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University of Illinois PUBLIC LAW AND LEGAL THEORY RESEARCH PAPER NO. 08-24 ~and~ University of Illinois LAW & ECONOMICS RESEARCH PAPER NO. LE09-037 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, Vol. 3, p. 333, 2006 Apologies and Settlement Levers Jennifer K. Robbennolt University of Illinois College of Law This paper can be downloaded free of charge from the Social Science Research Network at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1201482 Journal of Empirical Legal Studies Volume 3, Issue 2, 333–373, July 2006 Apologies and Settlement Levers Jennifer K. Robbennolt* This study uses experimental methods to explore the role of apologies in legalsettlementnegotiation.Specifically,thestudyexaminestheinfluences of apologies on disputants’ perceptions, and the effects of apologies on a number of judgments that influence negotiation outcomes—settlement levers such as reservation, aspirations, and judgments of fair settlement amounts. Five-hundred-fifty-six participants were asked to take the role of potentialplaintiffs,toprovidetheirreactionstoanexperimentalscenario, and to indicate the values they would set for each settlement lever. The natureofthecommunicationwiththeoffenderandthedescriptionofthe evidentiaryrulegoverningtheadmissibilityoftheoffender’sstatementwere manipulated. The data suggest that apologies can promote settlement by alteringtheinjuredparties’perceptionsofthesituationandtheoffenderso astomakethemmoreamenabletosettlementdiscussionsandbyaltering thevaluesoftheinjuredparties’settlementleversinwaysthatarelikelyto increase the chances of settlement. The results suggest further, however, that the nature of the apology itself, as well as the factual circumstances surrounding the incident, may play important roles in how apologies are understood. *ProfessorofLawandPsychology,UniversityofIllinoisCollegeofLaw,504EastPennsylvania Ave.,Champaign,IL61820;e-mail:[email protected]. IamindebtedtoBrianBornstein,ChrisGuthrie,PhilPeters,GrantRobbennolt,andChris Wellsfortheirinsightfulcommentsonearlierversionsofthisarticle.Helpfulcommentswere alsoprovidedbyparticipantsattheCornellJuniorEmpiricalLegalScholarsConference,the annualmeetingsoftheAmericanPsychology-LawSociety,andtheLawandSocietyAssociation, andworkshopsattheUniversityofIllinoisandWashingtonUniversity.Iappreciatethehelpful researchassistanceofJayHastings.ThismaterialisbasedonworksupportedbytheNational ScienceFoundationunderGrantNo.0241355andbytheUniversityofMissouriLawSchool Foundation. ©2006,CopyrighttheAuthors Journalcompilation©2006,CornellLawSchoolandBlackwellPublishing,Inc. 333 EElleeccttrroonniicc ccooppyy aavvaaiillaabbllee aatt:: hhttttpp::////ssssrrnn..ccoomm//aabbssttrraacctt==11220011448822 334 Robbennolt The possibility that apologies have a role to play in the settlement of civil disputes has recently received increasing scholarly1 and popular2 attention. Despiteconcernthatapologieswillbeviewedasadmissionsofresponsibility and, consequently, will result in increased liability, interest in apologies’ ability to facilitate the resolution of disputes has gained currency. Plaintiffs claim to want apologies and that receipt of or failure to receive an apology impacts their litigation decisions.3 Defendants may wish to offer apologies in some cases, but fear that an apology will be used against them in court.4 Proponentsofapologieshopethat,atleastinsomecases,aparty’sofferofan 1See, e.g., Jonathan R. Cohen, Advising Clients to Apologize, 72 S. Cal. L. Rev. 1009 (1999) [hereinafterCohen,AdvisingClientstoApologize];JonathanR.Cohen,LegislatingApology: TheProsandCons,70U.Cin.L.Rev.819(2002)[hereinafterCohen,LegislatingApology]; DouglasN.Frenkel&CarolB.Liebman,WordsthatHeal,140(6)AnnalsInternalMed.483 (2004);DeborahLevi,TheRoleofApologyinMediation,72N.Y.U.L.Rev.1165(1997);Erin Ann O’Hara, Apology and Thick Trust: What Spouse Abusers and Negligent Doctors Might HaveinCommon,79Chi.-KentL.Rev.1055(2004);ErinAnnO’Hara&DouglasYarn,On ApologyandConsilience,77Wash.L.Rev.1121(2002);AvivaOrenstein,ApologyExcepted: IncorporatingaFeministAnalysisintoEvidencePolicyWhereYouWouldLeastExpectIt,28Sw. U.L.Rev.221(1999);JenniferK.Robbennolt,ApologiesandLegalSettlement:AnEmpirical Examination, 102 Mich. L. Rev. 460 (2003) [hereinafter Robbennolt, Apologies and Legal Settlement]; Jennifer K. Robbennolt, What We Know and Don’t Know about the Role of ApologiesinResolvingHealthCareDisputes,__Ga.St.U.L.Rev.__(2005);DanielShuman, TheRoleofApologyinTortLaw,83Judicature180(2000);LeeTaft,ApologySubverted:The CommodificationofApology,109YaleL.J.1135,1157(2000). 2See,e.g.,MikeFrance,TheMeaCulpaDefense,BusinessWeek,Aug,26,2002,76;StevenKeeva, DoesLawMeanNeverHavingtoSayYou’reSorry?ABAJ.,Dec.1999,64–68,95;StevenKeeva, LawandSympathy:ApologyReformsCostLittle,ButContributeMuchtoClients’Healing,ABA J., Aug. 2004, 74; Bruce W. Neckers, The Art of the Apology, 81-JUN Mich. B.J. 10 (2002); LindseyTanner,DoctorsEyeApologiesforMedicalMistakes,AssociatedPress,Nov.8,2004; TessVigeland,Analysis:WhetherCompaniesShouldPubliclyApologizeforWrongdoing(Nat’l Pub.Radiobroadcast,Apr.3–4,2002);RachelZimmerman,MedicalContrition:Doctors’New TooltoFightLawsuits:Saying“I’mSorry,”WallSt.J.,May18,2004,A1. 3SeeDesRosiersetal.,LegalCompensationforSexualViolence:TherapeuticConsequences andConsequencesfortheJudicialSystem,4Psychol.Pub.Pol’y&L.433,442(1998);Thomas H. Gallagher et al., Patients’ and Physicians’ Attitudes Regarding the Disclosure of Medical Errors,289JAMA1001(2003);GeraldB.Hicksonetal.,FactorsthatPromptedFamiliestoFile MedicalMalpracticeClaimsFollowingPrenatalInjuries,267JAMA1359,1361(1992);Charles Vincent et al., Why Do People Sue Doctors? A Study of Patients and Relatives Taking Legal Action,343Lancet1609,1612(1994);AmyB.Witmanetal.,HowDoPatientsWantPhysicians to Handle Mistakes? A Survey of Internal Medicine Patients in an Academic Setting, 156 ArchivesofInternalMed.2565(1996). 4See,e.g.,Gallagher,supranote3. EElleeccttrroonniicc ccooppyy aavvaaiillaabbllee aatt:: hhttttpp::////ssssrrnn..ccoomm//aabbssttrraacctt==11220011448822 ApologiesandSettlementLevers 335 apologymayeliminatetheneedforalawsuitormayatleastfacilitatesettle- ment of the dispute.5 Withaneyetowardencouragingdefendants(orpotentialdefendants) toofferapologiesmorefrequently,legislaturesinseveralstateshaveenacted statutesintendedtoencourageandprotectsomeapologiesbymakingthem inadmissible in court.6 At the same time, some other proponents of apolo- gieshavesuggestedthattheremightbebeneficialeffectsofofferingexpres- sions of sympathy for the harm suffered, while stopping short of explicitly accepting responsibility for having caused the harm. These incomplete, or partial,apologiesaresuggestedasapossiblewaytominimizethelegalrisks ofapologizingwhileobtainingatleastsomeofthebenefit.7Critics,however, contend that these protected and partial apologies are insufficient and unlikely to satisfactorily resolve disputes.8 Untilrecently,thisdebatehasoccurredabsentanunderstandingofthe effectsapologiesmighthaveondisputeresolutionorofthemechanismsby whichsucheffectsmightoccur.Thestudyreportedinthisarticlebuildson recent empirical examination of apologies in civil litigation—exploring the ways different types of apologies influence disputants’ perceptions, attribu- tions,andnegotiation-relatedjudgments.Inparticular,thisarticleexamines the effects of apologies on disputants’ perceptions of the situation and the offender,andtheeffectsofapologiesonanumberofjudgmentsthatinflu- ence negotiation outcomes—settlement levers such as reservation, aspira- tions,andjudgmentsoffairsettlementamounts.Thisresearchsuggeststhat apologies can alter perceptions, attributions, and judgments in ways that improve the likelihood of settlement—specifically that apologies result in more positive perceptions and attributions and influence settlement levers in ways that make settlement more likely. The results suggest further, however, that the nature of the apology itself, as well as the factual circum- stances surrounding the incident (in this instance, the independent 5See, e.g., Cohen, Advising Clients to Apologize, supra note 1; Stephen B. Goldberg et al., DisputeResolution138(2ded.,1992);Levi,supranote1;Orenstein,supranote1;Shuman, supranote1. 6Seenotes12–18andaccompanyingtext. 7Seenote19andaccompanyingtext. 8Seenote20andaccompanyingtext. Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1201482 336 Robbennolt evidenceoftheoffender’sfault),mayplayimportantrolesinhowapologies are understood. Section I introduces the issues surrounding the role of apologies in civillitigation.SectionIIdescribesexistingresearchexaminingtheeffectsof apologiesonlegalsettlementdecisionmaking.SectionIIIdescribestherole of negotiator reservation prices, aspirations, and fair settlement judgments in negotiation. These settlement levers may be mechanisms through which apologies influence settlement decision making. Section IV describes the empiricalstudyandpresentstheresults.SectionVexaminestheimplications of these results in the debate over the role of apologies in civil litigation. I. Apologies in Litigation Proponentsofapologiesincivillitigationcontendthatapologizingbenefits both the offeror and the recipient of the apology.9 One of these benefits, they claim, is that apologies may avert lawsuits or, at least, promote settle- ment. Consequently, defendants in civil cases should consider apologizing because an apology may, by altering the disputants’ perceptions, emotions, andrelationship,makeitpossibleforthemtoavoidlitigationortoengagein more constructive, timely, and satisfactory settlement discussions.10 Despite growing interest in the promise of apologies for dispute reso- lution, concerns about the legal risks of apologizing loom large for defen- dants.11Defendantsavoidapologies,sometimesatallcosts,becausetheyfear thatanapologywillbeusedagainstthemasevidenceoftheirresponsibility ifthedisputeproceedstocourt.Inrecognitionofthisbarriertoapologiesin thecontextofcivillitigation,scholarsandregulatorshaveadvocatedseveral different approaches. First, in order to encourage more defendants to apologize, several states have enacted statutes that explicitly provide some 9See,e.g.,Cohen,AdvisingClientstoApologize,supranote1. 10Cohen,AdvisingClientstoApologize,supranote1;Levi,supranote1;Orenstein,supranote 1;Shuman,supranote1. 11See,e.g.,Gallagher,supranote3;RaeM.Lambetal.,HospitalDisclosurePractices:Resultsof aNationalStudy,22HealthAff.73(2003). ApologiesandSettlementLevers 337 apologies with evidentiary protection.12 The reach of this statutory protec- tionvaries.Somestatutesapplytoapologiesofferedincivillitigationgener- ally;13othersapplyonlyincasesofmedicalerror.14Inaddition,manyofthe statutesprotectstatementsexpressingsympathyfromadmissibility(i.e.,“I’m sorry that you were hurt.”), while preserving the admissibility of any state- ment that acknowledges fault (i.e., “It was my fault.”).15 Other statutes have gone further, also providing protection to statements that express “fault,” “error,”or“mistake.”16Stillotherstatutesincludeprotectionsfor“apologies” without defining the term.17 Proponents of all these variants express the hope that if apologetic expressions are protected from admissibility, defen- dants will be more likely to offer them.18 12Intheabsenceofsuchprotection(andunlessofferedinthecontextofsettlementnegotiation orinmediation),anapologyislikelytobeadmissibleasaparty’sownstatement,anexception to the hearsay rule. Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2). See discussion of admissibility of apologies in Cohen,AdvisingClientstoApologize,supranote1;Robbennolt,ApologiesandLegalSettle- ment,supranote1. 13See,e.g.,Cal.Evid.Code§1160(a);Fla.Stat.§90.4026(2);Mass.Gen.Lawsch.233§23D; Tenn.R.Evid.§409.1;Tex.Civ.Prac.&Rem.§18.061;Wash.Rev.Code§5.66.010(1). 14See,e.g.,Colo.Rev.Stat.§13-25-135;Ga.CodeAnn.§24-3-37.1;735Ill.Comp.Stat.5/8-1901; OhioRev.CodeAnn.§2317.43;Okla.Stat.Ann.tit.63,§1-1708.1H;Or.Rev.Stat.§677.082; Wyo.Stat.Ann.§1-1-130. 15See,e.g.,Cal.Evid.Code§1160(a);Fla.Stat.§90.4026(2);Tenn.R.Evid.§409.1;Tex.Civ. Prac.&Rem.§18.061;Wash.Rev.Code§5.66.010(1). 16See,e.g.,Colo.Rev.Stat.§13-25-135;Ga.CodeAnn.§24-3-37.1. 17See,e.g.,OhioRev.CodeAnn.§2317.43;Okla.Stat.Ann.tit.63,§1-1708.1H;Or.Rev.Stat. §677.082;Wyo.Stat.Ann.§1-1-130. 18Theextenttowhichthesestatutesresultinmoreapologiesisanempiricalquestionthat,tomy knowledge, has not yet been examined. Proponents and opponents of such legislation have characterizedtheseprotectionsforapologiesandsympatheticexpressionsinavarietyofdiffer- entways—andasdesignedtoserveavarietyofdifferentpurposes.See,e.g.,CaliforniaAssembly Comm. on Judiciary, Historical Notes to Cal. Evid. Code § 1160 (noting that the author introducedthebill“inanattempttoreducelawsuitsandencouragesettlement”);Hawaiibill (describingruleasenablingdefendantsto“reachouttoothersinahumanewaywithoutfearof havingsuchacommunicationusedsubsequentlyasanadmissionofliability”);ArthurKane, GOP Pushes Tort Reform, Denver Post, Apr. 6, 2003, at B4 (characterizing the Colorado apologylegislationaspartofa“flurryofbillstolimitlawsuitsanddamageawards”);PeggyLowe, “Sorry” Bill Advances, Rocky Mountain News, Apr. 2, 2003, at 22A (noting that sponsor called the bill the “I’m sorry legislation,” but that opponents called it “anti-patient rights”) 338 Robbennolt Second, even in the absence of this type of statutory protection, some have suggested that defendants might minimize the risks of apologizing by offering statements that express sympathy for the other party, but that stop shortofadmittingresponsibilityforhavingcausedinjury(i.e.,“I’msorryyou werehurt.”).19Theyarguethateventheseincompleteapologeticexpressions canhelpimproverelationswiththeotherpartyandsmooththewaytoward an acceptable settlement agreement. Others,however,havearguedthatboththeseapproaches,carvingout statutory protection for apologetic expressions or carefully crafting apolo- gies to be “safe” by limiting them to expressions of sympathy, are suspect. Expressing this view, Lee Taft writes that: [t]helawrecognizesthatanapology,whenauthenticallyandfreelymade,isan admission;itisanunequivocalstatementofwrongdoing.Thelawpermitssuch anacknowledgementtoenterthelegalprocessasawaytoallowtheperformer ofapologytoexperiencethefullconsequencesofthewrongfulact.Anapology made in this context, with full knowledge of the legal ramifications, is much morefreightedthananapologymadeinapurelysocialcontext.20 Thus,thecontentandcontextoftheapologyarethoughttoimpactits meaning and effectiveness. In this view, apologies that do not acknowledge responsibilityforthewrongcommittedandthatdonotexposetheofferorto the appropriate legal consequences are diminished in their meaning and effect. Muchofthisdebate,includinglegislativechangesandclientadvising, hasbeenoccurringintheabsenceofempiricalexaminationoftheeffectsof apologiesonsettlementdiscussions.Althoughthereisanestablishedbodyof researchinpsychologyontheeffectsofapologiesgenerally,onlyrecentlyhas there been examination of the role of apologies in the legal settlement context. SorryWorks!,availableat(cid:2)http://www.sorryworks.net/WhatIs.phtml(cid:3)(arguingthatapologies increase settlements, improve justice for victims, reduce settlement and defense costs, and reduce medical errors); Tennessee Advisory Comm. Comment on Tenn. R. Evid. § 409.1 (statingthatruleis“designedtoencouragethesettlementoflawsuits”). 19Cohen,AdvisingClientstoApologize,supranote1,at1048;Levi,supranote1,at1188.See alsoGallagheretal.,supranote3,at1004(describingphysiciantendencyto“‘choos[e]their wordscarefully’whentalkingwithpatientsabouterrors”). 20Taft,supranote1,at1157. ApologiesandSettlementLevers 339 II. Previous Research on Apologies and Settlement The psychological literature examining the effects of apologies in other contexts demonstrates that apologies have generally favorable effects on their recipients and on third-party observers. A number of experimental studieshavefoundthatapologiesorexpressionsofremorsefavorablyinflu- ence attributions of offender responsibility, estimates of the likelihood that the behavior will recur, perceptions of the wrongdoer, expectations about the effects of the incident on the parties’ relationship, affective reactions, and behaviors such as forgiveness, aggression, and recommendations for punishment.21Apologieshavealsobeenfoundtohavepositivephysiological 21See,e.g.,MarkBennett&DeborahEarwaker,Victim’sResponsetoApologies:TheEffectsof OffenderResponsibilityandOffenseSeverity,134J.Soc.Psychol.457(1994);BruceW.Darby& BarryR.Schlenker,Children’sReactionstoApologies,43J.Personality&Soc.Psychol.742,746, 749(1982);BruceW.Darby&BarryR.Schlenker,Children’sReactionstoTransgressions:Effects oftheActor’sApology,Reputation,andRemorse,28Brit.J.Soc.Psychol.353,358(1989);Gregg J. Gold & Bernard Weiner, Remorse, Confession, Group Identity, and Expectancies about RepeatingaTransgression,22Basic&AppliedSoc.Psychol.291(2000);MartiHopeGonzales etal.,Victimsas“NarrativeCritics:”FactorsInfluencingRejoindersandEvaluativeResponsesto Offenders’ Accounts, 20 Personality & Soc. Psychol. Bull. 691 (1994); Holley S. Hodgins & ElizabethLiebeskind,ApologyVersusDefense:AntecedentsandConsequences,39J.Experi- mentalSoc.Psychol.297(2003);Ken-ichiOhbuchietal.,ApologyasAggressionControl:ItsRole inMediationAppraisalandResponsetoHarm,56J.Personality&Soc.Psychol.219(1989); Ken-ichi Ohbuchi & Kobun Sato, Children’s Reactions to Mitigating Accounts, 134 J. Soc. Psychol.5(1994);JenniferR.Orleans&MichaelB.Gurtman,EffectsofPhysicalAttractiveness andRemorseonEvaluationsofTransgressions,6AcademicPsychol.Bull.49(1984);StevenJ. Scher&JohnM.Darley,HowEffectiveAretheThingsPeopleSaytoApologize?Effectsofthe RealizationoftheApologySpeechAct,26J.PsycholinguisticRes.127,134–35(1997);Bernard Weineretal.,PublicConfessionandForgiveness,50J.Personality281,291(1991). Inthelegalcontext,mockjurorresearchhasfoundthatdefendantsaregenerallyevaluated morepositivelyandsentencedlessseverelywhentheyapologizeorotherwiseexpressremorse. SeeMichaelG.Rumsey,EffectsofDefendantBackgroundandRemorseonSentencingJudg- ment,6J.AppliedSoc.Psychol.64(1976);ChristyTaylor&ChrisL.Kleinke,EffectsofSeverity ofAccident,HistoryofDrunkDriving,Intent,andRemorseonJudgmentsofaDrunkDriver,22 J.AppliedSoc.Psychol.1641(1992);ChrisL.Kleinkeetal.,EvaluationofaRapistasaFunction ofExpressedIntentandRemorse,132J.Soc.Psychol.525(1992);RandolphB.Pipes&Marci Alessi,RemorseandaPreviouslyPunishedOffenseinAssignmentofPunishmentandEstimated Likelihood of a Repeated Offense, 85 Psychol. Rep. 246 (1999). For a review of the role of apologies in criminal cases, see Carrie J. Petrucci, Apology in the Criminal Justice Setting: EvidenceforIncludingApologyasanAdditionalComponentintheLegalSystem,20Behav.Sci. &L.337(2002).Forsomeboundaryconditionsonthesetypesofeffects,seeKeithE.Neidermeier etal.,ExceptionstotheRule:TheEffectsofRemorse,Status,andGenderonDecisionMaking, 340 Robbennolt effects on both offeror and recipient.22 However, despite this body of researchexaminingtheeffectsofapologiesgenerallyandthegrowinginter- estintherolethatapologiescanplayinsettlingcivildisputes,thereareonly a few empirical studies that have begun to carefully examine the effects of apologies on legal settlement decision making. In one of these, Kathleen Mazor and her colleagues conducted an experimentalstudyofpatients’responsestomedicalerrors.23Membersofa health-care plan were asked to respond to one version of a set of written vignettes describing a medical error and the physician’s response. Respon- dentsreadabouteitheranerrorinprescribingamedicationtowhichthere was a documented allergy or an error in monitoring the dosage of an anti-seizure medication. In each case, the resulting injury was either rela- tively minor or life-threatening. The physician either provided little infor- mation and did not take responsibility for the error (the “nondisclosure” condition) or provided more information, took responsibility, and detailed steps that would be taken to prevent recurrence (the “full disclosure” con- dition). Patients who read the full disclosure vignettes were less likely to indicate that they would seek legal advice in response to the incident than were patients who read the nondisclosure version.24 The vast majority of patients (88 percent) endorsed the notion that following a medical error they “would want the doctor to tell me that he or she was sincerely sorry.”25 31J.AppliedSoc.Psychol.604(2001).SeealsoBornstein(findingthatdefendantsinciviltrials whoshowedremorsewereperceivedmorepositivelybymock-jurorsthanthosewhodidnot). 22SeeCharlottevanOyenWitvlietetal.,PleaseForgiveMe:Transgressors’EmotionsandPhysi- ologyDuringImageryofSeekingForgivenessandVictimResponses,21J.Psychol.&Christianity 219(2002);CharlotteWitvlietetal.,Victims’HeartRateandFacialEMGResponsestoReceiving anApologyandRestitution,Psychophysiology588(2002). 23KathleenM.Mazoretal.,HealthPlanMembers’ViewsaboutDisclosureofMedicalErrors,140 AnnalsofInternalMed.409(2004). 24Id.at413.Thiseffectwasqualifiedbyastatisticallysignificantthree-wayinteractionwithinjury severityandtypeoferror.Thoughforeachtypeoferrorandlevelofinjury,fewerofthosein thefulldisclosureconditionthaninthenondisclosureconditionindicatedthattheywouldseek legaladvice,thispatternwasonlystatisticallysignificantfortheconditioninwhichtheerrorwas a missed medication allergy and the outcome was less severe. Id. Respondents in the full disclosureconditionswerealsolesslikelytoindicatethattheywouldchangephysicians,were moresatisfied,reportedmoretrustinthephysician,andreportedfewernegativeemotionsthan didthoseinthenondisclosureconditions.Id.at414. 25Id.at415. ApologiesandSettlementLevers 341 RussellKorobkinandChrisGuthrieconductedanexperimentalinves- tigation of the effects of an apology on litigants’ settlement decisions in a landlord-tenant dispute.26 Participants taking the perspective of the tenant wereaskedtoevaluateanofferofsettlementfromthelandlord.Participants whoweretoldthatthelandlordhadapologizedtothem,saying,“Iknowthis isnotanacceptableexcuse...butIhavebeenunderagreatdealofpressure lately,”weremarginallymorelikelytoacceptthelandlord’sofferthanwere participants who had not received this “apology.”27 Recently,Iconductedaseriesofexperimentalstudiesthatspecifically examinedtheeffectsofdifferenttypesofapologeticexpressionsandeviden- tiary rules on settlement decision making.28 Participants were asked to read a vignette describing a pedestrian-bicycle accident from the perspective of the injured party and to evaluate a settlement offer from the other party. Full, responsibility accepting apologies had a positive impact on settlement decision making—resulting in favorable effects on the injured party’s attri- butions about the situation and the offender and in an increased tendency forrecipientstoacceptthesettlementoffer.29Participantswhoreceivedafull apology from the offender saw the offender as experiencing more regret, beingmoremoral,asmorelikelytoactcarefullyinthefuture,andashaving behavedlessbadly.Participantswhoreceivedafullapologyalsofeltgreater sympathy for the offender, less anger, more willingness to forgive, and believed that the incident would result in less damage to the parties’ rela- tionship.30 In contrast, an expression of sympathy without an admission of faultdidnothavethesameimpactonattributionsandappearedtoincrease participants’ uncertainty about whether to accept the offer.31 In a second study, I explored some boundary conditions on these findings. I found that partial, sympathy expressing, apologies may play a 26RussellKorobkin&ChrisGuthrie,PsychologicalBarrierstoLitigationSettlement:AnExperi- mentalApproach,93Mich.L.Rev.107(1994). 27Id.at148. 28Robbennolt,ApologiesandLegalSettlement,supranote1. 29Id.at487. 30Id.at488. 31Id.at497.

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and, consequently, will result in increased liability, interest in apologies' .. 1641 (1992); Chris L. Kleinke et al., Evaluation of a Rapist as a Function . 40See generally George L. Priest & Benjamin Klein, The Selection of Disputes
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