Litigation finance companies have some incentives to screen plaintiffs applying for financing based on the strength of their claims, but a company may still have incentives to provide financing when the probability that a plaintiff would prevail at litigation is low. The result is that litigation finance may facilitate both meritorious and nonmeritorious claims. This Article argues that fee limitation rules forlitigation finance companies can improve their incentives to select only relatively high probability cases, thus enhancing the normative case for states to enact legal reforms allowing litigation finance. A simple version of the rule, which will work if a case is sure to go to trial, allows a successful plaintiff to return no more tha...
This article surveys the effects of legal fee shifting on a variety of decisions arising before and ...
Recent years have seen a debate over litigation reform grow increasingly agitated. Attorneys, judges...
We show that, when plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the A...
Litigation finance companies have some incentives to screen plaintiffs applying for financing based ...
Litigation funding—for-profit, nonrecourse funding of a litigation by a nonparty—is a new and rapidl...
In this paper, we analyze three different ways to finance litigation, namely (i) self-finance by pla...
The advent of third-party litigation finance introduces a new gatekeeper to the legal process. Befor...
Imagine three plaintiffs. The first incurred serious back injuries as a passenger in an automobile c...
This article addresses the issue of the funding of civil litigation within the framework of access t...
A law firm that enters into a contingency arrangement provides the client with more than just its at...
When plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the American rule (...
In this Article we identify a number of serious mechanical flaws in the statutes and judicial doctri...
Litigation funding is new and topical. It has the capacity to significantly alter the litigation s...
Chapter 1 introduces the topic of third party funding of litigation which is a recent phenomenon in ...
In the early 1990s, a period of high-risk lending at high interest rates, a new entrant emerged in c...
This article surveys the effects of legal fee shifting on a variety of decisions arising before and ...
Recent years have seen a debate over litigation reform grow increasingly agitated. Attorneys, judges...
We show that, when plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the A...
Litigation finance companies have some incentives to screen plaintiffs applying for financing based ...
Litigation funding—for-profit, nonrecourse funding of a litigation by a nonparty—is a new and rapidl...
In this paper, we analyze three different ways to finance litigation, namely (i) self-finance by pla...
The advent of third-party litigation finance introduces a new gatekeeper to the legal process. Befor...
Imagine three plaintiffs. The first incurred serious back injuries as a passenger in an automobile c...
This article addresses the issue of the funding of civil litigation within the framework of access t...
A law firm that enters into a contingency arrangement provides the client with more than just its at...
When plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the American rule (...
In this Article we identify a number of serious mechanical flaws in the statutes and judicial doctri...
Litigation funding is new and topical. It has the capacity to significantly alter the litigation s...
Chapter 1 introduces the topic of third party funding of litigation which is a recent phenomenon in ...
In the early 1990s, a period of high-risk lending at high interest rates, a new entrant emerged in c...
This article surveys the effects of legal fee shifting on a variety of decisions arising before and ...
Recent years have seen a debate over litigation reform grow increasingly agitated. Attorneys, judges...
We show that, when plaintiffs cannot predict the outcome of litigation with certainty, neither the A...