There are
thousands of law school graduates every year, and yet, according to the New
York Times, millions of Americans who need legal services are not able to
retain an attorney. The current landscape shows a massive demand for lawyers,
but the current supply of employed attorneys can’t meet the needs of those
potential clients.
Monday, June 22, 2015
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Litigation Financing and the Concept of Champerty
Back in January, 2010, the
exchange between the Second Circuit Courts of Appeals and the New York Court of
Appeals regarding the case of Trust v.
Love Funding brought forth a question: Is legal funding a form of champerty?
Citing Ogden v. Des Arts, 4 Duer (N. Y.)
275, TheLawDictionary.org
defines champerty as "the carrying on a suit in the name of another,
but at one’s own expense, with the view of receiving as compensation a certain
share of the avails of the suit."
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