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  • "Take Care of Maya" Family Battles Former Lawyers Over $42M Litigation Loan

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Privilege Expert Argues TPLF Agreements Are Not Automatically Shielded From Disclosure

A new comment letter to the Advisory Committee on Civil Rules contends that third-party litigation funding (TPLF) agreements do not automatically qualify for protection under the attorney-client privilege or the work-product doctrine — directly challenging one of the funding industry's central objections to a federal rule mandating disclosure.

According to AskAboutTPLF, an initiative of Lawyers for Civil Justice, the letter was authored by Bradley partner and privilege specialist Todd Presnell, who takes no position on whether a disclosure rule should be adopted. Presnell argues that TPLF agreements fail all four requirements needed to trigger attorney-client privilege: they are not communications, they are not between a client and lawyer, they lack confidentiality because funders are not parties to the litigation, and they do not contain legal advice or strategy. On that basis, he writes that he does "not perceive the attorney-client privilege or work-product doctrine as a barrier to adopting a mandatory-disclosure rule."

Two recent rulings are cited as support. In *Entangled Media, LLC v. Dropbox Inc.* (N.D. Cal., April 13, 2026), a court permitted a funded plaintiff to seal specific financial terms after in camera review while ordering production of the remainder of the agreement. In *A Co. Hungary KFT v. Bespalov* (Cal. App. 2d Dist., April 22, 2026), an appellate court affirmed $8,000 in sanctions against a judgment debtor who asserted work-product privilege as a blanket objection, holding that privilege claims over funding records must be made document by document.

The campaign argues these cases show courts already redact, seal, and log privileged materials routinely, and that TPLF agreements require no different treatment.

North Carolina Becomes First State to Ban Third-Party Litigation Funding

North Carolina has become the first state in the nation to enact an outright ban on third-party litigation funding, after Governor Josh Stein signed House Bill 315 into law. The measure makes it unlawful for outside investors to finance civil lawsuits in exchange for a financial interest tied to the outcome of the case, marking a significant departure from the disclosure-and-transparency approach adopted by other states.

As reported by WWAY-TV3, the law defines litigation investment as providing money for the fees, costs, or expenses of pending or potential civil proceedings in return for compensation contingent on the result. The statute authorizes the state attorney general to seek injunctions and civil penalties against violators, though certain activities are carved out from the prohibition.

The bill drew broad legislative support, passing the House unanimously and clearing the Senate by a 45-1 margin. Business groups, including the North Carolina Chamber and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce's Institute for Legal Reform, backed the measure, arguing it strengthens the state's legal and business climate. Critics counter that third-party funding can expand access to the courts for parties who otherwise lack the resources to pursue meritorious claims.

The development represents a notable escalation in the regulatory debate over litigation finance in the United States. While states such as Ohio and others have advanced transparency requirements, North Carolina's outright prohibition sets a new precedent that funders, defense interests, and legislators in other jurisdictions are likely to watch closely.

Coalition Urges Congress to Curb Foreign Third-Party Funding Targeting the Energy Industry

A coalition of 21 organizations led by the American Energy Alliance (AEA) has called on congressional leaders to close a tax provision that allows third-party litigation financiers to treat their profits as capital gains rather than ordinary income. The group argues the loophole enables foreign investors to extract effectively tax-free returns from U.S. court outcomes, with the American energy sector squarely in the crosshairs.

According to the American Energy Alliance, the letter was sent on June 22 to House Speaker Mike Johnson, Senate Majority Leader John Thune, and the tax-writing committees in both chambers. The coalition contends that foreign sovereign wealth funds and geopolitical rivals have deployed substantial capital into U.S. energy-related litigation, creating national security vulnerabilities through undisclosed financing arrangements.

"Foreign nationals and foreign corporations with no U.S. presence pay no U.S. withholding tax on these gains," said AEA President Tom Pyle. The letter frames third-party litigation funding as a high-yield alternative asset class and warns that foreign entities are weaponizing it in disputes over climate claims, intellectual property, mergers, and environmental regulation.

The campaign reflects the growing convergence of litigation finance, tax policy, and national security in Washington. While the letter does not cite a specific bill, its focus on capital gains treatment signals that funders' tax positions — long a secondary concern in the disclosure debate — are emerging as a distinct front in the broader fight over third-party funding.

Irwell Backs Addept With Expanded Legal Expenses Insurance Capacity

Irwell Insurance Company has agreed a five-year capacity partnership with managing general agent Addept Insurance Services, significantly expanding the legal expenses insurance (LEI) capacity available to the UK specialist. The deal builds on an arrangement first struck in April 2025 and is designed to give Addept longer-term planning stability as demand for LEI cover accelerates.

As reported by Insurance Business, the expanded capacity will allow Addept to underwrite a greater volume of business, though financial terms were not disclosed. "Securing strong, quality capacity is a key strategic priority to maintain our pace of growth," said Addept managing director Richard Finan. Irwell chief executive Giles Reading said the partnership is focused on "delivering products that offer fair value to policyholders."

The agreement comes against a backdrop of mounting pressure on the UK's employment tribunal system. Caseloads reached 68,192 at the end of January 2026 — a nearly 50% year-on-year increase — while total outstanding claims now exceed 500,000 and disposals have fallen by roughly 20% over the same period.

Sweeping legislative changes are expected to drive claim volumes higher still. The Employment Rights Act 2025 will extend the claim time limit from three to six months in October 2026, and from January 2027 the qualifying period for unfair dismissal claims will drop from two years to six months, with the compensation cap removed. For LEI providers, the reforms point to sustained demand — and a growing need for the kind of durable underwriting capacity the Irwell-Addept deal is intended to supply.

“Take Care of Maya” Family Battles Former Lawyers Over $42M Litigation Loan

The family at the heart of the Netflix documentary "Take Care of Maya" is now locked in a dispute with its former attorneys over the proceeds of a litigation loan, in a case that puts the mechanics of litigation finance in an unusually public spotlight. Jack Kowalski and his daughter Maya, whose ordeal with a rare chronic illness and a Florida hospital drew national attention, are challenging the fees claimed by the lawyers who once represented them.

As reported by Bloomberg Law, the dispute centers on a $42 million litigation funding loan and nearly $10 million in attorneys' fees now in contention. The family's current counsel alleges that the prior firm, AndersonGlynn LLP of Jacksonville, "committed flagrant, serious, and repeated violations of their professional, ethical, and fiduciary duties" during the representation. The matter is being heard in Florida's Twelfth Judicial Circuit.

The fight illustrates a recurring tension in funded litigation: when sizable awards meet layered financing arrangements and contingency fees, the division of proceeds can become its own battleground. Disputes over how loan repayments, interest, and legal fees are calculated against a recovery are increasingly common as litigation finance scales.

For an industry often criticized for operating out of public view, the high profile of the Kowalski case offers a rare, concrete look at how litigation loans intersect with attorney compensation — and what can go wrong when the relationship between client, counsel, and funder breaks down.

Ohio Senate Passes Landmark Third-Party Litigation Funding Transparency Bill

The Ohio Senate has passed House Bill 105, advancing what supporters describe as one of the most comprehensive third-party litigation funding measures in the country and sending it to Governor Mike DeWine for signature. The legislation targets what its sponsors call an opaque, billion-dollar industry in which anonymous or foreign actors can shape the course of American lawsuits without disclosure.

According to the Ohio House of Representatives, the bill requires parties to disclose the existence of litigation funding agreements to others in a case and bars the sharing of confidential court documents with funders. Sponsored by Reps. Meredith Craig and Jim Thomas, HB 105 would also require both consumer legal funding companies and commercial litigation financiers to register with the Ohio Attorney General before operating in the state, including disclosures about their leadership and affiliations.

The measure goes further than disclosure alone. It prohibits funders from influencing counsel selection, litigation strategy, or settlement decisions, and bars them from paying referral fees to attorneys. In a provision drawing national attention, the bill also restricts any foreign government, foreign corporation, or foreign investor from participating in third-party litigation funding within the state.

Business groups, including small-business advocates, have praised the bill as overdue transparency reform, while critics warn it could chill legitimate access to capital for plaintiffs. With the legislation now before Governor DeWine, Ohio is positioned to become an early bellwether for how aggressively states will regulate litigation finance.

UK Judge Disallows £30,000 Success Fee Over Inadequate Legal Expenses Insurance Checks

A senior English costs judge has struck out a law firm's entire £30,000 success fee after finding that the firm failed to make reasonable inquiries into its client's existing legal expenses insurance before signing him to a conditional fee agreement. The ruling is a pointed reminder of the diligence funders and firms must exercise around pre-existing coverage before committing a client to risk-based financing.

As reported by Legal Futures, the case, Evans v Fletchers, arose from a 2017 motorcycle accident. The claimant, Peter Evans, had legal expenses insurance through his Zurich home policy, yet the firm took out after-the-event insurance and did not seriously investigate the existing cover until 2019. The claim settled in 2021 for £250,000 plus costs, and the firm billed £61,615, including a £30,365 success fee capped at 25% of damages.

Senior Costs Judge Jason Rowley disallowed the success fee in full, calling the firm's "desultory enquiries" fundamentally inadequate. He noted that specialist personal injury solicitors should have known the legal expenses insurer often differs from the home insurer, that inquiries made two years after the accident demanded greater diligence, and that the correspondence appeared designed to discourage a useful response. A competing firm, he observed, had easily identified the actual insurer.

The decision underscores that since success fees became largely unrecoverable after 2013, courts expect rigorous investigation of available "before-the-event" cover — a discipline with direct implications for how litigation is financed in the UK.

How to Avoid Getting Scammed in Litigation Finance: Lessons From a $10,000 Loss

By John Freund |

A cautionary first-person account from a retail investor is circulating as a warning about the risks lurking in consumer-facing litigation finance products — not in the underlying legal strategy, but in the structures wrapped around it. The piece arrives as more individual investors are drawn to litigation finance by promises of uncorrelated returns and pristine track records.

As reported by Alternative Assets, author Stefan von Imhof describes losing $10,000 in Fenchurch Legal's SPV 4, a vehicle marketed as financially sound with a "zero" default rate across hundreds of loans. The parent company entered administration in April 2026, putting more than 580 investors at risk of losing most or all of their capital. The core problem, he argues, was not the litigation lending itself but a special-purpose-vehicle structure that lacked genuine bankruptcy remoteness, leaving investors exposed to outside creditors.

His takeaways are blunt. A "0% default rate" is meaningless when platforms define default themselves. True ringfencing requires multiple legal protections, not marketing language, and most retail vehicles he examined were missing at least one. Named security trustees, insurers, and fund managers can disavow involvement when contacted directly. Audit opinions, he stresses, are the most revealing document, citing a reported £782 million in work-in-progress against only £87 million in deployed capital.

The overarching lesson for prospective investors is simple: independently verify every named entity rather than trusting the offering documents — a discipline that separates legitimate litigation finance from its imitations.

UK’s Global Rivals Capitalize as PACCAR Funding Reform Stalls

By John Freund |

The United Kingdom's long-promised overhaul of litigation funding regulation has stalled again, and rival jurisdictions are moving to capture the investment that uncertainty is pushing offshore. Nearly three years after the Supreme Court's 2023 decision in *PACCAR* rendered most litigation funding agreements unenforceable by treating them as damages-based agreements, the government has yet to deliver the corrective legislation it pledged.

As reported by The Times, the continued delay is undermining the competitiveness of England and Wales as a global hub for commercial litigation and arbitration. The Ministry of Justice announced in December 2025 that it intended to clarify that litigation funding agreements are not damages-based agreements, with legislation to follow "when parliamentary time allows." But the 2026 King's Speech omitted any litigation funding bill from the legislative programme, leaving funders and claimants without the statutory certainty they had been promised.

Industry participants have voiced deep disappointment, warning that the absence of reform creates an opening for offshore centers that have already implemented clearer rules on funder involvement. While those jurisdictions compete for capital, the UK continues to develop its framework largely through case law, with little appetite for comprehensive statutory change.

The practical effect, observers note, is that funders weighing where to deploy capital may increasingly look beyond London. For a market that has long marketed itself as the world's premier venue for high-value disputes, the prolonged *PACCAR* limbo carries real economic stakes.

New York Ruling Opens Litigation Funding to Discovery in Fraud-Tainted Injury Suits

By John Freund |

A New York appellate ruling, paired with the state's newly enacted consumer litigation funding law, is giving defendants fresh tools to scrutinize the financing behind personal-injury claims they suspect are fraudulent. Together, the developments mark a notable shift toward transparency in a market that has historically operated outside the view of courts and opposing parties.

As reported by Law360, the Appellate Division, First Department, held in *Lituma v. Liberty Coca-Cola Beverages LLC* that defendants may obtain discovery into a plaintiff's third-party litigation funding where they present evidence suggesting the underlying claims arose from systemic fraud. The November 2025 decision was the first time the court affirmed an order compelling a personal-injury plaintiff to produce funding-related discovery, vacating the note of issue to allow further inquiry.

The ruling lands alongside New York's Consumer Litigation Funding Act, signed by Governor Kathy Hochul on December 19, 2025, and effective 180 days later. The law caps a funder's recovery at 25% of a case's gross proceeds, requires plain disclosure of all charges and cumulative repayment amounts, and gives consumers a 10-business-day right to cancel without penalty. Attorneys are barred from accepting referral fees or holding financial interests in funding companies.

Notably, the statute stops short of mandating disclosure of funding arrangements during active litigation. For now, defendants seeking to expose questionable financing must rely on rulings like *Lituma* to pry those agreements into the open.

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