Ensaios sobre o poder judiciário no Brasil

Detalhes bibliográficos
Ano de defesa: 2012
Autor(a) principal: Castro, Alexandre Samy de
Orientador(a): Braido, Luís Henrique Bertolino
Banca de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Tipo de documento: Tese
Tipo de acesso: Acesso aberto
Idioma: por
Instituição de defesa: Não Informado pela instituição
Programa de Pós-Graduação: Não Informado pela instituição
Departamento: Não Informado pela instituição
País: Não Informado pela instituição
Palavras-chave em Português:
Link de acesso: https://hdl.handle.net/10438/11239
Resumo: This thesis is a collection of empirical essays on the institut ional features of the justice system in Brazil, focused on state district courts of the first degree. It relies on econometric methods and insights from microeconomic theory, which are essential towards understanding and modeling micro - level data (case dat a). The first chapter investigates another important feature of judicial behavior: whether judges exhibit any sort of systematic bias towards poor litigants. Many surveys have shown that in the process of decision - making, judges in Brazil tend to put signi ficant weight on the social consequences of their decisions, in detriment of strict observance of the law. Survey results must be confronted with patterns revealed by actual case data, which justifies the study. The statistical analysis is based on an orig inal database, constructed by the author based on the collection of millions of civil cases for the State Justice of Paraná . Relying on a discrete choice model, the paper estimates the winning chances of poor litigants relative to non - poor litigants, contr olling for all case and jurisdiction characteristics. The main conclusion of the study is that poor litigants are less likely to win a case than non - poor counterparts. These results consider the mechanisms through which poverty conditions may affect case o utcomes: i) when poverty condition is a substantive fact of the case and part of the legal reasoning (which typically occurs in family cases); ii) selection of disputes: poverty condition implies changes in fee - shifting schemes, with a direct impact on the expected value of the dispute; iii) selection and incentives of attorneys: poor litigants may face selection and incentive problems with respect to attorneys, thereby reducing their chances of victory in court. After taking into account such mechanisms, t he study finds no evidence that judges tend to favor poor litigants. In particular, the comparison between poor and non - poor plaintiffs suggest the occurrence of opportunistic behavior, related to the abuse of indigent assistance benefits, which eliminates fee - shifting and, as result, all the downside associated to the law suit. The second chapter is an attempt to test whether there exists a trade - off between procedural fairness and judicial efficiency. Put another way, the fact that a case is resolved faster is potentially compromising to the quality of the sentence. Again, conv entional wisdom has been supportive of that dilemma, on the grounds that expeditiousness is detrimental of the compliance to the right to legal due process. The study presents an empirical framework to test the hypothesis that such a dilemma exists in the Brazilian justice system. The model relies on the basic premise that the quality of the judicial decision is inversely related to its chances of being reversed by the court of appeals ( Tribunal de Justiça ). The database is constructed by the author, this t ime based on information available for thousands of cases in district courts of Minas Gerais . The data comprises various civil cases and their respective appeals. Based on a linear probability model, results suggest that the dilemma isn't corroborated by the data. On the contrary, they are suggestive of a complementary relation between expeditiou sness and quality: cases that are tried faster are associated with 'better' sentences, in the sense that they are less likely to be reversed at the court of appeals. The empirical model includes all case characteristics, and discusses the possibility of se lection bias on the sample. The last chapter is a study on the decision patterns of courts of appeals in criminal cases. The main objective is to measure the impact of judicial backgrounds on appellate decisions, based on jurisprudence from the State Supr eme Court of Santa Catarina , Brazil. The study exploits a particular feature of the judicial selection process in Brazil: the Federal Constitution reserves 10% of the seats in State Supreme Courts to attorneys affiliated to the Brazilian Bar Association (O AB), and 10% to public prosecutors ( Ministerio Publico ). The remainder of the Court seats are to be filled by career Judges from district courts. Those three backgrounds provide a clear - cut distinction on ideological cleavages. Specifically, under the null hypothesis, we expect, in criminal cases, that former attorneys adopt a pro - defendant stance whereas former prosecutors adopt a pro - plaintiff stance. Based on a large sample of criminal appeals in Santa Catarina , this study takes advantage that cases are randomly assigned to judges, to identify the causal effects of legal backgrounds on judicial decision - making. Results suggest that former prosecutors are 20% more likely to decide against defendants than career judges. On the other hand, former attorneys a re 6% more likely to do so. Considering a sample of procedural cases only, we find much stronger effects: former prosecutors are 50% more likely and former attorneys are 50% less likely to decide against defendants. The strong background effects, found on procedural matters, reveal that former attorneys (prosecutors) tend to regard procedural rights much more (less) seriously than former judges.