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.









