Expert Q&A on Bankruptcy Litigation Financing
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This Q&A with Burford Managing Director Emily Slater first appeared on Practical Law and is available here.
Legal claims held by bankruptcy estates often represent an unsecured creditor's best source of recovery. However, funding the litigation of those claims has been a long-standing issue. Bankruptcy stakeholders have generally relied on financing options, such as providing releases, obtaining contingency fee arrangements, fee deferrals, or further cash contributions from out of the money creditors. But these solutions have their limitations, often resulting in bankruptcy stakeholders settling claims for less than they are worth or forgoing them altogether.
Legal finance allows estates to pursue valuable claims that otherwise may have to be abandoned or settled and increases recoveries for creditors. Practical Law asked Emily O. Slater of Burford Capital LLC to discuss her views on bankruptcy litigation finance. Ms. Slater is a Managing Director of Buford's underwriting and investment arm in New York. Before joining Burford, Ms. Slater was a litigator at Debevoise & Plimpton LLP, where she specialized in complex securities and other bet-the-company litigation and regulatory investigations involving billions in damages. Ms. Slater regularly represented financial institutions and public companies before the SEC and DOJ.
Litigation finance, also called legal finance and third-party funding, refers to a transaction in which litigation risk is valued and used to secure financing from a capital provider that is not a litigation party in exchange for a share of the future proceeds generated by the litigation risk. Funds are often provided on a non-recourse basis. If the litigation does not meet the agreed definition of success, the capital provider does not receive back its capital or a return on its investment. Non-recourse litigation finance is used to manage risk and improve creditor recoveries in bankruptcies that have significant litigation assets or litigation between creditor groups.
Litigation finance first emerged in Australia as a necessary solution to the challenges of insolvent claimants and their representative. Over the course of the last decade, the use of finance in commercial litigation and arbitration has become common practice in the US and UK. In a bankruptcy scenario, there generally is little available cash for an office holder (like a bankruptcy trustee or liquidator) to pay lawyers to recover assets, particularly to recover damages for harm that may have been perpetrated against a company during its descent into bankruptcy. There are often claims against:
In today's sophisticated corporate finance environment, where small and medium sized debtors can have a complex capital structure with a mix of secured and subordinated creditors, the successful resolution of claims may be the only avenue of recovery for out of the money creditors. However, trustees and lawyers require resources to pursue these claims and, in many jurisdictions, lawyers are prohibited from taking matters on a contingency fee agreement. Even in cases where lawyers may be willing and able to finance the cost of legal fees, there are still cash costs for experts and other discovery, as well as administrative costs of the estate.
Legal finance emerged as a natural solution to obtain the necessary capital to pursue these contingent assets for the benefit of creditors.
Historically, bankruptcy stakeholders have relied on financing options, including:
But these solutions have their limitations and can result in bankruptcy stakeholders releasing claims for less than they are worth or forgoing them altogether.
Legal finance allows estates to pursue valuable claims that otherwise may have been abandoned or settled, which increases creditor recoveries. Legal finance comes in a variety of forms:
Bankruptcy practitioners frequently have significant concerns about a litigation finance provider controlling the litigation or settlement. Given that most bankruptcy professionals owe fiduciary duties to stakeholders, decision making authority cannot be ceded to a third-party. It is important for bankruptcy practitioners to know that most legal finance providers are passive investors and eschew control of litigation strategy in their funding agreements. If a practitioner receives a funding proposal that requires settlement approval, that is a red flag and the practitioner should seek other options in the market. Concerns about giving up control should not stop a bankruptcy professional from seeking litigation finance.
Legal finance ensures the efficient administration and recovery of assets for bankruptcy estates or litigation trusts for the benefit of creditors. It enables an estate to pursue claims and achieve recoveries that otherwise may not have been possible. A bankruptcy professional is also able to ensure the best recovery for creditors by negotiating the best fee agreement for each case. For example, to reduce the overall cost and risk of proceeding with litigation in large cases, stakeholders may benefit from litigators working principally on an hourly basis instead of on a full or partial contingency.
Stakeholders also benefit from market testing of both the case and funding terms because it:
Litigation finance arrangements in bankruptcy may require court approval under the Bankruptcy Code and Federal Rules of Bankruptcy Procedure. Parties must evaluate the need for approval based on the facts and circumstances in which a stakeholder is seeking capital. The general guidelines for seeking court approval, include:
In cases where court approval is necessary, a party seeking outside capital should:
For more than a decade, the bankruptcy trustee in Magnesium Corporation of America (MagCorp) and the trustee's counsel pursued claims against MagCorp's former holding company for placing MagCorp into bankruptcy. In 2016, having won a $213 million judgment for the benefit of MagCorp's creditors, the trustee felt confident that MagCorp was likely to successfully defend the judgment on appeal and collect the judgment. However, after litigating the matter for 13 years, the trustee:
To address this risk and ensure that it had adequate funds to litigate, the trustee obtained litigation financing by arranging for the public sale of an interest in the right to receive proceeds from the judgment on appeal. The court approved a $26.2 million sale or a portion of the case proceeds to a litigation funder (later acquired by Burford), which enabled the estate to:
This unprecedented financing arrangement was recognized at the Financial Times Innovative Lawyers Awards for North America for having provided a novel solution to a common problem faced by bankruptcy estates.
There is an increased role for legal finance in the bankruptcy context as rising interest rates, trade tariffs, fluctuating commodity prices, and continuing fundamental changes in the US economy spur new bankruptcy filings and bankruptcy professionals become more familiar with the benefits of legal finance. We also expect creative and entrepreneurial bankruptcy professionals to propose new ways to use legal finance as the next generation of bankruptcies pose more complex, multi-jurisdictional issues with multifaceted risk assessments, negotiations, and sets of stakeholders. Highly sophisticated global legal finance providers, like Burford, are ideal partners in creative problem-solving and commercial deal structuring as more complicated bankruptcy scenarios arise.
Parties should involve legal finance providers in the early stages of plan negotiations. Parties ideally should approach litigation finance providers when it becomes apparent there are significant potential litigation claims. Instead of releasing claims against management, advisors, former owners, and other third-parties at a significant discount to generate cash to pursue litigation, litigation finance can provide capital for litigation and bankruptcy administration to pursue the full value of those claims (and others). This benefits creditors by:
If litigation finance is provided to an estate or a litigation trust's full book of low and high-risk claims, it can reduce the cost of litigation finance compared to financing a single, high-risk case. That benefit can inure to creditors in multiple ways, including lowering the cost of capital and potentially shortening the duration of recovery for creditors.
It is also crucial to emphasize that litigation funders are not interchangeable. A bankruptcy practitioner should engage finance providers with both litigation and bankruptcy expertise to properly structure and document transactions to align with the interests of creditors. Particularly in the bankruptcy context, parties should have confidence that the funder has: