchaser of goods or services seeking return of their money, recision of the contract, or delivery of the specified goods); mortgage contract/foreclosure (foreclosures on commercial, or residential real property); fraud (financial damages incurred due to intentional or negligent misrepresentation regarding a product or company; fraud is also considered a type of tort claim, but because it arises out of commercial transactions, it was included under contracts); employment discrimination (claim based on an implied contractual relationship against an employer for unfair treatment or denial of normal privileges due to race, gender, religion, age, handicap and/or nationality); other employment dispute (claim against and employer for wrongful termination not based on discrimination or by the employer or the employee claiming contractual failure of the other party); rental/lease agreement; tortious interference with a commercial or contractual relationship (this claim consists of four elements: existence of a valid contract, defendant's knowledge of that contract, defendant's intentional procuring of breach of that contract and damages); partnership dispute (dispute over a business owned by two or more persons that is not organized as a corporation); subrogation (the exchange of a third party who has paid a debt in the place of a creditor, so that the third party may exercise against the debtor all the rights which the creditor might have done); and other contract claims (any contractual dispute other than the case categories used in this study such as stockholder claims). Real property: Any claim concerning ownership or division of real property (excluding mortgage foreclosures which are included under contracts). Specific categories used include eminent domain (condemnation of real property to obtain for public use) and other real property (any other claim regarding title to or use of real property). Source: Definitions were developed by the National Center for State Courts through consultation with NCSC staff attorneys, law professors, and from Black's Law Dictionary. Sample The sample design for the 2001 civil trial study was similar to the ones used for the 1996 and 1992 BJS civil trial studies. The sample is a 2-stage stratified sample with 46 of the 75 most populous counties selected at the first stage. The 75 counties were divided into 5 strata based on 1990 civil disposition data obtained through telephone interviews with court staff in the general jurisdiction trial courts. Stratum 1 consisted of the 14 counties with the largest number of civil case dispositions. Every county in stratum 1 was selected with certainty. Stratum 2 consisted of 13 counties with 11 chosen for the sample. From strata 3, 10 of the 18 counties were selected. Nine of the 26 counties in stratum 4 were included in the sample. Stratum 5 was added to the 2001 sample to replace Norfolk County, Massachusetts, a stratum 4 site that participated in the 1992 and 1996 studies but that fell out of the 75 most populous counties in the 2000 Census. Mecklenberg County, North Carolina, and El Paso County, Texas, were randomly selected from the 4 counties whose population increased sufficiently that they joined the ranks of the 75 most populous counties. The second stage of the sample design involved generating lists of cases that would be coded. Prior to drawing the 2001 case sample, each participating jurisdiction was asked to identify a list of cases that had been disposed of by jury trial or bench trial between January 1, 2001, and December 31, 2001. Trial cases were to meet the definitional criteria for jury and bench trials as defined in Black's Law Dictionary: (1) A jury trial was defined as "a trial held before and decided by a jury of laypersons and presided over by a judge culminating in a verdict for the plaintiff(s) or defendant(s)," and (2) A bench trial was defined as "a trial held in the absence of a jury and decided by a judge culminating in a judgment for the plaintiff(s) or defendant(s)." The study plan was to obtain every jury and bench trial disposed from the court of general jurisdiction in each of the counties selected for the study. In courts where the number of trials became too great, a sample of civil trials based on "take rates" generated by WESTAT was selected. Regardless of whether all or a sample of civil trials was collected, every medical malpractice or product liability case was included to oversample these case types. At the second stage of sampling, all tort, contract, and real property cases disposed of by bench or jury verdict between January 1, 2001, and December 31, 2001, were selected in 43 jurisdictions. In two of the remaining three jurisdictions (Cook and Philadelphia), a sample of civil trials was selected and then "weighted" to obtain an appropriate number of civil trials. In Bergen County some civil case files were unavailable for coding purposes. Weights were applied in Bergen County in order to account for these missing cases. Data on 6,215 civil jury trial cases, 1,958 civil bench cases, and 138 other civil trial cases that met the study criteria were collected in the 46 courts. The final sample consisted of 8,311 tort, contract, and real property cases disposed of by jury or bench verdict. Sampling error Since the data in this report came from a sample, a sampling error (standard error) is associated with each reported number. In general, if the difference between 2 numbers is greater than twice the standard error for that difference, there is confidence that for 95 out of 100 possible samples a real difference exists and that the apparent difference is not simply the result of using a sample rather than the entire population. All differences discussed in the text of this report were statistically significant at or above the 95-percent confidence level. Standard error estimates were generated by using a bootstrap method (jackknife) available for WESVAR PC. Data coding For each sampled case, a standard coding form was manually completed by on-site court staff to record information about the litigants, case type, processing time, and award amounts. ----------------------------------------- The Bureau of Justice Statistics is the statistical agency of the U.S. Department of Justice. Lawrence A. Greenfeld is director. This BJS Bulletin presents the first release of findings in a series of reports from the Civil Justice Survey of State Courts, 2001. Thomas H. Cohen wrote this Bulletin under supervision of Steven K. Smith. Mark Motivans provided statistical review. Data collection was supervised by the National Center for State Courts (NCSC); Paula Hannaford-Agor was the project director. Paula Hannaford-Agor and Neil LaFountain of the NCSC provided comments. Neil LaFountain also provided data assistance. Devon Adams, Tina Dorsey, and Tom Hester edited the report. Jayne Robinson prepared the report for final printing. April 2004, NCJ 202803 E ------------------------------------------- End of file 04/16/04 ih