The mantra of many defendants is
“I don’t have any money,” “you can’t squeeze blood from a stone” or “I’m
judgment proof.” Sometimes they are
right but sometimes they are just not looking hard enough.
Many defendants have fallen on
hard times because of the actions of a third party. Someone refuses to pay the defendant and now
the defendant can’t pay you. “Not my
problem,” you say. The defendant should
sue the third-party so he can pay me my money.
But defendant doesn’t have any money to sue the third-party.
A depressing reality in
litigation? Bad luck stacked on bad
luck? Maybe not. We encourage our clients to view legal
claim as assets. And just like any other
asset, a claim can be bought, sold or traded.
If a defendant cannot pay but has a lawsuit against a third party, the defendant
can offer the claim in lieu of or in addition to a cash payment to the
plaintiff.
Before accepting a claim against
a third-party to satisfy a judgment, there are some big questions to
answer. How strong a claim does
defendant have? Am I going to need
defendant to cooperate in the litigation on an ongoing basis? Does the third party have any money to
pay? Getting the answers to these
questions requires detailed legal analysis and due diligence on the financial
status of the target company.
“Oh that’s cool, I could build an
entire business around buying and selling litigation” you say. Probably not.
Champerty (pronounced CHampərtē) – scrabble players, your welcome – is
the common law doctrine that prohibits a person with no previous interest in
litigation from financing it and sharing in the proceeds. For a transaction to be champertous – scrabble
players, again, your welcome – and, therefore, illegal, the party taking
assignment of the claim must have no previous interest in the claim, must
expend its own money to prosecute the claim and must be entitled to the
proceeds of the claim. Courts have held
a plaintiff in the position described above has an interest in a claim and does
not present a champerty problem.
What’s the take away? Legal claims, whether for breach of contract,
fraud, civil RICO or anything else, are assets that may have value. They are often overlooked and may present opportunities
for you to exchange claims against judgment-proof defendants for claims against
“deep pocket” parties.
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