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With third-party litigation funding on the rise, courts are becoming a venue for politics

- Pieter Cleppe

Long gone are the days when politics was con ned to parliament­s. Apart from the growingly politicise­d and polarised media, the courtroom is increasing­ly becoming a political venue, with third-party litigation funding being particular­ly concerning.

Both in Europe and the US, there has been increased scrutiny of third-party litigation funding.

This is a phenomenon where claimants in court cases no longer fund their own cases. Instead, they are bankrolled by investment rms, who basically see it as an attractive, if insecure, investment.

Bloomberg Law recently disclosed how Russian billionair­es close to President Vladimir Putin have been secretly pouring money into US courts through thirdparty litigation funding in a bid to contest the sanctions they have been subject to.

The gist is that by investing millions without even showing their face in court, some malevolent actors have found lawfare a useful tool to laugh in the face of law and justice and syphon their money across the border while doing it.

Chinese claims are now targeting intellectu­al property in the US

In another example, a company based in China has been clandestin­ely funding intellectu­al property lawsuits against Samsung, using a Florida tech company as a front, to claim that the South Korean giant used its intellectu­al property in its popular audio products.

The essence of the problem here is that the funders “often manipulate civil litigation for their own purposes”, according to a letter to the heads of a US congressio­nal committee in October by major pharma companies Bayer and Johnson & Johnson.

In the letter, they complain that the litigation nance industry “goes to great lengths to operate in complete secrecy,” demanding more transparen­cy.

The fear here ... is that litigation nancing could allow Washington's adversarie­s to obtain con dential informatio­n about sensitive technologi­es.

The fear here, backed by the US Chamber of Commerce, is that litigation nancing could allow Washington's adversarie­s to obtain con dential informatio­n about sensitive technologi­es.

In any case, US House Speaker Mike Johnson and Senator John Kennedy, have already taken legal action, having submitted a legislativ­e proposal that would regulate foreign entities’ ability to fund litigation.

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Business groups like the US

Chamber of Commerce support this, as they believe the shortage of available informatio­n about who is nancing cases opens the door for foreign adversarie­s to undermine US national security.

An EU directive is in the works

Also in Europe, legal action is on the way. Last summer, the European Parliament recommende­d to the European Commission to propose a Directive on the regulation of third-party funding in the EU, aptly named “Responsibl­e funding of litigation”, with the goal of regulating third-party funders' nancing proceeding­s in the EU.

If adopted, it would create a minimum standard for third-party funders in the EU and establish a supervisor­y authority granting permits to funders and monitoring their activities.

Usually with no leg to stand on, the objective of these claims is to disrupt and clog the system and cause chaos, with pro ts nothing more than a side quest. Yet, sometimes, a case like this can end up hurting an entire country's GDP, too.

It would also hold funders jointly liable with the funded disputing party to pay the cost of the proceeding­s that may be awarded, impose an obligation on funders to adequate nancial resources to ful l their liabilitie­s under the funding arrangemen­t, impose a duciary duty of care the funder owes toward the funded disputing party, establish speci c disclosure and transparen­cy obligation­s to inform competent judicial or administra­tive organs of the existence of a funding arrangemen­t and limit the nancial stake of funders to 40% of the amount of compensati­on awarded, save for exceptiona­l circumstan­ces.

The directive was spurred on by a number of questionab­le claims that have seen a spike in recent years. Usually with no leg to stand on, the objective of these claims is to disrupt and clog the system and cause chaos, with pro ts nothing more than a side quest.

Yet, sometimes, a case like this can end up hurting an entire country's GDP, too.

The Sultanate of Sulu case continues to raise eyebrows

A prominent example in Europe of litigation funding is a case brought by a Spanish private arbitrator, Gonzalo Stampa, who demanded Malaysia to pay a $14.9 billion (€13.7bn) arbitral award to a group of individual­s claiming to be heirs of the last sultan of Sulu, a territory now belonging to Malaysia. Kuala Lumpur rejected the claim, arguing the case represente­d a challenge to its sovereignt­y.

The legal claims of the sultan’s heirs had been nanced by a global litigation and arbitratio­n - nance rm, the London-based Therium.

Even if there was no link to Spain, the claimants still brought the case there to the judicial authoritie­s eager to nd any judicial forum to get their way. As a result, Stampa, who specialize­s in internatio­nal mediation, was appointed by the Civil and Penal Chamber of Spain’s Supreme Court (TSJM) as the arbitrator of the case.

Imposing to disclose who’s funding a court case may deter outside investors and mean “less access to legal nance”, but that hasn’t stopped legal action being initiated both in Europe and the US related to the practice of thirdparty litigation funding.

Following legal challenges by the Malaysian government on the grounds that the required procedure had not been followed, Spain’s Supreme Court ruled in June 2021 to remove Stampa from the case, thereby granting the Malaysian government’s request for dismissal.

While Stampa was ordered to end the arbitratio­n several times, the arbitrator ignored those orders and even changed the arbitratio­n venue from Madrid to Paris on disputable legal grounds.

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There, he issued his nal ruling, granting the massive award, making it the second highest ever rendered, and amounting to 1% of Malaysia’s GDP. It’s peculiar that such important cases tend to involve multiple arbitrator­s, rather than just one, with the entire proceeding­s including payment to Stampa apparently funded by Therium.

Later, an appeal in France overturned the decision, and remarkably, Stampa was found guilty of contempt of court for failing to comply with an earlier court ruling ordering him to drop the complex legal battle.

It's time to stop and think what to do next

Imposing to disclose who’s funding a court case may deter outside investors and mean “less access to legal nance”, but that hasn’t stopped legal action being initiated both in Europe and the US related to the practice of thirdparty litigation funding.

Looking at the whole range of extra bureaucrac­y the European Parliament has in mind, perhaps it is important to take a pause.

Allowing judges to decide on a case-by-case basis to what extent claimants need to be transparen­t, particular­ly in a contentiou­s case where national security could be at risk, might just be a better way forward.

Pieter Cleppe is the editor-inchief of BrusselsRe­port.eu and a former attorney-at-law.

At Euronews, we believe all views matter. Contact us at view@euronews.com to send pitches or submission­s and be part of the conversati­on.

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A man holds a gavel, illustrati­on

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