Litigation Finance Investors Expanding Their Reach
Investor funded litigation is not new, but its use is expanding, according to experts in the field.
Panelists at the 2017 Risk Management Summit in Las Vegas, Nev., addressed the growing trend of investor funded litigation, particularly in the area of commercial auto claims, during the session, “Investor Funded Litigation Update.”
Insurance Journal was a sponsor of the summit hosted by eServices, a division of Energi that provides a turnkey risk management, claims and marketing technology for companies.
Though investor funded litigation has been around since ancient Greece, there’s been a noticeable uptick in its use in cases within the past 20 to 30 years, according to John Ferrante, vice president of Litigation Management for eClaims Management. Initially, it was used as a way for smaller businesses to remain a party in lawsuits with larger companies that had access to more funds.
Funding can be in the form of loans or assignments.
In some states, including Florida, it is illegal for an attorney to front money to a client, though in California, Massachusetts and Louisiana counsel on a case can provide a loan or cash advance for a client’s living expenses. In states where it is considered legal and ethical, the attorney is considered an investor in the case.
In California and some other states, doctors can be investors, as well, and they do so by agreeing to take less money than billed, panelists said.
Nick Gristina, a partner in the New Orleans office of Porteous, Hainkel & Johnson LLP, said that one company, Oasis Financial, is a well-known provider of cash advances in Louisiana. The plaintiff completes an application and pays a fee for the firm to review the case. A representative of Oasis will call and speak with his or her counsel and if they deem the case viable they will provide a cash advance.
Another firm, Diagnostic Management Affiliates (DMA), also located in Louisiana, acts as an HMO or PPO insurer. It coordinates medical visits and funds the case with the stipulation that plaintiff counsel pays the high interest loan back within two years or upon settlement.
According to Timon Sullivan, a trial attorney with Ogden & Sullivan P.A., in Florida, if a doctor agrees to take a letter of protection from a lawyer in order to bill a certain amount and the attorney agrees to pay that amount, that fact can be used to impeach the doctor’s testimony at trial.
Jonathan Colman, a principal and managing partner at Colman Law Group who practices in both Nevada and California, said it is legal to crowdfund to litigate one’s own case. But he said this brings up ethical questions including: is there a duty to pay the plaintiff first or should the investors be paid before the plaintiff?
Conflict Question
Colman said there is also the question of conflict as investors are not to play a role in the decision-making behind case handling.
Gristina said that in Louisiana, although the investor must be passive and can’t be involved in settlement discussions, there is still tacit control or influence on the claim.
Another concern around these funding schemes is whether counsel is breaking privileged communications by providing case information to investors. If a confidentiality agreement is signed by a client, then he or she is the holder of privilege.
Gristina said he knows lawyers who won’t take cases tied to litigation financing because they are harder to settle. There’s no incentive to settle when there’s an investor backing a plaintiff in a case and because they aren’t present it can make it impossible to settle.
At the same time, some judges believe litigation financing “levels the playing field,” according to Gristina.
Sullivan recommended defense counsel make sure the funding company is a designated a party of interest, so it must attend mediation.
Funding company information isn’t usually disclosed but in northern California, a new rule says that if investor funding is involved, it has to be disclosed in class action lawsuits.