Bill Text: FL S1276 | 2024 | Regular Session | Comm Sub


Bill Title: Litigation Financing

Spectrum: Bipartisan Bill

Status: (Introduced - Dead) 2024-03-08 - Died on Calendar [S1276 Detail]

Download: Florida-2024-S1276-Comm_Sub.html
       Florida Senate - 2024                             CS for SB 1276
       
       
        
       By the Committee on Fiscal Policy; and Senator Collins
       
       
       
       
       
       594-03087-24                                          20241276c1
    1                        A bill to be entitled                      
    2         An act relating to litigation financing; providing a
    3         short title; designating ss. 69.011-69.081, F.S., as
    4         part I of ch. 69, F.S.; creating part II of ch. 69,
    5         F.S., relating to litigation financing; creating s.
    6         69.101, F.S.; providing definitions; creating s.
    7         69.103, F.S.; requiring a court’s consideration of
    8         potential conflicts of interest which may arise from
    9         the existence of a litigation financing agreement in
   10         specified circumstances; creating s. 69.105, F.S.;
   11         prohibiting specified acts by litigation financiers;
   12         creating s. 69.107, F.S.; requiring certain
   13         disclosures related to litigation financing agreements
   14         and the involvement of foreign persons, foreign
   15         principals, or sovereign wealth funds; providing for
   16         discovery related to litigation financing agreements;
   17         creating s. 69.109, F.S.; requiring the
   18         indemnification of specified fees, costs, and
   19         sanctions by a litigation financier in specified
   20         circumstances; creating s. 69.111, F.S.; providing
   21         that a litigation financing agreement is void in
   22         specified circumstances; providing for enforcement of
   23         specified violations under the Florida Deceptive and
   24         Unfair Trade Practices Act; providing severability;
   25         providing applicability; providing an effective date.
   26          
   27  Be It Enacted by the Legislature of the State of Florida:
   28  
   29         Section 1. This act may be cited as the “Litigation
   30  Investment Safeguards and Transparency Act.”
   31         Section 2. Sections 69.011, 69.021, 69.031, 69.041, 69.051,
   32  69.061, 69.071, and 69.081, Florida Statutes, are designated as
   33  part I of chapter 69, Florida Statutes, and entitled “General
   34  Provisions.”
   35         Section 3. Part II of chapter 69, Florida Statutes,
   36  consisting of ss. 69.101, 69.103, 69.105, 69.107, 69.109, and
   37  69.111, Florida Statutes, is created to read:
   38  
   39                               PART II                             
   40                        LITIGATION FINANCING                       
   41         69.101Definitions.—As used in this part, the term:
   42         (1)“Foreign person” means a person or an entity that is
   43  not:
   44         (a)A citizen of the United States;
   45         (b)An alien lawfully admitted for permanent residence in
   46  the United States;
   47         (c)An unincorporated association, a majority of members of
   48  which are citizens of the United States or aliens lawfully
   49  admitted for permanent residence in the United States; or
   50         (d)A corporation that is incorporated in the United
   51  States.
   52         (2)“Foreign principal” means:
   53         (a)The government or a government official of any country
   54  other than the United States;
   55         (b)A political subdivision or political party of a country
   56  other than the United States; or
   57         (c)A partnership, an association, a corporation, an
   58  organization, or other combination of persons organized under
   59  the laws of or having its principal place of business in a
   60  country other than the United States whose shares or other
   61  ownership interest is owned by the government or a government
   62  official of a country other than the United States or owned by a
   63  political subdivision or political party of a country other than
   64  the United States.
   65         (3)“Health care practitioner” has the same meaning as
   66  provided in s. 456.001.
   67         (4)“Litigation financier” means a person engaged in the
   68  business of providing litigation financing.
   69         (5)“Litigation financing agreement” or “litigation
   70  financing” means a transaction in which a litigation financier
   71  agrees to provide financing to a person who is a party to or
   72  counsel of record for a civil action, administrative proceeding,
   73  claim, or other legal proceeding in exchange for a right to
   74  receive payment, which right is contingent in any respect on the
   75  outcome of such action, claim, or proceeding or on the outcome
   76  of any matter within a portfolio that includes such action,
   77  claim, or proceeding and involves the same counsel or affiliated
   78  counsel. However, the terms do not apply to:
   79         (a)An agreement wherein funds are provided for or to a
   80  party to a civil action, an administrative proceeding, a claim,
   81  or other legal proceeding for such person’s use in paying his or
   82  her costs of living or other personal or familial expenses
   83  during the pendency of such action, claim, or proceeding and
   84  where such funds are not used to finance any litigation or other
   85  legal costs.
   86         (b)An agreement wherein an attorney consents to provide
   87  legal services on a contingency fee basis or to advance his or
   88  her client’s legal costs, and where such services or costs are
   89  provided by the attorney in accordance with the Florida Rules of
   90  Professional Conduct.
   91         (c)An entity with a preexisting contractual obligation to
   92  indemnify or defend a party to a civil action, an administrative
   93  proceeding, a claim, or other legal proceeding.
   94         (d)A health insurer that has paid, or is obligated to pay,
   95  any sums for health care for an injured person under the terms
   96  of a health insurance plan or agreement.
   97         (e)The repayment of a financial institution, as defined in
   98  s. 655.005, for loans made directly to a party to a civil
   99  action, an administrative proceeding, a claim, or other legal
  100  proceeding or such party’s attorney when repayment of the loan
  101  is not contingent upon the outcome of such action, claim, or
  102  proceeding or on the outcome of any matter within a portfolio
  103  that includes such action, claim, or proceeding and involves the
  104  same counsel or affiliated counsel.
  105         (f)Funding provided to a nonprofit organization, provided
  106  the nonprofit organization uses the funding to seek relief other
  107  than compensatory damages in excess of $100,000 or punitive
  108  damages, whether as a party or on behalf of a client or member
  109  of the organization, and irrespective of whether the nonprofit
  110  organization seeks an award of costs or attorney fees in
  111  providing pro bono representation.
  112         (g) Funding provided by a nonprofit organization exempt
  113  from federal income tax under s. 501(c)(3) of the United States
  114  Internal Revenue Code, by grant or otherwise, to support the
  115  pursuit of litigation that does not seek compensatory damages in
  116  excess of $100,000 or punitive damages.
  117         (6)“National security interests” means those interests
  118  relating to the national defense, foreign intelligence and
  119  counterintelligence, international and domestic security, and
  120  foreign relations.
  121         (7)“Proprietary information” means information developed,
  122  created, or discovered by a person, or which became known by or
  123  was conveyed to the person, which has commercial value in the
  124  person’s business. The term includes, but is not limited to,
  125  domain names, trade secrets, copyrights, ideas, techniques,
  126  inventions, regardless of whether patentable, and other
  127  information of any type relating to designs, configurations,
  128  documentation, recorded data, schematics, circuits, mask works,
  129  layouts, source code, object code, master works, master
  130  databases, algorithms, flow charts, formulae, works of
  131  authorship, mechanisms, research, manufacture, improvements,
  132  assembly, installation, intellectual property including patents
  133  and patent applications, and information concerning the person’s
  134  actual or anticipated business, research, or development or
  135  received in confidence by or for the person from any other
  136  source.
  137         (8)“Sovereign wealth fund” means an investment fund owned
  138  or controlled by a foreign principal or an agent thereof.
  139         69.103Litigation financing agreement; representation of
  140  client interests.—A court may take the existence of a litigation
  141  financing agreement into account:
  142         (1)In a class action lawsuit brought in the courts of this
  143  state when determining whether a class representative or class
  144  counsel would adequately and fairly represent the interests of
  145  the class.
  146         (2)In actions involving a common question of law or fact
  147  pending before the court which may be or have been consolidated
  148  when determining whether the lead counsel or any co-lead counsel
  149  would adequately and fairly represent the interests of the
  150  parties to such actions.
  151         69.105Prohibited conduct.—A litigation financier may not:
  152         (1)Direct, or make any decisions with respect to, the
  153  course of any civil action, administrative proceeding, claim, or
  154  other legal proceeding for which the litigation financier has
  155  provided financing, or any settlement or other disposition
  156  thereof. This prohibition includes, but is not limited to,
  157  decisions in appointing or changing counsel, choice or use of
  158  expert witnesses, and litigation strategy. All rights to make
  159  decisions with respect to the course and settlement or other
  160  disposition of the subject civil action, administrative
  161  proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding remain solely with
  162  the parties to such action, claim, or proceeding and their
  163  counsel of record.
  164         (2)Contract for or receive, whether directly or
  165  indirectly, a larger share of the proceeds of a civil action,
  166  administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding
  167  financed by a litigation financing agreement than the share of
  168  the proceeds collectively recovered by the plaintiffs to any
  169  such action, claim, or proceeding after the payment of any
  170  attorney fees and costs owed in connection to such action,
  171  claim, or proceeding.
  172         (3)Pay or offer to pay a commission, referral fee, or
  173  other consideration to any person, including an attorney, a law
  174  firm, or a health care practitioner, for referring a person to
  175  the litigation financier.
  176         (4)Assign or securitize a litigation financing agreement,
  177  in whole or in part.
  178         (5)Be assigned rights to or in a civil action, an
  179  administrative proceeding, a claim, or other legal proceeding
  180  for which the litigation financier provided financing, other
  181  than the right to receive a share of the proceeds of such
  182  action, claim, or proceeding pursuant to the litigation
  183  financing agreement.
  184         69.107Required disclosures; discovery obligations.—
  185         (1)An attorney who enters into a litigation financing
  186  agreement must disclose the existence and deliver a copy of the
  187  agreement to the client he or she represents in the civil
  188  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  189  proceeding financed by the agreement within 30 days after being
  190  retained as counsel by such client, or within 30 days after
  191  entering into the litigation financing agreement, whichever is
  192  earlier.
  193         (2)Except as otherwise stipulated to by the parties to a
  194  civil action, an administrative proceeding, a claim, or other
  195  legal proceeding, or as otherwise ordered by a court of
  196  competent jurisdiction, a party to or counsel of record for a
  197  civil action, an administrative proceeding, a claim, or other
  198  legal proceeding who enters into a litigation financing
  199  agreement with respect to such action, claim, or proceeding
  200  must, without awaiting a discovery request and within 30 days
  201  after commencement of such action, claim, or proceeding,
  202  disclose the existence and deliver to the following parties a
  203  copy of the litigation financing agreement:
  204         (a)All parties to the civil action, administrative
  205  proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding.
  206         (b)The court, agency, or tribunal in which the civil
  207  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  208  proceeding is pending.
  209         (c)Any known person, including an insurer, with a
  210  preexisting contractual obligation to indemnify or defend a
  211  party to the civil action, administrative proceeding, claim, or
  212  other legal proceeding.
  213         (3)In addition to complying with subsections (1) and (2),
  214  the class counsel of a putative class in a class action lawsuit
  215  for which litigation financing is obtained must disclose to the
  216  following persons the existence of any legal, financial, or
  217  other relationship between the class counsel and the litigation
  218  financier that exists separate and apart from the litigation
  219  financing agreement itself within 30 days after commencement of
  220  such action or of the execution of the litigation financing
  221  agreement, whichever is earlier:
  222         (a)All parties to the civil action, administrative
  223  proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding.
  224         (b)The court, agency, or tribunal in which the civil
  225  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  226  proceeding is pending.
  227         (c)Any known person, including an insurer, with a
  228  preexisting contractual obligation to indemnify or defend a
  229  party to the civil action, administrative proceeding, claim, or
  230  other legal proceeding.
  231         (4)The class counsel in a class action or putative class
  232  action lawsuit for which litigation financing is obtained must,
  233  upon the request of a class member, disclose and deliver a copy
  234  of the litigation financing agreement to the class member.
  235         (5)In addition to complying with subsections (1) and (2),
  236  the lead counsel and co-lead counsel, if any, for civil actions
  237  consolidated in the courts of this state must disclose to the
  238  following parties the existence of and deliver a copy of any
  239  litigation financing agreement entered into in connection with
  240  any of the consolidated actions:
  241         (a)All parties to the consolidated civil actions.
  242         (b)The court, agency, or tribunal in which the civil
  243  actions are pending.
  244         (c)Any known person, including an insurer, with a
  245  preexisting contractual obligation to indemnify or defend a
  246  party to the civil actions.
  247         (6)(a)A party to a civil action, an administrative
  248  proceeding, a claim, or other legal proceeding, or such party’s
  249  counsel of record, must, except as otherwise stipulated to by
  250  the parties to such action, claim, or proceeding, or as
  251  otherwise ordered by a court of competent jurisdiction, disclose
  252  as prescribed in paragraph (b) the name, address, and
  253  citizenship or country of incorporation or registration of any
  254  foreign person, foreign principal, or sovereign wealth fund
  255  that, with respect to the action, claim, or proceeding:
  256         1.Obtained or will obtain a right to receive any payment
  257  that is contingent in any respect on the outcome of such civil
  258  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  259  proceeding, or on the outcome of any matter within a portfolio
  260  that includes such civil action, administrative proceeding,
  261  claim, or other legal proceeding and involves the same counsel
  262  or affiliated counsel;
  263         2.Provided or will provide funds, whether directly or
  264  indirectly, which funds have been or will be used to satisfy any
  265  term of a litigation financing agreement into which the party or
  266  the party’s counsel of record has entered to finance such civil
  267  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  268  proceeding; or
  269         3.Has received or is entitled to receive proprietary
  270  information or information affecting national security interests
  271  obtained as a result of the financing of such civil action,
  272  administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding by a
  273  litigation financing agreement entered into by the party or the
  274  party’s counsel of record.
  275         (b)The disclosures required in paragraph (a) must be made
  276  to the following persons:
  277         1.All parties to the civil action, administrative
  278  proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding.
  279         2.The court, agency, or tribunal in which the civil
  280  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  281  proceeding is pending.
  282         3.Any known person, including an insurer, with a
  283  preexisting contractual obligation to indemnify or defend a
  284  party to the civil action, administrative proceeding, claim, or
  285  other legal proceeding.
  286         4.The Department of Financial Services.
  287         5.The Office of the Attorney General.
  288         (7)The fact of the existence of a litigation financing
  289  agreement and the identities of all parties to the agreement are
  290  discoverable in any civil action, administrative proceeding,
  291  claim, or other legal proceeding financed by such an agreement,
  292  unless the court, for good cause shown, determines otherwise.
  293         (8)The disclosure obligations in this section are ongoing
  294  obligations. Thus, when a party to a civil action, an
  295  administrative proceeding, a claim, or other legal proceeding,
  296  or his or her counsel of record:
  297         (a)Enters into or amends a litigation financing agreement
  298  after the commencement of such action, claim, or proceeding, the
  299  party or attorney has 30 days after the date of entering into or
  300  amending the litigation financing agreement to comply with the
  301  disclosure obligations established herein.
  302         (b)Obtains information on the involvement of a foreign
  303  person, foreign principal, or sovereign wealth fund after the
  304  commencement of such action, claim, or proceeding, which
  305  involvement would require disclosure under this section, the
  306  party or attorney has 30 days after the date of obtaining the
  307  information to comply with the disclosure obligations
  308  established herein.
  309         (9)(a) A party, or the party’s counsel, who is required to
  310  disclose a copy of the litigation financing agreement under
  311  subsection (2) or subsection (5) may redact from the agreement
  312  the dollar amounts being financed. Another party may petition
  313  the circuit court in the county where the civil action,
  314  administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding is
  315  pending to:
  316         1. Dispute the extent of such redactions if information
  317  other than the dollar amounts being financed has been improperly
  318  redacted from the agreement; or
  319         2. Show cause that the dollar amounts being financed should
  320  be disclosed.
  321         (b) In the case of such petition, the party or counsel
  322  disclosing the agreement shall submit an unredacted copy of the
  323  agreement to the court for inspection in camera. If the court
  324  finds that information other than the dollar amounts being
  325  financed has been improperly redacted from the agreement or that
  326  cause has been shown to disclose the dollar amounts being
  327  financed, the court must order that such information be
  328  disclosed to all parties to whom the agreement must be
  329  disclosed.
  330         69.109Indemnification by litigation financiers.—In any
  331  litigation financing agreement, the litigation financier must
  332  agree to indemnify the plaintiffs to the civil action,
  333  administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal proceeding
  334  funded in the agreement and such plaintiffs’ counsel of record
  335  against any adverse costs, attorney fees, damages, or sanctions
  336  that may be ordered or awarded against such persons in such
  337  action, claim, or proceeding. However, indemnification is not
  338  required for those adverse costs, attorney fees, damages, or
  339  sanctions that the litigation financier can show resulted from
  340  the intentional misconduct of such plaintiffs or plaintiffs’
  341  counsel of record.
  342         69.111Violations; enforcement.—
  343         (1)A litigation financing agreement executed in violation
  344  of this part is void and unenforceable.
  345         (2)A violation of s. 69.105 or s. 69.109 is a deceptive
  346  and unfair trade practice actionable under part II of chapter
  347  501.
  348         (3)A court, an agency, or a tribunal of competent
  349  jurisdiction may impose fines or any other sanction it deems
  350  appropriate upon any person who violates s. 69.107.
  351         Section 4. If any provision of this act or its application
  352  to any person or circumstance is held invalid, the invalidity
  353  does not affect other provisions or applications of the act
  354  which can be given effect without the invalid provision or
  355  application, and to this end the provisions of this act are
  356  severable.
  357         Section 5. The disclosure requirements in s. 69.107,
  358  Florida Statutes, as created by this act apply to any civil
  359  action, administrative proceeding, claim, or other legal
  360  proceeding pending or commenced on or after July 1, 2024. Any
  361  party to or counsel of record for a civil action, an
  362  administrative proceeding, a claim, or other legal proceeding
  363  pending on July 1, 2024, who would have been required to make a
  364  disclosure under s. 69.107, Florida Statutes, had it been in
  365  effect at the time the relevant action occurred must make the
  366  disclosure under that section within 30 days after July 1, 2024.
  367  Failure to do so is sanctionable as provided in s. 69.111,
  368  Florida Statutes.
  369         Section 6. Except as otherwise provided herein, this act
  370  applies to a litigation financing agreement entered into on or
  371  after July 1, 2024.
  372         Section 7. This act shall take effect July 1, 2024.

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