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	<title>National Lawsuit Funding</title>
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	<description>Providing the cash you need!</description>
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		<title>Settlement Funding</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/settlement_funding</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/settlement_funding#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 16:00:20 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[future settlement funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[interim funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[pre-settlement funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[settlement award]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[settlement funding]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/?p=934</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[When you are involved in a personal injury case and there is going to be a cash award you may be eligible for settlement funding. Settlement funding is were a company advances you a portion of the cash you are going to receive when your case settles. Most settlement funding companies award you a portion [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When you are involved in a personal injury case and there is going to be a cash award you may be eligible for settlement funding. Settlement funding is were a company advances you a portion of the cash you are going to receive when your case settles.</p>
<p>Most settlement funding companies award you a portion of your projected to be awarded payout.</p>
<p>Either way it is best for clients to stick with waiting it out till their case settles; however, in some cases in order for the case to settle you may need to get a small advance on your case.</p>
<p>Settlement funding is not for everyone, but if it is you can have your attorney request funding for you by applying with National Lawsuit Funding.</p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
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		<item>
		<title>Cash Settlement</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cash_settlement</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cash_settlement#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 15:41:59 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cash settlement]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/?p=929</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash settlement company that can help fund your lawsuit? Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash settlement company that can help ease your financial burdens? Than look no further than National Lawsuit Funding, a leading cash settlement company! We are a cash settlement company that has been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash settlement company that can help fund your lawsuit?</p>
<p>Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash settlement company that can help ease your financial burdens?</p>
<p>Than look no further than National Lawsuit Funding, a leading cash settlement company!</p>
<p>We are a cash settlement company that has been providing plaintiffs with advancements on their pending lawsuits for over 15 years. We are a cash settlement company that works hard to give our clients first rate lawsuit funding.</p>
<p>We are a cash settlement company that can make your financial stresses a problem of the past. National Lawsuit Funding is a top-notch cash settlement company – a cash settlement company that has helped people just like you to a brighter future.</p>
<p>A good cash settlement company welcomes inquiries from potential customers &#8212; we at National Lawsuit Funding invite you to give us a call today! We are a cash settlement company that looks forward to confidentially discussing your situation and a cash settlement company that looks forward to answering any and all questions you may have.</p>
<p>A brief phone call is generally enough to acquaint this cash settlement company with the relevant aspects of your case. At that time, we at the National Lawsuit Funding cash settlement company can determine whether your case meets this cash settlement company’s initial cash settlement company guidelines.</p>
<p>If your case meets these cash settlement company guidelines, our cash settlement company staff immediately begins working to see how we might best fulfill your legal funding needs.</p>
<p>We are a cash settlement company that makes it simple for plaintiffs pursuing qualified lawsuits to get the money they need. Don’t miss out on all that National Lawsuit Funding, an experienced cash settlement company, can offer you.</p>
<p>Call this cash settlement company today and your money will soon be on its way! </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Cash Advance</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cashadvance</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cashadvance#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 15:33:49 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cash advance]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/?p=924</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[We at National Lawsuit Funding specialize in giving cash advances to plaintiffs with a pending lawsuit. We want all plaintiffs who are in need of a cash advance to know that getting money BEFORE your case settles is fast and simple with National Lawsuit Funding, the cash advance specialist. We give each of our clients [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We at National Lawsuit Funding specialize in giving cash advances to plaintiffs with a pending lawsuit.</p>
<p>We want all plaintiffs who are in need of a cash advance to know that getting money BEFORE your case settles is fast and simple with National Lawsuit Funding, the cash advance specialist.</p>
<p>We give each of our clients the cash advance they need – a cash advance that helps them get the settlement they deserve. Our cash advance is contingent upon the expected settlement of each individual case.</p>
<p>There are no monthly fees required of our cash advance customers, and we get repaid for our cash advance only upon settlement. In the unexpected event that a cash advance customer’s case does not settle, the cash advance customer is no longer responsible for repayment of our cash advance.</p>
<p>Potential cash advance customers often ask us how much they can expect their cash advance to be.</p>
<p>We at National Lawsuit Funding tell these potential cash advance customers that our cash advances begin at $500 and that our cash advances can go up to $100,000, although most of our cash advances are under $10,000.</p>
<p>The cash advance customer’s needs and the potential value of the cash advance customer’s case determine the amount of our cash advance.</p>
<p>Each case that we consider for a cash advance is reviewed on its own merits, though we at National Lawsuit Funding generally give cash advances to clients only when liability is clear and coverage is sufficient.</p>
<p>We at National Lawsuit Funding understand that a cash advance is often necessary for a plaintiff to get a fair settlement. Our clients value the service provided to them by National Lawsuit Funding because our cash advances put money into plaintiffs’ pockets when they need it most. With our cash advance, you can get the settlement you deserve.</p>
<p>Our cash advance enables you to stay in a case longer and pursue a larger settlement. In addition, our cash advance helps cash advance customers cover unexpected expenses.</p>
<p>A cash advance from National Lawsuit Funding gives plaintiffs financial relief. A cash advance from National Lawsuit Funding gives plaintiffs options. We are proud to be in the business of helping people through our cash advances. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Cash Advance Company</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cash_advance_company</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cash_advance_company#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 15:23:17 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Funding]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[cash advance company]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/?p=918</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash advance company that can help fund your lawsuit? Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash advance company that can help ease your financial burdens? Than look no further than National Lawsuit Funding, a leading cash advance company! We are a cash advance company that has been [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash advance company that can help fund your lawsuit?</p>
<p>Are you a plaintiff looking for a cash advance company that can help ease your financial burdens?</p>
<p>Than look no further than National Lawsuit Funding, a leading cash advance company! We are a cash advance company that has been providing plaintiffs with advancements on their pending lawsuits for over 15 years.</p>
<p>We are a cash advance company that works hard to give our clients first rate lawsuit funding. We are a cash advance company that can make your financial stresses a problem of the past.</p>
<p>National Lawsuit Funding is a top-notch cash advance company – a cash advance company that has helped people just like you to a brighter future.</p>
<p>A good cash advance company welcomes inquiries from potential customers &#8212; we at National Lawsuit Funding invite you to give us a call today! We are a cash advance company that looks forward to confidentially discussing your situation and a cash advance company that looks forward to answering any and all questions you may have.</p>
<p>A brief phone call is generally enough to acquaint this cash advance company with the relevant aspects of your case. At that time, we at the National Lawsuit Funding cash advance company can determine whether your case meets this cash advance company’s initial cash advance company guidelines.</p>
<p>If your case meets these cash advance company guidelines, our cash advance company staff immediately begins working to see how we might best fulfill your legal funding needs.</p>
<p>We are a cash advance company that makes it simple for plaintiffs pursuing qualified lawsuits to get the money they need. Don’t miss out on all that National Lawsuit Funding, an experienced cash advance company, can offer you.</p>
<p>Call this cash advance company today and your money will soon be on its way! </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<slash:comments>0</slash:comments>
		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Case Loan</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/case_loan</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/case_loan#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 22 Jun 2011 15:17:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Funding]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/?p=913</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[National Lawsuit Funding provides plaintiffs (you) with cash before your case settles. We are a first-class settlement advance (case loan) company that makes life easier for our case loan customers. Anyone who is legitimately pursuing a qualified lawsuit and needs case funding is qualified for our case loan services. We are a case loan company [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>National Lawsuit Funding provides plaintiffs (you) with cash before your case settles. We are a first-class settlement advance (case loan) company that makes life easier for our case loan customers.</p>
<p>Anyone who is legitimately pursuing a qualified lawsuit and needs case funding is qualified for our case loan services. We are a case loan company that most often provides case loan for personal injury cases.</p>
<p>However, we have also provided case loans for a variety of other clients and cases, including case loans for wrongful death lawsuits, case funding for medical malpractice lawsuits, case funding for sexual harassment lawsuits, case loans for employment discrimination lawsuits, case loans for breach of contract lawsuits, case loans for wrongful termination lawsuits, case loans for product liability lawsuits, and case loans for countless other worthy causes.</p>
<p>We are dedicated to helping plaintiffs through our case loans services.</p>
<p>Applying for funding for your case, often referred as case loans, through National Lawsuit Funding is a simple process. Not actually a loan, but an advance on the outcome of your pending case.</p>
<p>The application (case loan) form will be faxed to you and a separate (case loan) form faxed to your attorney. Both (case loan) forms will need to be completed, signed, and faxed back to us. We will also need some additional documents from your attorney to begin the (case loan) approval process.</p>
<p>Once we have all the required case loan documents, the review of your cash advance application generally will take between 24 and 48 hours. Once your (case loan) application is approved, a case loan check will be sent to you via overnight mail.</p>
<p>If you prefer, we can wire your case funding money directly into your account.</p>
<p>National Lawsuit Funding is a settlement advance company which would love to help you. We have been providing qualified applicants with case loans for over 15 years.</p>
<p>Give us a call and let one of our 5 star case loan representatives assist you with all your case loan needs. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Cash for Structured Settlement Payments</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cash_for_structured_settlement_payments</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/funding/cash_for_structured_settlement_payments#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 21 Jun 2011 13:43:52 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Funding]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/?p=898</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Can I get cash for a structured settlement payment? YES. A structured settlement factoring transaction describes the selling of future structured settlement payments [or, more accurately, the "right" to receive the future structured settlement payment(s)]. People who receive structured settlement payments may decide at some point that they need more money in the short term [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h2>Can I get cash for a <a href="http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com" title="structured settlement payment">structured settlement payment</a>?</h2>
<p>YES.</p>
<p>A <em>structured settlement factoring transaction</em> describes the selling of future structured settlement payments [or, more accurately, the "right" to receive the future structured settlement payment(s)].</p>
<p>People who receive <strong>structured settlement payments</strong> may decide at some point that they need more money in the short term than the periodic payment provides over time.</p>
<p>In the pre-settlement funding world National Lawsuit Funding can provide you cash before your case settles. However, you are required to have a pending case based on payment of personal injury damages and attorney representation.  The reasons can vary, but can include unforeseen medical expenses for oneself or a dependent, the need for improved housing or transportation, education expenses and the like. To meet this need, you can get a partial advance of your future settlement.</p>
<p>Get reasonable rates for your settlement by having our staff give you the best offer up front in writing faxed to you.</p>
<p>Here&#8217;s how . . .</p>
<p>Online:</p>
<p>Complete the Form on the <a title="Cash for Structured Settlement" href="http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/cash_advance_form">Apply Now</a> page.</p>
<p>When prompted, tell us yours, your case,  accident date, and the name of the attorney your working with.</p>
<p>Usually within 1 hour and not more than 72 Hours we can get cash in your hand.</p>
<p>You may receive your advance via our three easy options:  Western Union, a check via FedEx, ore by direct Wire Transfer into your Bank Account via ACH.</p>
<p>You may also apply for an advance by phone:</p>
<p>Contact one of our Customer Service Experts at 1-888-322-2400.</p>
<p>Secure, Confidential, and We Care!</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		</item>
		<item>
		<title>Dopp</title>
		<link>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/courtdecisions/dopp</link>
		<comments>http://www.nationallawsuitfunding.com/courtdecisions/dopp#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2011 16:35:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Court Decisions]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.lawsuitfunding.us/?p=571</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Dopp vs Yari United States District Court, D. New Jersey. Paul S. DOPP, Plaintiff, v. Bob YARI, Defendant. Civil No. 96-1242. May 31, 1996. Suits were filed contesting enforceability of agreement for financing of litigation in exchange for division of final proceeds. Cross-motions for summary judgment were made. The District Court, Clarkson S. Fisher, and [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Dopp vs Yari</h1>
<p><b>United States District Court, D. New Jersey.<br />
Paul S. DOPP, Plaintiff,<br />
v.<br />
Bob YARI, Defendant.<br />
Civil No. 96-1242.<br />
May 31, 1996.</b></p>
<p>Suits were filed contesting enforceability of agreement for financing of litigation in exchange for division of final proceeds.   Cross-motions for summary judgment were made.   The District Court, Clarkson S. Fisher, and J., held that:  (1) New Jersey law applied;  (2) agreement was valid contract; and (3) New Jersey criminal usury statute did not apply.<br />
Judgment for lender.<br />
West Headnotes</p>
<p><b>OPINION </b></p>
<p><b>CLARKSON S. FISHER, District Judge.</b><br />
 This consolidated action involves the question of the enforceability of a contract for the financing of litigation in exchange for a division of the final proceeds. The underlying litigation has now been completed, and the parties have both filed suit seeking to litigate the enforceability of the agreement, which both parties agree calls for Paul S. Dopp (&#8220;Dopp&#8221;) to pay Bob Yari (&#8220;Yari&#8221;) $1.5 million.   The matter comes before the court on Yari&#8217;s motion for summary judgment entering judgment on the first count of Yari&#8217;s complaint for breach of contract in this consolidated matter. Also before the court is Dopp&#8217;s cross-motion for summary judgment.   Because this court finds no genuine issues of material fact and concludes that the agreement is an enforceable contract, Yari&#8217;s motion will be granted, Dopp&#8217;s motion will be denied and judgment will be entered in favor of Yari in the amount of $1.5 million.</p>
<p>At English common law, agreements to finance litigation in exchange for a division of the proceeds, arising out of the doctrine of champerty, were unenforceable as agreements tending to induce or promote needless litigation.   But it was held in New Jersey&#8217;s former Supreme Court that the law of maintenance and champerty has never prevailed in this state.  Schomp v. Schenck, 40 N.J.L. 195 (Sup.Ct.1878).</p>
<p> This matter involves what may be the final battle in a case that has taken on a life of its own.   See Dopp v. HTP Corp., 755 F.Supp. 491 (D.P.R.1991) (Dopp I); Dopp v. HTP Corp., 947 F.2d 506 (1st Cir.1991) (Dopp II); Dopp v. HTP Corp., 831 F.Supp. 939 (D.P.R.1993) (Dopp III); Dopp v. Pritzker, 38 F.3d 1239 (1st Cir.1994) (Dopp IV) cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1108, 115 S.Ct. 1959 (1995); Pritzker v. Yari, 42 F.3d 53 (1st Cir.1994) (Dopp V) cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1108, 115 S.Ct. 1959, 131 L.Ed.2d 851 (1995); Dopp v. Pritzker, 68 F.3d 455 (Table), 1995 WL 628569 (1st Cir.1995).   In recognition of this history, this court will provide a brief factual summary.</p>
<p> The present matter involves the third financing agreement between the parties and the second of two financing agreements between Yari and Dopp in which Yari purchased a stake in the outcome of civil litigation between Dopp and Jay A. Pritzker in exchange for providing Dopp with necessary financing of that litigation as well as maintaining Dopp&#8217;s lifestyle.   As will be discussed, the underlying litigation has now been completed, and Yari seeks to enforce the terms of the third and final litigation agreement.</p>
<p> The underlying litigation between Dopp and Pritzker stemmed from an oral contract between Dopp and Pritzker concerning the purchase of the Dorado Beach Hotel Corporation (&#8220;DBHC&#8221;), a company that controlled a complex of hotels and golf courses along the north shore of Puerto Rico.   According to the parties, in 1984 Dopp obtained an option to purchase the DBHC but lacked the necessary financing.   Dopp and Pritzker subsequently entered into an oral agreement in which Pritzker would provide the necessary financing and Dopp would receive a portion of corporate shares of a company formed for the purpose of acquiring DBHC.   The basis of the case against Pritzker was the allegation that Pritzker had employed duress and deceit to pressure Dopp into signing documents, which amended the oral agreement and granted Pritzker an option to retire Dopp&#8217;s interest, which Pritzker subsequently executed.</p>
<p> In 1988, Dopp initiated a diversity suit against Pritzker in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico alleging deceit and duress and seeking damages or reformation.   In 1990 the case was tried and the jury found Pritzker liable in the amount of $2,000,000.  Dopp v. HTP Corp., 755 F.Supp. 491, 493 (D.P.R.1991).   Ten appeals followed.   On October 4, 1991, the First Circuit affirmed the finding of liability against Pritzker but remanded to the district court for a new trial on the issues of remedies and damages.</p>
<p> Faced with the costs of a second trial on the issue of damages and other related living costs, Dopp and Yari entered into an agreement in which Yari agreed to provide Dopp with necessary funding in exchange for a division of any final judgment against Pritzker.   The agreement provides in relevant part:<br />
Any monetary proceeds from any final Judgment of the Court with respect to the Action (the &#8220;Judgment&#8221;) after deduction of any sums due Ledesma, Palou &#038; Miranda (&#8220;Counsel&#8221;) &#8230; shall be distributed between Yari and Dopp as follows:<br />
  <br />
<b>(i) First to repayment of all indebtedness to the Bank in relation to the Line<br />
of Credit &#8230; <br />
(ii) Secondly, the sum of $2,500,000 (or $3,000,000 if the Line of Credit is extended<br />
to $3,000,000) to Yari (or any fraction of that amount if the Proceeds will not<br />
cover the full amount), <br />
(iii) Thirdly, the sum of $12,000,000 to Dopp, <br />
(iv) Fourthly, the sum of $7,000,000 to Yari, <br />
(v) And any remaining shall be equally divided between Dopp and Yari.</b></p>
<p><b>Affidavit of Yari, Ex. A.</b><br />
 Although the First Circuit has upheld liability at the time of the agreement, the agreement acknowledges &#8220;the [underlying] action entails a degree of risk and that there may be no Proceeds to disburse.&#8221;  </p>
<p>On March 27, 1993, a second jury returned a verdict for full damages against Pritzker in the amount of $17,000,000.   To the surprise of Yari, Article 1425 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico confers on a defendant the right to redeem the interest a third party has in the judgment in exchange for the amount the third party paid to purchase the share, along with the judicial costs and interest at the rate of 6%.  P.R.Laws Ann., title 31, § 3950.   The purpose of this statute is to prevent the precise form of speculation in litigation that occurred in this case.  Pritzker v. Yari, 42 F.3d 53, 66 (1st Cir.1994). As of March 27, 1993, Yari had provided Dopp financing in the amount of $450,000.00.</p>
<p> Upon learning of this statutory right, Pritzker filed suit against Yari in the United States District Court for the District of Puerto Rico seeking, inter alia, to extinguish Yari&#8217;s portion of the proceeds.   By opinion and order dated March 5, 1993, and opinion and order dated September 9, 1993, the district court granted Pritzker&#8217;s motions and entered an order granting Pritzker the opportunity to extinguish Yari&#8217;s share in the Dopp litigation and reduce the total judgment by $3,503,767.29 in exchange for tendering Yari $450,000.00 plus interest and costs.   In computing the amount of credit, the district court limited the amount of the final judgment Pritzker could reduce by half.   The court made this adjustment on the basis that it was inequitable to punish Dopp under the circumstances.   Two appeals followed.</p>
<p> In the first appeal, Dopp suggested, inter alia, full damages properly computed totaled $60,581,000; Pritzker suggested $35,000.  Dopp v. Pritzker, 38 F.3d 1239 (1st Cir.1994) cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1108, 115 S.Ct. 1959 (1995).   In the second appeal, Yari challenged, inter alia, the application of § 1425 of the Civil Code and Pritzker challenged the district court&#8217;s authority to limit the amount by which the final judgment could be reduced.  Pritzker v. Yari, 42 F.3d 53 (1st Cir.1994), cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1108, 115 S.Ct. 1959, 131 L.Ed.2d 851 (1995).</p>
<p> While the two cases were on appeal, the second and third financing agreements originated.   First, on April 7, 1993, Yari provided Dopp an additional $50,000.   Then, on June 21, 1993, Yari wired Dopp an additional $25,000.00 along with correspondence detailing the parties&#8217; arrangement.   The letter provides in relevant part:<br />
  Pursuant to your request, I am wiring today an additional $25,000.00 to your account.   I am writing this letter to gain your consent to the following: Provided our agreement of July 23, 1992 is finally transferred to Pritzker pursuant to the District Court&#8217;s ruling under Article 1425, in which event, and only in such event, this and any future payment would not fall under our agreement as continued funding pursuant to the September 24, 1992 amendment, then, and only then, you agree to repay this and any future payments you receive from me hereafter upon your receipt of any proceeds from your underlying litigation with Pritzker including interest at a rate of 9% per annum.</p>
<p><b>Affidavit of Yari, Ex. J. (emphasis in original). </b></p>
<p> On October 28, 1994, the First Circuit issued its opinion in Dopp v. Pritzker, 38 F.3d 1239 (1st Cir.1994) (Dopp IV), cert. denied, 514 U.S. 1108, 115 S.Ct. 1959 (1995), and concluded that a remitter in the amount of $2,828,038.00 was appropriate.   The court remanded to the district court with instructions for Dopp to consent to an award of full damages of $14,171,962, or for the district court to order a new trial on full damages. Id. at 1251.   By that time, Yari had provided Dopp over $700,000 in financing, $450,000 of which was the subject of the appeal by Yari, and an additional $250,000 in the subsequent funding. </p>
<p>Exhibit N suggests a total of $785,000 had been wired from Yari to Dopp as of November 30, 1994.   Of this amount approximately $60,000 involved unrelated matters.</p>
<p> Following the issuance of the First Circuit opinion, Dopp sent to Yari an  &#8220;Irrevocable Offer To Settle&#8221; dated November 7, 1994.   The offer provides in relevant part:<br />
  You are finding it difficult to understand that my complete focus, since October 28th, has been upon First Circuit&#8217;s biased and unexpected decision. In the interest of setting your mind at rest over our agreement, and keeping in mind your reluctance to execute, now, my earlier offers to document our July 18th understanding, I offer the following:<br />
  In consideration of your past continued funding (now $700,000 &#038; not inclusive of the Piper Project $10,000 &#038; The SANWA BANK $50,000 Mtge accommodation), I will offer, irrevocably until ten days following the entry of a final judgment in all Pritzker litigation, to pay you 16% percent of all proceeds (after deducting only LP &#038; M&#8217;s share) against a minimum of $1.5 million.   In addition, I will agree to repay the $700,000 with your 3/4 share representing consideration for such $700,000 funding.  (The Piper due diligence expenses, for which I have now disbursed in excess of $30,000, and the SANWA BANK $50,000 is the subject of separate agreements). </p>
<p>  Naturally, a detailed document reflecting the Irrevocable Offer To Settle, I am certain, will be required.   This, however, is, and does, put at rest your unwarranted concerns over our July 18th agreement and permits me to fully concentrate on the urgent work at hand.   Please have Roger (or whomever you prefer) prepare the appropriate documentation for this Agreement, which clearly confirms your rights and will not require notice to any other party.</p>
<p><b>Affidavit of Yari, Ex. K.</b><br />
On November 7, 1994, Yari wrote to Dopp. </p>
<p>  Thank you [for your] Irrevocable Offer contained in your letter dated November 7, 1994.   I understand the offer as irrevocable on your part as its stands and so I do not believe any further documentation is necessary until and unless I accept the offer with the time limits set forth therein.   In addition to the consideration recited in your letter, it is our understanding that, as present consideration, I am directing my attorney, Roger Crane, at your request, to assist your attorney, Ruben Nigaglione, in preparing a Motion for Rehearing.   I shall bear the costs of my attorney&#8217;s efforts.</p>
<p> On December 13, 1994, the First Circuit issued its opinion in Pritzker v. Yari, 42 F.3d 53 (1st Cir.1994) (Dopp V), and upheld the ability of Pritzker to extinguish Yari&#8217;s litigation share but reversed the district court&#8217;s equitable decision to limit the amount Pritzker could extinguish.</p>
<p> On December 16, 1994, Yari wrote to Dopp and accepted the &#8220;Irrevocable Offer To Settle.&#8221;   Affidavit of Yari, Ex. M.  At no time did Dopp suggest a more detailed agreement was necessary.   Following the acceptance, Yari wired Dopp an additional $230,000 in ten payment between January 12, 1995 and July 10, 1995.  Id. at Ex. N.</p>
<p> Additionally, a petition for rehearing en banc was denied in Dopp IV, petitions for certiorari were denied by the United States Supreme Court in both Dopp IV and Dopp V, and Dopp subsequently filed an unsuccessful appeal to the First Circuit following the district court&#8217;s decision after remand of Dopp IV. See Dopp v. Pritzker (Dopp VI), 68 F.3d 455 (Table), 1995 WL 628569, (1st Cir.1995).</p>
<p> Finally, on January 8, 1996, the District Court for the District of Puerto Rico entered final judgment against Pritzker and in favor of Dopp and ordered Pritzker to pay Dopp $9,989,606.94 plus interest.   Dopp received approximately $5.3 million of that amount in January and February of this year.   An additional $1.99 million remains on deposit with the District Court of Puerto Rico awaiting a ruling from the Puerto Rico Department of Revenue on whether that sum is subject to tax.   Of the $5.3 million received, Dopp retired approximately $2.7 million in debt including $530,000.00 borrowed from Yari.</p>
<p> An additional $450,000 was paid by Pritzker to extinguish Yari&#8217;s litigation credits under the July 23, 1992 agreement.</p>
<p> After the Final Judgment was paid, both parties filed complaints in this court-premising jurisdiction on diversity of citizenship.  §28 U.S.C.  1332. Dopp is a New Jersey resident, Yari a California resident.   By order dated April 17, 1996, the matters were consolidated.   Yari&#8217;s six-count complaint sounds in breach of contract, unjust enrichment, constructive trust and equitable lien and seeks $1.5 million pursuant to the November 7, 1994, offer.   Dopp&#8217;s complaint seeks a declaratory judgment declaring that the November 7, 1994, offer and the subsequent acceptance are null and void.</p>
<p> In a previous opinion entered April 1, 1996, this court denied Yari&#8217;s application to freeze the assets of Dopp pending final determination of the case.   In that opinion this court concluded that the proofs submitted by Yari, which alleged that Dopp was seeking to evade creditors, were insufficient as a matter of law to justify freezing Dopp&#8217;s assets.</p>
<p> The matter now returns to the court on Yari&#8217;s motion for summary judgment.   In opposition to entry of judgment and in support of cross-motion, Dopp has suggested the contract in question violates New Jersey&#8217;s criminal usury statute and is therefore unenforceable.  N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19.   Additionally, Dopp argues that no enforceable contract exists.   In support Dopp suggests the agreement lacks consideration, is missing material terms, was not accepted and was offered to Yari only under duress.   Finally, Dopp suggests that summary judgment is inappropriate without the opportunity to conduct discovery. Because the court finds these arguments without support and because the court finds that no genuine issues of material fact exist, summary judgment will be entered on Count I of the complaint, and judgment will be entered in favor of Yari in the amount of $1.5 million.</p>
<p><b>I. DISCUSSION</b><br />
As an initial matter this court must address what substantive law applies.   A federal district court sitting in diversity must apply the choice- of-law rules of the forum state.  Klaxon Co. v. Stentor Elec. Mfg. Co., 313 U.S. 487, 61 S.Ct. 1020, 85 L.Ed. 1477 (1941).   Under New Jersey choice-of-law rules in contract cases, in the absence of an effective choice of law by the parties, New Jersey courts have attempted to apply the law of the jurisdiction &#8220;having the most significant relationship to the parties and to the transaction.&#8221;  Caribe Hilton Hotel v. Toland, 63 N.J. 301, 307 A.2d 85 (1973).   See §Restatement (Second) of Conflict of Laws, 188 (1971).</p>
<p>In the instant case, negotiations took place via fax and telephone between Dopp&#8217;s residence in New Jersey and Yari&#8217;s residence in California.   At oral argument, both parties agreed New Jersey law should apply to determine whether a contract exists and whether that contract is usurious. Additionally, New Jersey has a specific interest in protecting its residents from out-of-state lenders who seek to lend money to New Jersey residents on terms, which are usurious under New Jersey law.  Oxford Consumer Discount Co. of No. Phila. v. Stefanelli, 102 N.J.Super. 549, 246 A.2d 460 (App.Div.1968), mod. 104 N.J.Super. 512, 250 A.2d 593, mod. 55 N.J. 489, 262 A.2d 874 (1970), app. dismissed, 400 U.S. 808, 91 S.Ct. 45, 27 L.Ed.2d 38 (1970).</p>
<p>  In Oxford Consumer Discount Co., the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division, concluded that the legislative history of the New Jersey Secondary Loan Mortgage Act of 1965, N.J.S.A. 17:11 A-1, demonstrated a legislative intent that the Act govern the terms of any secondary mortgages made to a New Jersey resident involving New Jersey realty notwithstanding the execution of the loan documents outside of the state and in favor of a foreign corporation.   But see Oxford Consumer Discount Co. of No. Phila. v. Stefanelli, 55 N.J. 489, 499-500, 262 A.2d 874 (1970) (Weintraub, J., dissenting), app. dismissed, 400 U.S. 808, 91 S.Ct. 45, 27 L.Ed.2d 38 (1970).</p>
<p> More recently, in Turner v. Aldens, Inc., 179 N.J.Super. 596, 601, 433 A.2d 439 (App.Div.1981), the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division, concluded that the interest rate provisions contained in the Retail Installment Sales Act, N.J.S.A. 17:16C-1, were intended to protect New Jersey consumers no matter from where the seller deals and despite the &#8220;election&#8221; of the parties in the contract of adhesion that Illinois law would apply.   In reaching this conclusion, the court noted, the evil sought to be remedied by N.J.S.A. 17:16C-1, is the charging of excessive interest to New Jersey consumers.   The court concluded: <br />
  &#8220;[t]hat evil is of such a nature that we are confident the Legislature did not intend to discriminate on the basis of the source of supply.   Rather, it endeavored to protect residents of this State from the evil irrespective of whether its source was in-state or out-of-state.&#8221;<br />
 Id. at 602, 433 A.2d 439.</p>
<p> While neither of those cases dealt with the precise statute at issue in this case, the opinions are persuasive.   As a federal district court sitting in diversity, this court is asked to determine whether the New Jersey Supreme Court would apply New Jersey&#8217;s own criminal usury statutes to a suit brought against a New Jersey resident to enforce a contract.   In light of these cases and the stipulation of the parties, this court concludes that this court should examine the transaction pursuant to New Jersey substantive law.</p>
<p> Turning to the merits of the case, the entry of summary judgment is appropriate only if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.  Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(c).   The burden of establishing the absence of a genuine issue is on the moving party.  Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986).   Once this burden is met, the nonmoving party must &#8220;go beyond the pleadings and by [its] own affidavits, or by the &#8216;depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file,&#8217; designate &#8216;specific facts showing that there is a genuine issue for trial.&#8221;  Id. at 324, 106 S.Ct. at 2553.   An issue is &#8220;genuine&#8221; if the evidence is such that a reasonable [trier of fact] could return a verdict for the nonmoving party.&#8221;  Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U.S. 242, 248, 106 S.Ct. 2505, 2510, 91 L.Ed.2d 202 (1986).</p>
<p> In the instant matter I find no genuine issue of material fact exists that Dopp made a valid offer and that offer was accepted by Yari.   The November 7, 1994, letter provided all the necessary terms of the offer.   Yari accepted those terms.   Dopp&#8217;s suggestion that Yari&#8217;s offer to provide the services of his attorney as additional consideration amounted to a counteroffer is meritless.   Additionally, Dopp&#8217;s argument that the documents demonstrate only preliminary negotiations, not an agreement, is unpersuasive. As explained by the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division:<br />
  The fact that parties who are in agreement upon all necessary terms may contemplate that a formal agreement yet to be prepared will contain such additional terms as are later agreed upon will not affect the subsistence of the contract as to those terms already unqualifiedly agreed to and intended to be binding.   1 Corbin on Contracts (1950).</p>
<p><b>Comerata v. Chaumont, Inc., 52 N.J.Super. 299, 305, 145 A.2d 471 (App.Div.1958).</b><br />
 Additionally, Dopp&#8217;s suggestion that the agreement lacked consideration suffers from the same deficiency.   At the time of the offer, the issue of whether Pritzker could extinguish Yari&#8217;s share of the litigation resulting from the July 23, 1992, agreement was pending before the First Circuit, and both parties agree that if the First Circuit reversed in Dopp V, Yari stood to gain a far greater portion of any judgment against Pritzker.   Additionally, Yari had a right to receive 9% interest on the second agreement.   Thus, conceivably, Yari stood to gain a substantial portion of the judgment plus interest on the second agreement if Dopp V was decided in his favor.</p>
<p> Additionally, Dopp wanted additional funding from Yari.   The third agreement settled the issue and offered a 16% share in the litigation subject to a minimum of $1.5 million of the net proceeds of the litigation in exchange for your &#8220;past continued funding (now $700,000&#8230;.&#8221;  Affidavit of Yari, Ex. K. Following the offer Yari provided Dopp an additional $20,000.00 in late November, and following acceptance of the offer Yari provided Dopp an additional $230,000.00 in financing.  Thus, the third financing agreement was a bargained-for exchange.  Continental Bank of Pa. v. Barclay Riding Acad., 93 N.J. 153, 170, 459 A.2d 1163 (1983), cert. denied, 464 U.S. 994, 104 S.Ct. 488, 78 L.Ed.2d 684 (1983).</p>
<p> Additionally, Dopp suggests that summary judgment is inappropriate because he was under &#8220;great duress&#8221; at the time when he made the offer and that therefore the offer is invalid.   Dopp suggests that at the time of the offer he was in need of additional financing, which he suggests Yari was improperly withholding, and he was under the belief that the First Circuit would reverse in Dopp V.   Dopp suggests that in such cases summary judgment is inappropriate without further discovery and that a jury trial is required.</p>
<p> Dopp relies upon Shanley &#038; Fisher, P.C. v. Sisselman, 215 N.J.Super. 200, 212, 521 A.2d 872 (App.Div.1987), in which the New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division commented, &#8220;when there has been moral compulsion sufficient to overcome the will of a person otherwise competent to contract, any agreement made under the circumstances is considered to be lacking in voluntary consent and therefore invalid.&#8221;   In Shanley &#038; Fisher the Appellate Division concluded it was reversible error for the trial court to grant summary judgment in the face of the defendant&#8217;s duress and undue-influence claim.   Dopp suggests that the case precludes summary judgment in the instant matter.</p>
<p> The court disagrees.   Summary judgment is appropriate only if there is no  &#8220;genuine issue&#8221; of any material fact and the moving party is entitled to summary judgment as a matter of law.  Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U.S. 317, 106 S.Ct. 2548, 91 L.Ed.2d 265 (1986).   In the instant matter, Dopp supplies only an affidavit that he was under &#8220;great duress.&#8221;   No genuine issue of material fact is created by this submission.   Moreover, Dopp has set forth no facts, which justify the need for further discovery.  Fed.R.Civ.P. 56(f).</p>
<p> Finally, Dopp argues that the agreement in question is not an agreement establishing the division of proceeds from a joint undertaking but, rather, a usurious loan in excess of the legal limit.   Under New Jersey law, usury is the exaction of a rate in excess of the amount permitted by law. Ferdon v. Zarriello Bros. Inc., 87 N.J.Super. 124, 208 A.2d 186 (L.Div.1965).   In New Jersey, the criminal usury statute governs loans in excess of $50,000.  N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19.   The applicable rate of 30% per annum is the maximum legal rate.  The civil remedy for a usurious loan is to sever the interest portion of the loan and permit recovery only of the principal.  Schuran, Inc. v. Walnut Hill Associates, 256 N.J.Super 228, 233, 606 A.2d 885 (L.Div.1991).</p>
<p><b>The statute provides in part: </b><br />
a.  Criminal Usury.   A person is guilty of criminal usury when not being authorized or permitted by law to do so, he:<br />
(1) Loans or agrees to loan, directly or indirectly, any money or other property &#8230; with an interest rate which exceeds 30% per annum shall not be a rate authorized or permitted by law &#8230;<br />
	N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19.</p>
<p>Generally, in order to prove usury, a party must establish three elements:  (1) a loan of money, (2) an absolute obligation to repay the principal and (3) the exaction of a greater compensation than that allowed by law for the use of the money.   The burden of proof on a party claiming a corrupt bargain is upon the one who asserts a claim of usury.  Ditmars v. Camden Trust Co., 10 N.J. 471, 498, 92 A.2d 12 (1952).   Additionally, it is not enough that the circumstances established render it probable that there was a corrupt *821  bargain.  Altman v. Altman, 8 N.J.Super. 301, 307, 72 A.2d 536 (Ch.1950).   The defense of usury fails unless it is clearly established by a preponderance of the evidence.  Id.  It is also the general rule that when the terms of the agreement are subject to two constructions, one of which will render it lawful and one of which will render it usurious, in the absence of evidence requiring the contract to be construed as usurious, courts will give the contract a construction that will render the agreement lawful.  Lindsey v. Campbell, 132 Cal.App.2d 746, 282 P.2d 948 (Cal.App.1955);  Fried v. Bolanos, 187 A.D.2d 108, 110, 592 N.Y.S.2d 144, 146 (N.Y.App.Div.1993).</p>
<p>In this case Dopp suggests the transaction is usurious because Yari was promised payment of $1.5 million plus the return of his $700,000, in exchange for the loan of $700,000.   In response, Yari argues that in order to find usury, there must be the existence of a loan and the exaction of unlawful interest.   Yari notes that &#8220;[i]n order to constitute a loan, there must be a contract whereby, in substance, one party transfers to the other a sum of money which that other agrees to repay absolutely, together with such additional sums as may be agreed upon for its use.&#8221;   PI. Br. at 19 (quoting 47 C.J.S. Interest and Usury;  Consumer Credit § 123 (1982)).</p>
<p>  Yari suggests that in the instant case the agreement was not a loan but, rather, a joint investment, because if there had been no recovery in the Pritzker litigation, he would not have recovered the principal.   Yari suggests that when a return of money is contingent on the happening of an event, the transaction is not a loan and therefore cannot be usurious.  Altman v. Altman, 8 N.J.Super. 301, 307, 72 A.2d 536 (Ch.1950).   Additionally, Yari argues that even assuming there was an obligation to return the $700,000 principal, the $1.5 million was not guaranteed interest but a contingent share of the profits.   Yari argues that because there was no guaranteed interest, but rather a contract for the division of the litigation proceeds, the transaction was not a loan but, rather, a joint undertaking, not subject to the usury law.</p>
<p> In support, Yari points to the initial July 1992 agreement between the parties, which clearly contemplated a division of the litigation proceeds, if any.   Yari suggests that the November 7, 1994, offer must be interpreted in light of the original agreement and the subsequent correspondence between the parties.   Additionally, Yari notes that the June 21, 1993, agreement provides, &#8220;&#8230; you agree to repay this and any future payments you receive from me hereafter upon your receipts of any proceeds from your underlying litigation with Pritzker including interest at a rate of 9% per annum.&#8221;  Id. at Ex. J. (emphasis added).   Yari suggests that throughout the case, proceeds, if any, were an uncertainty and that he was never guaranteed an unconditional return of $1.5 million.   Finally, Yari points to the November 7, 1994, offer, which provides:<br />
  &#8230; I will offer, irrevocable until ten days following the entry of a final judgment in all Pritzker litigation, to pay you 16% of all proceeds (after deducting only LP &#038; M&#8217;s share) against a minimum of $1.5 million.</p>
<p> Yari suggests that the document clearly contemplates a division of proceeds, with payment depending upon receipt of the proceeds.   In response, Dopp argues that, assuming that payment of the $1.5 million was contingent, and accepting Yari&#8217;s argument that it was, the contract is usurious as a matter of law if there is any contingency by which the lender may receive more than the lawful rate of interest.   Dopp Br. at 11.   Dopp relies upon Najarro v. SASI Intern., Ltd., 904 F.2d 1002, 1010 (5th Cir.1990), cert. denied, 498 U.S. 1048, 111 S.Ct. 755, 112 L.Ed.2d 775 (1991).</p>
<p> In Najarro, the Fifth Circuit addressed whether transactions which imposed on the borrower the obligation to return the principal along with a &#8220;commission&#8221; equal to a 25% annualized rate of return on the principal were usurious under Texas law.   The district court had rejected the defendant&#8217;s claim of usury and enforced the agreement finding no loan and, alternatively, no scheme to charge usury.   In concluding that no loan had occurred, the district court had relied upon affidavits previously filed by the defendants in moving to dismiss for lack of subject- matter jurisdiction, where the defendants took the position that the agreement was never &#8220;intended to be anything other than investment.   There was never intended to be a loan.&#8221; Id. at 1006.</p>
<p> On appeal the Fifth Circuit reversed, concluding that the affidavits of the parties did not create any relevant summary judgment issues on whether a loan existed.   Instead, the court noted that the question is whether money is advanced with an absolute obligation to repay.   The court found both of these elements were present and therefore summary judgment was inappropriate.<br />
 Having satisfied the first two elements of usury, the court turned to the issue of whether the loans charged an interest rate greater than that permitted by law.   Plaintiff, similar to Yari in this case, argued that because the payment of the 25% commission was contingent on defendant&#8217;s earning a profit, the interest rate was contingent and should not constitute usurious interest. In support, plaintiff relied upon a line of cases for the proposition that when interest depends upon a contingency, the loan is not usurious.   The court, however, concluded that more recent Texas cases had adopted the contrary rule that &#8220;[a] contract is usurious if there is any mode or contingency by which the lender could receive more than the maximum rate of interest allowed by law.&#8221; Id. at 1010 (quoting Dixon v. Brooks, 678 S.W.2d 728, 729 (Tex.Ct.App.1984)).   The court concluded that because the plaintiff had not presented evidence that the agreement to pay commissions &#8220;was unenforceable by plaintiffs under all circumstances,&#8221; the contract was usurious as a matter of law.  Id. (emphasis in original).</p>
<p> Dopp suggests that rule of law in Najarro is applicable to the instant matter because regardless of whether payment was contingent on receipt of proceeds; a contingent interest is usurious as a matter of law.   The court disagrees.   Recently the Texas Court of Appeals declined to apply Najarro, limiting the case to the proposition that a loan is usurious only if the amount of interest the borrower would be obligated to pay is set forth in the contract and would be unconditionally payable if the contingency occurred.  First USA Management, Inc. v. Esmond, 911 S.W.2d 100, 106 (Tex.Civ.App.1995).   Moreover, the rule of the law in Texas according to the Fifth Circuit is at odds with the law of the majority of jurisdictions, and this court concludes New Jersey would not follow the Texas rule.</p>
<p> Rather, the rule adopted by the majority of jurisdictions, including New York and California, permits collection of interest rates in excess of the legal rate when the collection of the entire interest is at risk and depends upon a contingency and provided that the parties contracted in good faith without the intent to evade the usury laws.  Arneill Ranch v. Petit, 64 Cal.App.3d 277, 134 Cal.Rptr. 456, 461-464 (Cal.Ct.App.1976);  Fried v. Bolanos, 217 A.D.2d 823, 629 N.Y.S.2d 538, 539-540 (1995).   This rule is set forth with approval in §Restatement (First) of Contracts,  527 (1932);  14 Williston on Contracts 1692 (3d ed. 1972), § 1692;  47 C.J.S. § 141.   As explained in Williston: <br />
  It was stated in an early case that if the interest only was put at hazard, the transaction would be usurious, and it is clear that where the interest only is subjected to a contingency there is greater opportunity for colorable transactions.   If, however, the transaction is a genuine business venture it is not usurious, according to the better view, to provide for payment on a contingency of interest exceeding the legal rate, although the principal may be absolutely repayable. </p>
<p>  Such arrangements, however, will not be upheld in any case where the purpose is to evade the statutes against usury, no matter what form the transaction may take.<br />
 14 Williston on Contracts 1692 (3d ed. 1972).<br />
 Because the New Jersey Supreme Court has not ruled on the issue, this court, a federal district court sitting in diversity, must predict how the New Jersey Supreme Court would rule if presented with the facts of this case.  Erie R. Co. v. Tompkins, 304 U.S. 64, 78, 58 S.Ct. 817, 822, 82 L.Ed. 1188 (1938).   In making this determination this court may look to the state&#8217;s lower-court decisions as well as the opinions of other jurisdiction.   Although no case in New Jersey is on point, in several cases New Jersey has adopted similar positions consistent with the majority view.</p>
<p> For example in Loigman v. Keim, 250 N.J.Super. 434, 437, 594 A.2d 1364  (Law.Div.1991), the New Jersey Superior Court, Law Division, concluded that the usury laws of New Jersey do not apply to contingent interest charges on a defaulted obligation when the intent of the parties is for the debtor not to default.</p>
<p> The Loigman court noted that the courts of New Jersey had not addressed this issue since 1877, when the New Jersey Supreme Court decided the case of Ramsey v. Morrison, 39 N.J.L. 591 (Sup.Ct.1877).   In Ramsey defendant borrowed on a one-month note which required defendant to pay interest and post as collateral 25 shares of stock.   The agreement provided that if the note were not paid in one month, the collateral would be forfeited without any offset of the principal.   The Supreme Court in Ramsey concluded the agreement was not usurious, holding:<br />
  It is essential to the nature of usury that a certain gain, exceeding the legal rate of interest, is to accrue to the lender as a consideration for the loan.   If the gain to the lender, beyond the rate of interest, is by the contract, made dependent on the will of the borrower, as where he may discharge himself from it by punctual payment of the principal, the contract is not usurious.</p>
<p>Loigman v. Keim, 250 N.J.Super. 434, 594 A.2d 1364 (Law.Div.1991) (quoting  Ramsey v. Morrison, 39 N.J.L. 591, 593 (Sup.Ct.1877)).<br />
 The court in Loigman concluded that the majority view and the opinion set forth in Ramsey appears to be that provisions for interest that are dependent upon some default of the buyer before they become operative are not subject to usury.  Id. at 437 (citing Klapper v. Integrated Agr. Mgt. Co., 149 A.D.2d 765, 539 N.Y.S.2d 812 (1989)).   This rule of law is set forth in 47 C.J.S. § 140.</p>
<p> Consistent with those cases, this court concludes that New Jersey would adopt the better view according to Williston, that the collection of interest in excess of the lawful rate is not usurious if collection of the entire interest is at risk and depends upon a contingent event and provided and the contract was entered into in good faith and without the intent to evade the usury laws.   14 Williston on Contracts 1692 (3d ed. 1972).   In the instant case, the burden is on Dopp to establish a genuine issue of material fact of whether the agreement in question was a usurious loan.  Altman v. Altman, 8 N.J.Super. 301, 307, 72 A.2d 536 (Ch.1950).   That burden has not been met. This court finds the agreement can clearly be construed as a joint undertaking of the parties disclosing intent to distribute proceeds of the case, if any.</p>
<p> In light of this construction and the absence of any dispute that the parties entered the transaction in good faith without the intent to evade the usury law, summary judgment is appropriate.   Accordingly, this court concludes that the New Jersey criminal usury statute has no application.</p>
<p> Finally, this case is similar to the recent case of Kraft v. Mason, 668 So.2d 679 (Fla.Dist.Ct.App.1996), in which the District Court of Appeal of Florida upheld an action by a plaintiff to enforce a contract to share in the division of the proceeds of litigation in exchange for providing a necessary $100,000 in funding for the litigation.   After the underlying litigation settled for $5,015,000, the plaintiff brought suit to collect on her portion of the proceeds.   After a nonjury trial, the trial court entered final judgment on behalf of the plaintiff and rejected all defenses.   On appeal the court affirmed the trial court&#8217;s determination that the transaction was not usurious on the basis that plaintiff lacked the requisite corrupt intent to collect a usurious rate.   Additionally, the court noted that the profit or interest was contingent and, thus, the transaction could not constitute usury.   The court concluded:<br />
  Yet another reason the loan was not usurious is that the money to be paid Mason could be characterized as a bonus to be received for participating in an uncertain transaction.   A loan agreement is not usurious when payment depends upon a contingency.   Here, when the loan was given, any talk of recovery was pure speculation.   Quite possibly, there would be no successful recovery from the antitrust litigation, and Mason might have collected nothing beyond the pay back of the loan.   The contingent nature of any &#8220;interest&#8221; to Mason makes the agreement non-usurious.</p>
<p><b>Id. at 684 (citations omitted).</b><br />
 The discussion of the court in Kraft is persuasive.   This case is about enforcing agreements.   Dopp has already received the entire benefit of the agreement without the burden of performance.   Today Dopp seeks to evade his obligation.</p>
<p> This court&#8217;s obligation is to enforce bargains unless those bargains violate statute or public policy.   This court concludes that the instant transaction does not violate the New Jersey criminal usury statute and is enforceable. N.J.S.A. 2C:21-19.   As discussed above, the transaction had all the markings of a joint undertaking and not a loan, which called for the unconditional return of principal plus an unlawful interest rate.   Notably absent is any mention in the document of the time of maturity or the interest rate applicable, two marks of traditional note.   Additionally, even if the transaction is viewed as a loan and the court concluded that the internal rate of return amounted to interest, the &#8220;interest&#8221; if any was contingent and, accordingly, nonusurious.</p>
<p> Finally, this court sees nothing immoral or contrary to public policy in enforcing an agreement entered into by Dopp and compensating Yari for the risk undertaken.   Accordingly, summary judgment will be granted and judgment entered in the amount of $1.5 million with prejudgment interest in favor of Yari and against Dopp.<br />
D.N.J.,1996.</p>
<p><b>Dopp v. Yari<br />
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		<title>Kraft</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2011 16:33:04 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
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		<description><![CDATA[Kraft vs Mason District Court of Appeal of Florida, Fourth District. Julian B. KRAFT; Falcon Food Service Company, Inc., Harold R. Newburg, Sea-Good Seafood, Inc., a Florida corporation, Seagood Trading Corporation, a Florida Corporation, and Blaine H. Winship as partner of Winship &#038; Byrne, Appellants/Cross-Appellees, v. Zelda Pincourt MASON, Appellee/Cross-Appellant. No. 94-2544. Feb. 28, 1996. [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<h1>Kraft vs Mason</h1>
<p><b>District Court of Appeal of Florida,<br />
Fourth District.<br />
Julian B. KRAFT; Falcon Food Service Company, Inc., Harold R. Newburg, Sea-Good<br />
Seafood, Inc., a Florida corporation, Seagood Trading Corporation, a Florida Corporation,<br />
and Blaine H. Winship as partner of Winship &#038; Byrne, Appellants/Cross-Appellees,</b><br />
v.<br />
<b>Zelda Pincourt MASON, Appellee/Cross-Appellant.<br />
No. 94-2544.<br />
Feb. 28, 1996.</b></p>
<p><b>Reconsideration and Clarification Denied April 19, 1996. </b></p>
<p> Sister who lent brother money to continue antitrust litigation, in consideration of share of proceeds if case settled or was decided in brother&#8217;s favor, sought share of proceeds after suit was settled.   The Circuit Court, Palm Beach County, Richard I. Wennet, J., entered final judgment on behalf of sister while rejecting sister&#8217;s claim to share of full settlement amount before deducting attorney fees.   Cross-appeals were taken.   The District Court of Appeal, Henning, Patti Englander, Associate Judge, held that:  (1) loan agreement was not champertous;  (2) loan was not usurious;  (3) action for sister&#8217;s share of recovery was within statute of limitations; and (4) sister was entitled to recover share of proceeds calculated prior to deduction of attorney fees.</p>
<p><b>Affirmed in part, reversed in part and remanded. </b></p>
<p><b>HENNING, PATTI ENGLANDER, Associate Judge.<br />
STATEMENT OF THE FACTS</b><br />
 Julian Kraft, Harold Newburg and their companies were plaintiffs in a federal antitrust suit in the mid-1980s.   They were represented by a law firm, which, after a time, told them that the firm would be required to settle the case or withdraw from representation unless fees and costs were paid.   Without the financial wherewithal themselves, the plaintiffs sought financing from others.</p>
<p> First, Kraft approached a gentleman named Gross with a contract drafted by Kraft himself.   The contract provided for an interest in the antitrust suit if Gross would obtain a bank loan and, in turn, lend the proceeds to the plaintiffs.   Specifically, the terms were for 20% of the first $1,000,000 recovered, 6% of the next $4,000,000 recovered and 3% of any recovery in excess of $5,000,000 in exchange for a loan of $100,000.   The plaintiffs were obligated to pay Gross the first $100,000 of any recovery, and Gross was obligated to utilize that $100,000 in reducing the loan principal. Additionally, the loan was guaranteed and the borrowers would pay interest payments.   Gross declined to provide the financing.</p>
<p> Still needing the funds, Kraft sought help from his sister Zelda Mason.   She reviewed the loan agreement (identical to the one Kraft had drafted for Gross) and after considering the matter for a few weeks agreed to lend her brother the money.   She made no changes in the loan document.   She believed that the $100,000 loan would be repaid and that she would receive interest payments on the loan.   She was also obligated by the loan agreement to use the first $100,000 received by her to reduce the loan principal.   She testified that her brother said any additional money received under the loan agreement was like &#8220;icing on the cake&#8221; for her.   Mason did not consider it a necessary incentive for making the loan.   She had no expectations as to any further recovery. Important for issues presented to this court, we note that the contract contained no fixed repayment dates.</p>
<p> Once Mason lent the money, the antitrust lawsuit continued.   The law firm modified its agreement with Kraft and Newburg to a straight contingent fee agreement.   Because of this, Mason actually bore the cost of the litigation with her $100,000 loan.</p>
<p> In 1987, there was a partial settlement of the antitrust litigation for  $200,000.   Mason received $85,000 to reduce her loan obligations with the bank; with agreement of all, $15,000 was paid to her prior attorney; and all agreed the remaining $15,000 principal would be paid from any later settlement.</p>
<p> In June of 1987, Kraft stopped making the contractually mandated interest payments.   By October, Mason demanded in writing full payment of the principal and unpaid interest.   Testimony reveals that Kraft had repudiated the contract because of an unrelated family dispute Kraft had with his sister.   Mason did not file a lawsuit at that time.</p>
<p> Eventually in December 1992, the antitrust suit settled for $5,015,000.  Although the attorneys notified Mason in writing that she was entitled to $355,450, no money was   actually disbursed at the direction of Kraft.   He still believed he was entitled to a setoff for that family matter. Mason demanded her settlement proceeds and instituted this suit when she was not paid.   The suit was defended on the basis that the original contract was champertous and usurious and that the suit had been filed outside the statute of limitations.</p>
<p>This amount was calculated by Kraft&#8217;s attorney pursuant to paragraph 6 of the loan agreement by taking 20% of the first $1 million ($200,000), 6% of the next $4 million ($240,000) and 3% of the remaining $15,000 ($450) less the $85,000 previously paid to Mason.   Interestingly, this original calculation is the calculation demanded by Mason at trial and before this court on appeal, but rejected by the defendants and trial court below.</p>
<p> After a nonjury trial, the trial court entered final judgment on behalf of Mason rejecting all defenses.   However, the trial judge rejected Mason&#8217;s position that she was entitled to have her recovery based on the full settlement amount before deducting attorneys&#8217; fees.   This is the appeal and cross-appeal to this court of those rulings.</p>
<p><b>MAINTENANCE AND CHAMPERTY</b><br />
 &#8220;Maintenance is an officious intermeddling in a suit which in no way belongs to the intermeddler, by maintaining or assisting either party to the action, with money or otherwise, to prosecute or defend it.&#8221;   9 Fla.Jur.2d Champerty and Maintenance § 1 (1979).   Under the modern view, &#8220;it is the act of one improperly, and for the purpose of stirring up litigation and strife, encouraging others either to bring [an] action or to &#8230; defend [a suit] which they have no right to make&#8230;.&#8221;  Id.<br />
 Champerty is a form of maintenance wherein one will carry on a suit in which he has no subject-matter interest at his own expense or will aid in doing so in consideration of receiving, if successful, some part of the benefits recovered.   14 C.J.S. Champerty and Maintenance § 1a (1991).<br />
 Historically, the common-law doctrines of champerty and maintenance arose in England from causes unique to society as it then existed.  §14 Am.Jur.2d Champerty and Maintenance 1 (1964).  &#8220;The power of influential persons to whom rights of action were transferred in order to obtain their support and favor in suits brought to assert those rights was the cause of the rigid doctrine&#8230;.&#8221;  14 C.J.S., supra, § 3. As civilization and law progressed, the need for these strict rules decreased.   14 Am.Jur.2d, supra, § 1.   Today, none of the states adhere to the rigor of the original champerty and maintenance doctrines.  Id.<br />
 Though Appellants argue to this court that we should follow the strict common-law definitions, the few cases in Florida on this subject support the more modern-day approach that officious intermeddling is a necessary element of champerty.   We define officious as &#8220;offering unnecessary and unwanted advice or services; meddlesome, esp. in a highhanded or overbearing way.&#8221;   Webster&#8217;s New World Dictionary 988 (2d col. ed. 1986).</p>
<p> In Brown v. Dyrnes, 109 So.2d 788 (Fla. 2d DCA 1959), the Second District Court determined there was sufficient evidence to support the jury&#8217;s finding that the contract was champertous.   The litigation in question was provoked by the champertor who unjustly aroused the suspicion of one litigant against the other.   There, a widow inherited numerous parcels of real estate.   Brown managed these properties for the husband and for the widow after her husband&#8217;s death.   Sometime later, the widow met the plaintiff/champertor and discussed the property.   At the time she was content with the management services of Brown.   The plaintiff/champertor, however, persuaded the widow to believe that Brown was profiting from the handling of her properties and that through a lawsuit she could recover a large judgment.   Believing this, she contracted with the champertor, agreeing to pay him percentages of all properties and money recovered in the suit.   Furthermore, if the suit settled without his consent, he would be paid for services rendered.</p>
<p> The litigation that ensued exonerated Brown, and the widow eventually had to pay him $10,000.   Next, the champertor filed suit alleging that the widow owed him for his services in the unsuccessful litigation.   This time, the widow prevailed.   The Second District Court found the verdict could well be sustained on the theory the contract was champertous.</p>
<p> This court in Anderson v. Trade Winds Enterprises Corp. 241 So.2d 174 (Fla. 4th DCA 1970), cert. denied, 244 So.2d 432 (Fla.1971), accepted the definition of maintenance as stated above as well as the following definition of champerty:  &#8221; &#8216;a bargain by a champertor with a plaintiff or defendant for a portion of the matter involved in a suit in case of a successful termination of the action, which the champertor undertakes to maintain or carry on at his own expense.&#8217; &#8221;  241 So.2d at 177 (quoting 14 Am.Jur. § 3 (1964)).   After accepting these definitions, this court determined that the facts in that case could not &#8220;even remotely resemble maintenance or champerty.   In the first place there was obviously no officious intermeddling by anyone in a lawsuit. In the second place there was no bargaining between any person not involved in a law suit to acquire an interest in a matter in litigation&#8221;.  241 So.2d at 177 (emphasis added).</p>
<p> In the instant case, Mason clearly did not act in an officious manner.  She was not intermeddling in a lawsuit.   She did not instigate the litigation.   Her assistance was sought out by Kraft when he needed money to continue his lawsuit.   She did not bargain for the terms under which she made the loan&#8211;they too were prepared by Kraft.   Nor did she concern herself with the antitrust litigation or impose her views upon the attorneys or the litigants once she provided the loan.</p>
<p> Accordingly, this court holds that the trial court correctly rejected the champerty argument raised below.</p>
<p><b>USURY</b><br />
There are four requirements necessary to establish usury: <br />
</font></p>
<ol>
<li> <font face="Arial, Helvetica, Sans-serif" size="2">A loan, express or implied. </font>
<li> <font face="Arial, Helvetica, Sans-serif" size="2">An understanding between the parties that the money loaned must be repaid.<br />
  </font>    </p>
<li> <font face="Arial, Helvetica, Sans-serif" size="2">In consideration of the loan, a greater rate of interest than is allowed by law is paid or agreed to be paid by the borrower.<br />
  </font> </p>
<li> <font face="Arial, Helvetica, Sans-serif" size="2">A corrupt intent to take more than the legal rate for the use of the money loaned.<br />
  </font>
  </ol>
<p> <font face="Arial, Helvetica, Sans-serif" size="2">See Jersey Palm-Gross, Inc. v. Paper, 639 So.2d 664, 666 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994), app&#8217;d, 658 So.2d 531 (Fla.1995);  32 Fla.Jur. Interest and Usury § 52 (1994).<br />
<br />
 The main issue before this court is whether the trial court erred in determining that no corrupt intent existed to collect interest at a usurious rate.   This court in Jersey provided a succinct background on usury relevant to this issue:<br />
  Civil usury involves loans of $500,000 or less and an interest rate of greater than 18% and less than 25%.   See § 687.03, Fla.Stat. (1993). Criminal usury involves any loan amount with a rate of interest greater than 25% but not in excess of 45%.   See § 687.071, Fla.Stat. (1993).  The penalties for civil usury include forfeiture of all interest charged; the civil penalties for criminal usury are forfeiture of the right to collect the debt.   See § 687.04, Fla.Stat. (1993).  In the case of either criminal or civil usury, the lender&#8217;s willfulness to charge an excessive interest rate is determined by considering all of the circumstances surrounding the transaction.   This might involve looking beyond the terms of the loan documents.   If a borrower promises or is otherwise required to pay a bonus or other consideration as an inducement to the lender to make the loan, such added obligations may be considered interest and can render a loan usurious.<br />
 639 So.2d at 667 (citations omitted).</p>
<p> In Jersey, the lender was to receive 15% interest on a loan of $200,000 for eighteen months.   Shortly before closing on the loan, the lender insisted upon 15% equity in the borrower&#8217;s partnership.   With the inclusion of the partnership interest, the interest rate on the loan was 45% per annum.   The trial court found that the lender had knowingly and willingly charged a usurious rate.</p>
<p><b>This court affirmed and stated: </b><br />
  The determination of intent is the responsibility of the trier of fact.  &#8230;.   The supreme court in Dixon [v. Sharp, 276 So.2d 817 (Fla.1973) ] cited with approval the definition of willfully and knowingly set forth in Chandler v. Kendrick, 108 Fla. 450, 146 So. 551, 552 (1993):<br />
  A thing is willfully done when it proceeds from a conscious motion of the will intending the result, which actually comes to pass.   It must be designed or intentional, and may be malicious, though not necessarily so. </p>
<p>  We agree that mathematical calculations alone do not equate with usurious intent.   However, here the lender knew at the outset the total value of the amount he was receiving in consideration for making the loan.   Gross, the lender&#8217;s president and sole stockholder, is a developer with 40 years experience and not an unsophisticated lender.   He knew that the borrowers had an urgent need for the money.   He dictated the terms of the loan.   The fact that the borrowers were &#8220;in distress&#8221; or &#8220;necessitous&#8221; when the loan was made is as significant as the fact that the lender dictated the terms of the loan. Our supreme court explained the purpose of Florida&#8217;s usury statute: <br />
  The very purpose of statutes prohibiting usury is to bind the power of creditors over necessitous debtors and prevent them from extorting harsh and undue terms in the making of the loans.</p>
<p> 639 So.2d at 668 (citations omitted).   The Supreme Court, in approving this court&#8217;s opinion, further stated:<br />
  &#8220;[U]sury is largely a matter of intent, and is not fully determined by the fact that the lender actually receives more than law permits, but is determined by the existence of a corrupt purpose in the lender&#8217;s mind to get more than legal interest for the money lent.&#8221;   Moreover, &#8220;the question of intent is to be gathered from the circumstances surrounding the entire transaction.&#8221; Consequently, the ultimate arbiter on the issue of intent is the trial court because &#8220;the question of intent is one of fact.&#8221;</p>
<p> 658 So.2d at 534 (citations omitted).<br />
 The instant case appears to be the antithesis of Jersey.   Here, Mason was an unsophisticated lender.   She did not know at the outset the total amount she would receive.   The evidence is uncontroverted that it was the borrowers who dictated the terms of the loan, not Mason.   The loan was to be paid back after the disposition of the lawsuit.   Accordingly, no one could have known at the loan&#8217;s inception the total amount Mason would be receiving in consideration for making the loan.   Clearly, the record does not demonstrate the necessary &#8221; &#8216;corrupt purpose in the lender&#8217;s mind to get more than legal interest&#8230;.&#8217; &#8221;  Jersey, 658 So.2d at 534 (quoting Dixon, 276 So.2d at 820).   This is not a case of an overreaching lender taking advantage of a desperate borrower to impose undue or harsh terms.</p>
<p>Yet another reason the loan was not usurious is that the money to be paid Mason could be characterized as a bonus to be received for participating in an uncertain transaction.   A loan agreement is not usurious when payment depends upon a contingency.   See, e.g., Bailey v. Harrington, 462 So.2d 861 (Fla. 3d DCA), rev. denied, 472 So.2d 1180 (Fla.1985), and rev. denied sub nom., N-Site Associates v. Harrington, 472 So.2d 1181 (Fla.1985);  Schwab v. Quitoni, 362 So.2d 297 (Fla. 3d DCA 1978).   Here, when the loan was given, any talk of recovery was pure speculation.   Quite possibly, there would be no successful recovery from the antitrust litigation, and Mason might have collected nothing beyond the pay back of the loan.   This contingent nature of any &#8220;interest&#8221; to Mason makes the agreement non-usurious.</p>
<p>Case appears to be the antithesis of Jersey.   Here, Mason was an unsophisticated lender.   She did not know at the outset the total amount she would receive.   The evidence is uncontroverted that it was the borrowers who dictated the terms of the loan, not Mason.   The loan was to be paid back after the disposition of the lawsuit.   Accordingly, no one could have known at the loan&#8217;s inception the total amount Mason would be receiving in consideration for making the loan.   Clearly, the record does not demonstrate the necessary &#8221; &#8216;corrupt purpose in the lender&#8217;s mind to get more than legal interest&#8230;.&#8217; &#8221;  Jersey, 658 So.2d at 534 (quoting Dixon, 276 So.2d at 820).   This is not a case of an overreaching lender taking advantage of a desperate borrower to impose undue or harsh terms.</p>
<p> Yet another reason the loan was not usurious is that the money to be paid Mason could be characterized as a bonus to be received for participating in an uncertain transaction.   A loan agreement is not usurious when payment depends upon a contingency.   See, e.g., Bailey v. Harrington, 462 So.2d 861 (Fla. 3d DCA), rev. denied, 472 So.2d 1180 (Fla.1985), and rev. denied sub nom., N-Site Associates v. Harrington, 472 So.2d 1181 (Fla.1985); Schwab v. Quitoni, 362 So.2d 297 (Fla. 3d DCA 1978).   Here, when the loan was given, any talk of recovery was pure speculation.   Quite possibly, there would be no successful recovery from the antitrust litigation, and Mason might have collected nothing beyond the pay back of the loan.   This contingent nature of any &#8220;interest&#8221; to Mason makes the agreement non-usurious.</p>
<p>   Thus, the trial court&#8217;s finding that the usury defense was inapplicable was correct and is affirmed.</p>
<p><b>STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS</b><br />
We write briefly on this issue to affirm the trial court&#8217;s finding that the statute of limitations did not commence as to the shares of the recovery and the $15,000 in unpaid principal until the settlement of the underlying antitrust case in December 1992.   It did expire as to some unpaid interest payments on the principal as Mason concedes and as the trial court correctly held.   When interest payments are payable in installments, the statute of limitations can run on some but not others.   See Hannett v. Bryan, 640 So.2d 203 (Fla. 4th DCA 1994);   Central Home Trust Co. v. Lippincott, 392 So.2d 931 (Fla. 5th DCA 1980).</p>
<p><b>CALCULATING SHARES OF THE RECOVERY</b><br />
Paragraph 6 of the Loan Agreement reads as follows: <br />
  6.  In consideration of the above, Borrowers hereby direct Winship &#038; Byrne to pay to Lender the following percentages of any Recovery by plaintiffs in the Lawsuit:  20 percent of the first $1,000,000.00 of any Recovery; 6 percent of the next $4,000,000.00 of any Recovery; and 3 percent of any additional Recovery.   The term &#8220;Recovery&#8221;, as used herein, means the proceeds received from any settlement in plaintiffs&#8217; favor of any claims brought by them in the Lawsuit and the proceeds received from any judgment awarding damages to plaintiffs in the Lawsuit, including any amount obtained by reason of trebling of damages or punitive damages, but excluding any award of costs, interest or attorneys fees.   Any payment made to Lender by Winship &#038; Byrne in accordance with the provisions of this paragraph shall be made from the net proceeds of any settlement and/or judgment payable to Borrowers, and not from the portion payable to Winship &#038; Byrne.   Notwithstanding the above, the first $100,000 of any Recovery shall be paid by Winship &#038; Byrne to Lender for the purpose of enabling Lender to pay off the principal amount of the loan, with said $100,000 to be credited against Lender&#8217;s 20 percent share of the first $1,000,000.00 of any Recovery.</p>
<p> The trial court interpreted this provision as requiring Mason&#8217;s share to be calculated on the net proceeds of the settlement after attorneys&#8217; fees had been deducted from the gross amount.   Mason argues that the trial court&#8217;s interpretation is wrong.   We agree with Mason.</p>
<p> A careful reading shows that the portion of the paragraph defining  &#8220;Recovery&#8221; relates to the calculation of the lender&#8217;s share.   Once calculated, the remainder of the paragraph defines how the calculated amount is to be paid.   Payment to the lender is to come from the proceeds of the settlement to which the borrowers are entitled after attorneys&#8217; fees are deducted and paid to the lender from Kraft and Newburg&#8217;s recovery proceeds and not from the share due the attorneys (Winship &#038; Byrne).   The loan agreement does not require that the Lender&#8217;s share be calculated from that reduced amount.</p>
<p>The well-formed law on contract construction is dispositive of this issue.   Clear and unambiguous contract terms should be construed as written.  Institutional &#038; Supermarket Equipment, Inc. v. C &#038; S Refrigeration, Inc., 609 So.2d 66 (Fla. 4th DCA 1992).   Extrinsic evidence regarding a contract&#8217;s meaning should not be admitted if the contract is not ambiguous.  J.C. Penney Co., Inc. v. Koff, 345 So.2d 732 (Fla. 4th DCA 1977).</p>
<p> &#8220;[T]he construction placed on the terms of an agreement by a trial court must be accepted by a reviewing court unless the construction is clearly erroneous.&#8221;  Elmore v. Enterprise Developers, Inc., 418 So.2d 1078, 1079 (Fla. 4th DCA 1982).   Here, the trial court clearly erred in finding the agreement ambiguous.   Its interpretation of the agreement based on evidence taken at trial need not and should not be accepted by this court.   To do so would be to rewrite a contractual provision or vary a party&#8217;s obligations under a clearly written contract.   This is impermissible under the law.   See Koff.</p>
<p>  Moreover, even had there been an ambiguity in the contract the record unequivocally confirms that the agreement was drafted by one of the borrowers and so should be construed against them and in favor of the lender.   See Home Savings of America, F.A. v. Roehner, 491 So.2d 612 (Fla. 4th DCA  1986);  Finlayson v. Broward County, 471 So.2d 67 (Fla. 4th DCA 1985).</p>
<p> On this point, then, the case must be remanded to the trial court for calculations of an award to Mason consistent with this opinion.</p>
<p><b>CONCLUSION</b><br />
 Because this court holds that the trial court correctly found the contract in issue was neither champertous nor usurious and that the suit was not filed beyond the statute of limitations, the case is affirmed on those issues. Because the trial court erred in calculating the recovery to which Mason is entitled, the case is reversed on that issue.<br />
 AFFIRMED, in part;  REVERSED in part and REMANDED.</p>
<p><b>GUNTHER, C.J., and SHAHOOD, J., concur.<br />
Fla.App. 4 Dist.,1996.<br />
Kraft v. Mason</b></p>
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		<title>Rancman</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2011 16:29:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Lawsuit Settlement Funding</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Court Decisions]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Rancman vs Interim Settlement Funding Corp Rancman, Appellee, v. Interim Settlement Funding Corporation et al., Appellants. [Cite as Rancman v. Interim Settlement Funding Corp., 99 Ohio St.3d 121, 2003-Ohio-2721.] Commercial transactions &#8211; Small loans &#8211; Attorneys at law &#8211; Contracts &#8211; Contract making the repayment of funds advanced to a party to a pending case [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Rancman vs Interim Settlement Funding Corp</p>
<p><b>Rancman, Appellee, v. Interim Settlement Funding<br />
Corporation et al., Appellants.</b><br />
[Cite as Rancman v. Interim Settlement Funding Corp., 99 Ohio St.3d 121,<br />
2003-Ohio-2721.]<br />
Commercial transactions &#8211; Small loans &#8211; Attorneys at law &#8211; Contracts &#8211; Contract<br />
making the repayment of funds advanced to a party to a pending case contingent<br />
upon the outcome of that case is void as champerty and maintenance.<br />
(No. 2001-2154 &#8211; Submitted January 21, 2003 &#8211; Decided June 11, 2003.)<br />
Appeal from the Court of Appeals for Summit County, No. 20523, 2001-Ohio-1669.<br />
__________________<br />
<b>Syllabus of the Court</b><br />
Except as otherwise permitted by legislative enactment or the Code of<br />
Professional Responsibility, a contract making the repayment of funds advanced<br />
to a party to a pending case contingent upon the outcome of that case is void as<br />
champerty and maintenance.<br />
__________________<br />
<b>O&#8217;Connor, J. </b><br />
1. We are asked to address whether a nonrecourse advance of funds secured solely<br />
by an interest in a pending lawsuit and at a contracted return exceeding 180<br />
percent per year is permissible under Ohio law. We hold that it is not. Such an<br />
agreement constitutes champerty and maintenance and thus is void under Ohio law.<br />
<br />
I <br />
2. Roberta Rancman, appellee, was seriously injured as a passenger in a<br />
one-vehicle collision in the early hours of March 1, 1998. Rancman filed suit in<br />
March 1999 against State Farm Insurance Company, claiming uninsured motorist<br />
benefits under a motor vehicle policy issued to her estranged husband. <br />
3. Rancman was unwilling to wait until the resolution of her case against State<br />
Farm to receive the insurance proceeds. In April 1999, Rancman contacted<br />
appellant Interim Settlement Funding Corp. (&quot;Interim&quot;), seeking an advance of<br />
funds secured by her pending claim. In April 1999, after investigating Rancman&#8217;s<br />
case, Interim&#8217;s president, on behalf of a second company, appellant Future<br />
Settlement Funding Corporation (&quot;FSF&quot;), forwarded $6,000 to Rancman in exchange<br />
for the first $16,800 she would recover if the case was resolved within 12<br />
months, $22,200 if resolved within 18 months, or $27,600 if resolved within 24<br />
months. If the case was not resolved in Rancman&#8217;s favor, she had no obligation<br />
under the contract. <br />
4. In September 1999, Interim advanced an additional $1,000 to Rancman, which<br />
was secured by the next $2,800 she expected to collect on her claim. The Interim<br />
agreement was also without recourse if Rancman did not recover in the State Farm<br />
action. <br />
5. Rancman settled her case against State Farm for $100,000 within 12 months of<br />
entering the agreement with FSF. Rancman refused payment on the contracts;<br />
instead, she tendered the return of the moneys advanced to her at eight percent<br />
interest per annum. In December 1999, Rancman filed suit against Interim and<br />
FSF, seeking rescission of the contracts and a declaratory judgment that the<br />
defendants&#8217; practices were &quot;unfair, deceptive, and unconscionable sales<br />
practices * * *.&quot; <br />
6. The case proceeded to a two-day trial before a magistrate. The magistrate<br />
concluded that the transactions were loans that violated Ohio&#8217;s usury law and<br />
provisions of R.C. Chapter 1321, the Small Loan Act. The common pleas court<br />
adopted the magistrate&#8217;s findings and ordered the repayment of the principal at<br />
eight-percent interest per annum. The Court of Appeals for Summit County agreed<br />
that the transactions were loans subject to R.C. Chapter 1321.1 As neither<br />
Interim nor FSF had obtained a license pursuant to R.C. Chapter 1321, the court<br />
found the loans to be void under R.C. 1321.02. This holding prohibited the<br />
appellants from collecting &quot;any principal, interest, or charges.&quot; <br />
7. The case is now before this court upon our allowance of Interim and FSF&#8217;s<br />
discretionary appeal. <br />
II <br />
8. Rancman argues, and the courts below held, that certain contingent advances<br />
on settlements are impermissible loans because the appellants incurred virtually<br />
no risk in the transactions and because the potential profit on the advances<br />
exceeds the legally permissible interest rate. Interim and FSF adamantly contend<br />
that the advances are investments, not loans, and note that there is no statute<br />
limiting the return on an investment. <br />
9. It is unnecessary for the resolution of this case to determine the threshold<br />
level of risk necessary for a contingent advance to be treated as an investment<br />
rather than a loan. The advances here are void as champerty and maintenance<br />
regardless of whether they are loans or investments. <br />
10. &quot;Maintenance&quot; is assistance to a litigant in pursuing or defending a lawsuit<br />
provided by someone who does not have a bona fide interest in the case.<br />
&quot;Champerty&quot; is a form of maintenance in which a nonparty undertakes to further<br />
another&#8217;s interest in a suit in exchange for a part of the litigated matter if a<br />
favorable result ensues. 14 Ohio Jurisprudence 3d (1995), Champerty and<br />
Maintenance, Section 1. &quot;The doctrines of champerty and maintenance were<br />
developed at common law to prevent officious intermeddlers from stirring up<br />
strife and contention by vexatious and speculative litigation which would<br />
disturb the peace of society, lead to corrupt practices, and prevent the<br />
remedial process of the law.&quot; 14 Corpus Juris Secondum (1991), Champerty and<br />
Maintenance, Section 3. See, also, Bluebird Partners, L.P. v. First Fid. Bank,<br />
N.A. (2000), 94 N.Y.2d 726, 709 N.Y.S.2d 865, 731 N.E.2d 581. <br />
11. The ancient practices of champerty and maintenance have been vilified in<br />
Ohio since the early years of our statehood. Key v. Vattier (1823), 1 Ohio 132,<br />
136, 1823 WL 8. We stated in Key that maintenance &quot;is an offense against public<br />
justice, as it keeps alive strife and contention, and perverts the remedial<br />
process of the law into an engine of oppression.&quot; Id. at 143. We have held the<br />
assignment of rights to a lawsuit to be void as champerty. Brown v. Ginn (1902),<br />
66 Ohio St. 316, 64 N.E. 123, paragraph two of the syllabus. We have also said<br />
&quot;that the law of Ohio will tolerate no lien in or out of the [legal] profession,<br />
as a general rule, which will prevent litigants from compromising, or settling<br />
their controversies, or which, in its tendencies, encourages, promotes, or<br />
extends litigation.&quot; Davy v. Fid. &amp; Cas. Ins. Co. (1908), 78 Ohio St. 256,<br />
268-269, 85 N.E. 504. <br />
12. In recent years, champerty and maintenance have lain dormant in Ohio courts.<br />
Historically, champertors and maintainors were attorneys, and these practices by<br />
attorneys have been regulated by DR 5-103 of the Code of Professional<br />
Responsibility. See, e.g., Disciplinary Counsel v. Williams (1990), 51 Ohio<br />
St.3d 36, 553 N.E.2d 1082. Nonetheless, the codification of these doctrines for<br />
attorney discipline did not remove them from the common law. &quot;[T]he doctrines of<br />
champerty and maintenance appear in numerous Ohio cases as contract defenses * *<br />
*.&quot; Tosi v. Jones (1996), 115 Ohio App.3d 396, 400, 685 N.E.2d 580, appeal<br />
dismissed upon the application of appellant in (1997), 78 Ohio St.3d 1430, 676<br />
N.E.2d 535. <br />
13. For example, the Sixth District Court of Appeals voided an agreement as<br />
champerty and maintenance where a company in the business of locating heirs to<br />
unclaimed estates contracted with potential heirs for one-third of their<br />
eventual inheritance. Finders Diversified, Inc. v. Baugh (Apr. 20, 1984), Lucas<br />
App. No. L-83-424, 1984 WL 7841. That court voided the agreement because the<br />
company agreed to pay the costs associated with locating and collecting from the<br />
estate (maintenance) and because the company would receive a stake in the heirs&#8217;<br />
claims (champerty). <br />
14. The advances sub judice constitute champerty because FSF and Interim sought<br />
to profit from Rancman&#8217;s case. They also constitute maintenance because FSF and<br />
Interim each purchased a share of a suit to which they did not have an<br />
independent interest; and because the agreements provided Rancman with a<br />
disincentive to settle her case. <br />
15. The $6,000 advance, for example, gave FSF the right to the first $16,800 of<br />
the settlement after fees, expenses, and superior liens, if the State Farm case<br />
settled within 12 months. If there had not been any superior liens on Rancman&#8217;s<br />
settlement and her attorney had charged a 30-percent contingency fee, Rancman<br />
would not have received any funds from a settlement of $24,000 or less. This<br />
calculation gives Rancman an absolute disincentive to settle for $24,000 or less<br />
because she would keep the $6,000 advance regardless of whether she settles with<br />
State Farm and would not receive any additional money from a $24,000 settlement.<br />
<br />
16. Under the same facts, the $1,000 Interim advance would provide a settlement<br />
disincentive of an additional $4,000. Thus, with no liens and a 30-percent<br />
attorney fee, the $7,000 advanced to Rancman effectively bars her from<br />
considering a settlement offer of up to $28,000. <br />
17. These advances also affect settlement offers greater than $28,000. Suppose<br />
Rancman decides that she will settle for nothing less than $80,000 minus<br />
attorney fees. Because of the obligation to repay the advances, she would refuse<br />
to settle until State Farm offers $98,000.2 If the settlement advance agreements<br />
are enforced, Rancman must receive an $18,000 premium on a settlement offer to<br />
have the same incentive to settle that she would have had if she had not entered<br />
into the agreements with FSF and Interim. This can prolong litigation and reduce<br />
settlement incentives-an evil that prohibitions against maintenance seek to<br />
eliminate. Cf. Cleveland Bar Assn. v. Nusbaum (2001), 93 Ohio St.3d 150, 151,<br />
753 N.E.2d 183 (Lundberg Stratton, J., concurring). <br />
18. Equally troubling is a champertor&#8217;s earning a handsome profit by speculating<br />
in a lawsuit and by potentially manipulating a party to the suit. Key, 1 Ohio at<br />
146. The FSF agreement reads, &quot;[Rancman] acknowledges and fully understands that<br />
FSF may, will, and should make a substantial profit on this agreement.&quot; However,<br />
a lawsuit is not an investment vehicle. Speculating in lawsuits is prohibited by<br />
Ohio law. An intermeddler is not permitted to gorge upon the fruits of<br />
litigation. <br />
19. Except as otherwise permitted by legislative enactment or the Code of<br />
Professional Responsibility, a contract making the repayment of funds advanced<br />
to a party to a pending case contingent upon the outcome of that case is void as<br />
champerty and maintenance. Such an advance constitutes champerty and maintenance<br />
because it gives a nonparty an impermissible interest in a suit, impedes the<br />
settlement of the underlying case, and promotes speculation in lawsuits. The<br />
advances made to Rancman constituted champerty and maintenance. Consequently,<br />
the contracts requiring their repayment are void and shall not be enforced. Gen.<br />
Film Co. v. Sampliner (C.A.6, 1916), 232 F. 95, 99. <br />
20. Therefore, we affirm the judgment of the court of appeals. <br />
Judgment affirmed.<br />
Moyer, C.J., F.E. Sweeney, Pfeifer and Lundberg Stratton, JJ., concur.<br />
Resnick and Christley, JJ., concur separately.<br />
Judith A. Christley, J., of the Eleventh Appellate District, sitting for Cook,<br />
J.<br />
__________________<br />
<b>Christley, J., concurring. </b><br />
21. Although I concur with the majority&#8217;s judgment, I write separately to<br />
emphasize the following point. <br />
22. It appears from the record that neither party has addressed whether the<br />
doctrines of champerty and maintenance are applicable to the matter currently<br />
before the court. Accordingly, I believe a better course of action would have<br />
been to allow the parties the opportunity to submit additional briefing on this<br />
issue. Having said that, however, I agree with the majority&#8217;s ultimate<br />
conclusion that the protections embodied in champerty and maintenance prohibit<br />
contracts such as the ones presented here. <br />
Resnick, J., concurs in the foregoing concurring opinion.<br />
__________________<br />
Slater &amp; Zurz and Walter Kaufmann, for appellee.<br />
Brouse McDowell, L.P.A., Robert M. Stefancin and Rebecca A. Kucera, for<br />
appellants Interim Settlement Funding Corp. and Future Settlement Funding Corp.<br />
Connie J. Elliano, for appellant Future Settlement Funding Corp.<br />
Todd W. Sleggs &amp; Associates and Todd W. Sleggs, urging reversal for amicus<br />
curiae Todd W. Sleggs.<br />
Andrew T. Savage, urging reversal for amici curiae LawFunds, L.L.C.; Cambridge<br />
Management Group, L.L.C.; Capital Transaction Group, Inc.; ExpertFunding.com<br />
Corporation; Funding Office, Inc.; Future Funding of Utah, Inc.; Future<br />
Settlement Funding of South Carolina, Inc.; Budget Fast Cash, L.L.C.;<br />
LawsuitFunding.com, Inc.; Litigation Funding, Inc.; Plaintiff Support Services,<br />
Inc.; Pre-Settlement Funding Corp.; and Shree Rajendra Corp., d.b.a. Settlement<br />
Financial Group.<br />
&nbsp;</font></p>
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		<title>Osprey</title>
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		<pubDate>Tue, 15 Mar 2011 16:28:03 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description><![CDATA[Osprey, Inc. et al., v. Cabana Limited Partnership et al., (2000) Shearouse Adv. Sh. No. S.E. 2d Shearouse Adv. Sh. No. THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA In The Supreme Court Osprey, Inc. and W. Andrew Leheup, Petitioners, v. Cabana Limited Partnership, a South Carolina limited partnership; Maritime Development Corp., a South Carolina corporation; Bluewater Associates; [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Osprey, Inc. et al., v. Cabana Limited Partnership et al., (2000)</p>
<p>Shearouse Adv. Sh. No. <br />
S.E. 2d<br />
</font></b><br />
<b><font size="2">Shearouse Adv. Sh. No. <br />
THE STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA<br />
In The Supreme Court</font></b></p>
<p><b><font size="2">Osprey, Inc. and W.<br />
Andrew Leheup, Petitioners,<br />
v.<br />
Cabana Limited Partnership, a South Carolina limited partnership; Maritime<br />
Development Corp., a South Carolina corporation; Bluewater Associates; William<br />
J.Reiner; Tompkins &amp; McMaster, a South Carolina general partnership; George<br />
Hunter McMaster, and Henry Dargan McMaster, Defendants, of whom Cabana Limited<br />
Partnership, Maritime Development Corp., Bluewater Associates, and William J.<br />
Reiner are Respondents.</font></b></p>
<p><font size="2">ON WRIT OF CERTIORARI<br />
TO THE COURT OF APPEALS</p>
<p>
Appeal From Richland County <br />
R. Markley Dennis, Jr., Circuit Court Judge</p>
<p>Opinion No. 25124<br />
Heard March 9, 2000 &#8211; Filed May 15, 2000</p>
<p>AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED</font></p>
<p><font size="2">A. Camden Lewis and Mark W. Hardee of Lewis, <br />
Babcock &amp; Hawkins, L.L.P, Columbia, for petitioners.</p>
<p>Nelda T. Smyrl of Columbia and George Hunter<br />
McMaster of Tompkins &amp; McMaster, Columbia, for <br />
respondents.</p>
<p>JUSTICE WALLER: This case raises the issue of the continuing vitality of the<br />
common law doctrine of champerty, an issue this Court has not substantively<br />
addressed since 1830. The circuit court dismissed certain actions in a lawsuit<br />
brought by Osprey, Inc., and Andrew Leheup (&quot;Plaintiffs&quot;) against Cabana Limited<br />
Partnership, Maritime Development Corp., Bluewater Associates, and William J.<br />
Reiner (&quot;Defendants&quot;). The Court ofAppeals affirmed in part, reversed in part,<br />
and remanded the case for further inquiry. Osprey, Inc. v. Cabana Limited<br />
Partnership, 333 S.C. 323, 509 S.E.2d 275 (Ct. App. 1998), overruled on other<br />
grounds by I&#8217;On v. Town of Mt. Pleasant, Op. No. 25048 (S.C. Sup. Ct. filed Jan.<br />
17, 2000) (Shearouse Adv. Sh. No. 2 at 1). We granted Plaintiffs&#8217; petition for a<br />
writ of certiorari to review the Court of Appeals&#8217; decision. We affirm as<br />
modified.</p>
<p>FACTS<br />
Cabana Limited Partnership was a plaintiff in a lender liability action filed in<br />
federal district court in South Carolina against Greyhound Real Estate Financing<br />
Co. and others. Two years into the federal case, with litigation expenses<br />
surpassing $100,000, Cabana attorney George H. McMaster asked Plaintiffs for a<br />
loan to help pay the expenses. McMaster&#8217;s firm, Tompkins &amp; McMaster, had<br />
represented Plaintiffs in other matters. Plaintiffs agreed in March 1993 to lend<br />
$50,000 to Defendants Cabana, Maritime, Bluewater, andReiner. That agreement<br />
provided, in pertinent part:<br />
The parties acknowledge each to the other that there exists a certain Lawsuit<br />
between Cabana Limited Partnership vs. Greyhound Real Estate Finance Company, et<br />
al., and that in consideration for the advancement of the funds above, the Fifty<br />
Thousand and no/100 ($50,000.00) Dollars, Osprey, Inc. is buying an interest in<br />
that said Lawsuit. If said Lawsuit is settled or tried with a verdict in excess<br />
of Fifty Thousand and no/100 Dollars ($50,000.00) Dollars, Osprey, Inc. will<br />
receive the sum of the amount of the verdict up to a maximum of One Hundred<br />
Fifty Thousand and no/100 ($150,000.00) Dollars and the<br />
Note will be considered satisfied and paid in full. If the Lawsuit is never<br />
settled or if tried and the outcome is not in favor of Cabana Limited<br />
Partnership in an<br />
amount of One Hundred Fifty Thousand and no/100 ($150,000.00) Dollars or more,<br />
then the Debtor will remain obligated for the Note [in the] amount of the<br />
Settlement or verdict but in no event less than Fifty Thousand and no/100<br />
($50,000.00) Dollars.<br />
In related loan documents, Defendants Bluewater and Cabana signed a promissory<br />
note in the amount of $50,000, bearing an annual interest rate of 15 percent, to<br />
Plaintiff Osprey; Defendant Reiner personally guaranteed the loan; Reiner<br />
assigned all his right and interest in the first $150,000 of gross proceeds from<br />
the federal lawsuit to Osprey; and Bluewater assigned its interest in certain<br />
timeshare notes and mortgages to Osprey to serve as collateral for the loan.<br />
In January 1994, the parties settled the federal case and entered into a sealed<br />
settlement agreement. Plaintiffs sought repayment of the loan upon learning of<br />
the settlement. Defendants asserted they were prohibited from revealing the<br />
terms of the settlement and refused to repay the loan. The federal court<br />
ultimately granted Plaintiffs&#8217; request to disclose the settlement agreement,<br />
and Plaintiffs discovered that Defendants had received $650,000. Tompkins &amp;<br />
McMaster was paid $200,000 for attorney&#8217;s fees and the remainder was placed in<br />
escrow.<br />
The settlement agreement required Greyhound, the defendant in the federal<br />
lawsuit, to pay $650,000 directly to Tompkins &amp; McMaster as compensation for<br />
legal services in five related cases, including Cabana&#8217;s. The agreement<br />
prohibited any payment to Cabana, and required Tompkins &amp; McMaster to hold<br />
$450,000 in escrow pending the resolution of tax levies filed against Cabana by<br />
the Internal Revenue Service. Tompkins &amp; McMaster v.United States, No.<br />
95-1882,1996 WL 389483,1996 U.S. App. LEXIS 17118 (4th Cir. July 12, 1996)<br />
(unpublished opinion).</p>
<p>Tompkins &amp; McMaster filed a federal lawsuit to clarify its rights to the<br />
$450,000. The firm argued that no tax levy attached to the proceeds because<br />
Cabana received nothing from the settlement and had no right to legal fees<br />
received by the firm. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, in affirming the<br />
district court&#8217;s dismissal of the case, rejected Tompkins &amp; McMaster&#8217;s argument.<br />
Although the money was not paid directly to Cabana, it was paid to the firm on<br />
Cabana&#8217;s behalf and for its benefit. Thus, the $650,000 represented Cabana&#8217;s<br />
proceeds from the federal litigation. Tompkins &amp; McMaster, supra. Defendants<br />
assert the IRS matter has since been resolved in favor of Greyhound and Tompkins<br />
&amp; McMaster, and against the IRS.<br />
Plaintiffs filed suit in state court to enforce the loan agreement. Defendants<br />
moved to dismiss the complaint under Rule 12(b)(6), SCRCP, because the agreement<br />
was champertous on its face and consequently unenforceable. The circuit judge<br />
granted Defendants&#8217; motion to dismiss as champertous the causes of action for<br />
breach of contract, breach of contract of assignment, and breach of contract<br />
accompanied by a fraudulent act. </p>
<p>Plaintiffs appealed. Reviewing the matter as a motion for summary judgment<br />
pursuant to Rule 12(c), SCRCP, the Court of Appeals affirmed the circuit judge&#8217;s<br />
ruling that South Carolina recognizes the doctrine of champerty. However, the<br />
Court of Appeals reversed the judge&#8217;s ruling that the loan of fiduciary duty by<br />
the attorneys, and fraud to proceed because they were not barred as champertous.<br />
Those actions are still pending below.<br />
ISSUE<br />
Does South Carolina recognize the common law doctrine of champerty and, if so,<br />
does it remain a viable defense to the enforcement of the loan agreement in<br />
this case?<br />
STANDARD OF REVIEW<br />
This case raises a novel question of law. We are free to decide a question of<br />
law with no particular deference to the lower court. See S.C. Const. art. V, §§5<br />
and 9; S.C. Code Ann. §§ 14-3-320 and -330 (1976 &amp; Supp.1999); S.C. Code Ann. §<br />
14-8-200 (Supp. 1999) (granting Supreme Court and Court of Appeals the<br />
jurisdiction to correct errors of law in both law and equity actions);<br />
I&#8217;On v. Town of Mt. Pleasant, Op. No. 25048 (S.C. Sup. Ct. filed Jan. 17, 2000)<br />
(Shearouse Adv. Sh. No. 2 at 1).<br />
DISCUSSION<br />
Plaintiffs contend the Court of Appeals erred in holding that South Carolina<br />
recognizes the doctrine of champerty. They assert that champerty is not and<br />
should not be recognized because it is rooted in feudal England. It is an<br />
outdated concept no longer needed in twenty-first century America, Plaintiffs<br />
argue. They urge the Court to refuse to recognize champerty and enforce the<br />
entire agreement as it was written.</p>
<p>Defendants assert the Court has long recognized champerty, should continue to<br />
recognize it, and should apply it in this case to nullify the entire loan<br />
agreement &#8211; including the $50,000 note and guarantee &#8211; because it is champertous<br />
as a matter of law.<br />
We agree with the Court of Appeals that this Court previously has recognized the<br />
common law doctrine of champerty. Osprey, 333 S.C. at 329-30, 509 S.E.2d at 277<br />
(citing S.C. Code Ann. § 14-1-50 (1977), which provides that &quot;[a]ll, and every<br />
part, of the common law of England, where it is not altered by the Code or<br />
inconsistent with the Constitution or laws of this State, is hereby continued in<br />
full force and effect in the same manner as before the adoption of this<br />
section&quot;).<br />
Champerty is defined as a bargain by a person with a plaintiff or a defendant<br />
for a portion of the matter involved in a suit in the event of a successful<br />
termination of the action, which the person undertakes to maintain or carry on<br />
at his own expense. State v. Chitty, 17 S.C. Law (1 Bail.) 379, 400 (1830); 14<br />
C.J.S. Champerty and Maintenance §2 (1991); 14 Am.Jur.2d Champerty and<br />
Maintenance § 3 (1964). A champertor is one who purchases an interest in the<br />
outcome of a case in which he has no interest otherwise. A champertous agreement<br />
is unlawful and void where the rule of champerty is recognized, and the tainted<br />
agreement is unenforceable. 14 C.J.S. Champerty and Maintenance §17; 14<br />
Am.Jur.2d Champerty and Maintenance § 7.<br />
Barratry (or barretry) is the offense of frequently exciting and stirring up<br />
quarrels and suits between other individuals. Chitty, supra; 14 C.J.S. Champerty<br />
and Maintenance § 2; Black&#8217;s Law Dictionary 150 (1990). Champerty and barratry<br />
have been described as forms of maintenance, which is defined as &quot;an officious<br />
intermeddling in a suit that in no way belongs to one, by maintaining or<br />
assisting either party. with money or otherwise, to prosecute or defend [the<br />
suit].&quot; 14 C.J.S. Champerty and Maintenance § 2(b); 14 Am.Jur.2d Champerty and<br />
Maintenance § 2.<br />
As explained by the United States Supreme Court, &quot;[p]ut simply, maintenance is<br />
helping another prosecute a suit; champerty is maintaining a suit in return for<br />
a financial interest in the outcome; and barratry is a continuing practice of<br />
maintenance or champerty.&quot; In re Primus, 436 U.S. 412, 424 n.15, 98 S.Ct. 1893,<br />
1900 n.15, 56 L.Ed.2d 417, 429 n.15 (1978). &quot;The laws against champerty,<br />
maintenance, and barratry are aimed at the prevention of multitudinous and<br />
useless lawsuits and at the prevention of speculation in lawsuits.&quot; 14 C.J.S.<br />
Champerty and Maintenance § 2.<br />
The origins of the doctrine of champerty are found in medieval England. Claims<br />
and rights in those days were not freely assignable. Under English common law,<br />
the public policy originally was so strongly opposed to champerty and<br />
maintenance that assignments of a cause of action, so as to give the assignee<br />
any right to bring suit in his own name, generally were forbidden. Noland v.<br />
Law, 170 S.C. 345, 353, 170 S.E. 439, 442 (1933). &quot;[T]he offense of maintenance<br />
was a broad one . . . and was so abhorred that it formed one basis for the<br />
prohibition against assigning choses in action&quot; until the nineteenth century.<br />
Son v. Margolius, 709 A.2d 112, 120 (Md. 1998) (quoting 4 William Blackstone,<br />
Commentaries on the Laws of England).<br />
To overcome such impediments, wealthy people obtained interests in legal claims,<br />
agreeing to pay the litigant&#8217;s expenses in exchange for a share </p>
<p>Legal historians have traced the roots of champerty back to the Greek and Roman<br />
civilizations when the predecessors of modern lawyers were required to<br />
demonstrate a &quot;personal connection&quot; to a litigant before speaking on his behalf.<br />
Since ancient times, political allies have joined together to harass their<br />
enemies with vexatious litigation. Those who did so were known as &quot;sycophants&quot;<br />
in ancient Greece, &quot;calumniators&quot; in ancient Rome, and &quot;maintainers&quot; in medieval<br />
England. Max Radin, Maintenance by Champerty, 24 Cal. L. R. 48, 50-53 (1935);<br />
Elliott Associates. L.P. v. Banco de la Nacion, 194 F.3d 363, 372 (2d Cir.1999)<br />
(&quot; [c] ommentators have traced the doctrine of champerty, and its doctrinal<br />
near-cousins of maintenance and barratry, back to Greek and Roman law, through<br />
the English law of the Middle Ages, and into the statutory or common law of many<br />
of the states&quot;). of the results if successful. Such claims often involved title<br />
to land, which meant that a person with capital could grow richer by becoming a<br />
joint owner of a landed estate. Champertors, both the wealthy and those desiring<br />
to become wealthy, financed the claims of the others, often the poor and the<br />
dispossessed, against people upon whom the champertors sought to inflict<br />
financial or political injury. Feudal magnates had numerous retainers, including<br />
professional maintainers, who brought suits financed by the magnate. Those<br />
maintainers took all necessary steps to win, including the employment of bullies<br />
to prevent an opponent from appearing in court at a critical moment. Champerty<br />
was a &quot;means by which powerful men aggrandized their estates and the background<br />
was unquestionably that of private war.&quot; Max Radin, Maintenance by Champerty, 24<br />
Cal. L. Rev. 48, 58-64 (1935); see also Percy H. Winfield, TheHistory of<br />
Maintenance and Champerty, 35 Law Quarterly R. 50, 57-68 (1919); R.D. Cox,<br />
Champerty As We Know It, 13 Memphis St. U. L. R. 139, 143-60 (1983).</p>
<p>Neither secular nor clerical medieval courts were able to prevent or police such<br />
agreements. Collusion among the landed gentry, sheriffs, judicial officials, and<br />
the king&#8217;s ministers to obtain money and land through the maintenance of a<br />
stranger&#8217;s lawsuit was rampant in medieval England. Radin, supra; Winfield,<br />
supra; Cox, supra. King after king tried to eradicate the practice, but never<br />
wholly succeeded because those who were called upon to enforce the law often<br />
were the worst offenders. Winfield, supra, at 65.<br />
Legal historians view champerty as a final &quot;flaring up&quot; of the feudal era, a<br />
last-ditch effort of feudal lords to combat the limits and framework of the<br />
monarchy. It embodied a resistance of the moneyed class to capitalistic forces<br />
that had begun to take root across Europe in the eleventh and twelfth centuries.<br />
Radin, supra, at 64-66.<br />
Efforts to prevent champerty and maintenance were grounded in several concerns:<br />
the king&#8217;s desire to prevent litigation involving his own interests or those of<br />
his supporters; clerical opposition to litigation generally, especially in<br />
secular courts; a general dislike of usury, or the practice of loaning money at<br />
interest; and the belief that litigation was, in itself, an undesirable and<br />
distasteful-affair, regardless of the merits of a lawsuit. Radin, supra, 60-67.<br />
With that background, this Court&#8217;s strong language and unequivocal condemnation<br />
of champerty evident in State v. Chitty, supra, is understandable.<br />
In Chitty, the defendant magistrate, an attorney, was found guilty of the crime<br />
of barratry. The magistrate constantly urged people to swear out warrants and<br />
cross-warrants in order to generate additional fees for himself. In affirming<br />
the conviction, the majority stated that some authorities suggest that if a man<br />
lay out money, in behalf of another in suits at law to recover a just right, he<br />
is not a barretor,and that he may do this in respect of the poverty of the<br />
party. Some subsequent writers also, losing sight of the reason of the rule,<br />
have laid it down, generally, that it was not barretry to spend money in<br />
promoting the suit of another to recover a just right. But . . . in the case<br />
referred to, it is expressly laid down, that if one lend money to promote and<br />
stir up suits, he is a barretor. . .The busybody, the deceiver, the vile knave,<br />
or unthrift, who excites others to litigation, with an intention to vex, and<br />
oppress, and by this means extort money, is . . . an offender against public<br />
justice. <br />
Maintenance, it seems, is a species of barretry; and champerty, and conspiracy<br />
belong to the same class of offences, and yet it never entered into the mind of<br />
any man, that he who unlawfully maintained a suit, bargained to divide the<br />
field, or conspired with others, was less a maintainer, champertor, or<br />
conspirator, because the cause was just [and not rooted in a selfish or<br />
oppressive motive] . . . . The temple erected and consecrated to Justice is not,<br />
however, to be polluted with impunity, by those who would prostitute the rules<br />
regulating its police to base and unworthy purposes&#8230; The pursuit of right,<br />
whether public or private, can never be an offence; where justice alone is the<br />
end in view; but every perversion of the machinery of the law to other purposes,<br />
by coupling it with improper objects, is reprehensible. Hence if one lay out<br />
money in the prosecution of a suit to recover a close, of which his poor<br />
neighbor has been deprived, and without which he must lose it, he is no<br />
champertor, because, right, humanity, and justice would approve it: but if he do<br />
it upon a stipulation, that he shall receive one half of the field, if it be<br />
recovered, he is, according to the legal definition of this offence, a<br />
champertor. Chitty,17 S.C., Law (1 Bail.) at 399-401. The Chitty court, then,<br />
plainly believed champerty was a perverse practice that should be eradicated as<br />
a matter of public policy, regardless of whether the champertor&#8217;s motive is to<br />
see justice done or merely financial gain for himself.<br />
We have found only two cases other than Chitty which reveal much about this<br />
Court&#8217;s past view of champerty. In Cooke v. Pool, 25 S.C. 593 (1886), the Court<br />
rejected a champerty argument. The Court appeared much less disturbed by signs<br />
of champerty than the Chitty court had been fifty-six years earlier.<br />
In Cooke, a plaintiff who obtained a default judgment assigned it to attorney<br />
Thompson Cooke for $100. Thompson Cooke, who was not an interested party in the<br />
litigation that resulted in the default judgment, then assigned the judgment to<br />
his brother, Henry Cooke, in payment of a debt. The defendants asserted Henry<br />
could not enforce the judgment because the original assignment of the judgment<br />
to Thompson was champertous.<br />
The Cooke court disagreed. The Court concluded that, although Thompson probably<br />
could not have sought to enforce the judgment because the transfer to him was<br />
champertous and in violation of a statute, Thompson&#8217;s assignment to brother<br />
Henry was not void for champerty. The Court found that the record supported the<br />
lower court&#8217;s finding that Henry was a bonafide holder of a regular and valid<br />
assignment who had no notice of the tainted title. <br />
This Court appeared similarly unfazed by medieval notions of 45 S.E. 146 (1903)<br />
(concluding an assignment by the husband of a lawsuit he initially brought to<br />
his wife was not champertous because they were &quot;still regarded as one in law&quot;;<br />
furthermore, the money which the husband had sought to recover was the wife&#8217;s<br />
inheritance); Fraser &amp; Dill v. Charleston, 13 S.C. 533, 545 (1880) (concluding<br />
devisees&#8217; assignment to City of Charleston of rights relating to stock issued by<br />
the city, after the stock was fraudulently conveyed by the testator&#8217;s personal<br />
representative, was not a champertous agreement; city as a proper assignee had<br />
right to take legal action to protect the thing assigned).<br />
Champerty frequently is raised when it really is not an issue at all because an<br />
agreement involves a party who, in the modern view, has a valid interest in a<br />
lawsuit. See e.g., In re Perrysburg Marketplace Co., 208 B.R. 148 (Bankr. N.D.<br />
Ohio 1997) (prosecution of secured claim against Chapter 11 debtor-mortgagor by<br />
mortgagee, which had purchased debtor&#8217;s loan from Resolution Trust Corporation,<br />
did not constitute champerty); Schwartz v. Eliades, 939 P.2d 1034 (Nev. 1997)<br />
(agreement between two cab company owners to share litigation expenses and any<br />
proceeds in defamation suit, where other owners assigned their interest in the<br />
suit to the two, was not champertous because neither owner was a stranger to the<br />
lawsuit); Rienhardt v. Kelly, 917 P.2d 963 (N.M. Ct. App. 1996) (agreement by<br />
testator&#8217;s son with residuary beneficiary of testator&#8217;s will, in which son<br />
agreed to pay for beneficiary&#8217;s litigation costs in suit to dispute validity of<br />
agreement between decedent and another for purchase of ranch for nominal amount<br />
of money, was not champertous given that son, as heir of testator, had property<br />
interest in lawsuit).<br />
As the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court has explained, &quot;[i]f a party has an<br />
interest independent of and prior to the allegedly champertous arrangement, or<br />
even the possibility of an interest, in the subject litigated, the agreement to<br />
carry on the litigation at his own expense in consideration of having part of<br />
the recovery is not champertous and illegal.&quot; Berman v. Linnane, 679 N.E.2d 174,<br />
177 (Mass. 1997).<br />
champerty when it found an English statute enacted by Henry VIII, which was<br />
intended to prevent champertous conveyances, inapplicable in South Carolina.<br />
Poyas v. Wilkins, 46 S.C.L. (12 Rich.) 420, 428 (1860) (a conveyance of land by<br />
one out of possession is not void for champerty).<br />
In this case, the Court of Appeals remanded the matter for further inquiry into<br />
whether &quot;Plaintiffs, in lending the Defendants money for litigation expenses,<br />
engaged in officious intermeddling with the intention to stir up strife or<br />
otherwise unnecessarily prolong a lawsuit.&quot; Osprey, 333 S.C. at 330-31, 509<br />
S.E.2d at 279.<br />
The Court of Appeals relied on three cases from other jurisdictions. In two of<br />
those, it appears the court rejected the champerty argument because the alleged<br />
champertor was not really a champertor at all under a modern view of the<br />
assignability of rights, but actually had a legitimate interest in the action.<br />
See Temeron, Inc. v. Ferraro Energy Corp., 861 P.2d 319, 325-26 (Okla Ct. App.<br />
1993) (alleged champertor had the right, under a consulting contract it signed<br />
with gas supplier to review supplier&#8217;s records, to bring suit on supplier&#8217;s<br />
behalf to recover underpayments and retain percentage of proceeds; court<br />
reversed ummary judgment for defendant on grounds of champerty, recognizing the<br />
alleged champertor had a legitimate interest in the matter); Giambattista<br />
v.Nat&#8217;l Bank of Commerce of Seattle, 586 P.2d 1180, 1186-88 (Wash. Ct. App.<br />
1978) (alleged champertor was a money broker who agreed to pay litigation<br />
expenses for its client depositors whose certified checks were not handled<br />
properly by a bank; court reversed grant of summary judgment for defendant on<br />
grounds of hamperty, recognizing the alleged champertor had a legitimate<br />
interest in the matter); see also cases cited in footnote 3.<br />
A third case cited by the Court of Appeals is quite similar to the present case.<br />
In Kraft v. Mason, 668 So.2d 679 (Fla. Dist. Ct. App. 1996), a sister loaned her<br />
brother $100,000 to pay litigation expenses in an ongoing antitrust lawsuit. The<br />
loan agreement called for the sister to receive interest on the loan, plus a<br />
declining percentage of any settlement or judgment obtained. After the case<br />
settled for more than $5 million, the brother reneged on the deal because of an<br />
unrelated family dispute with his sister. He refused to pay some $355,000 he<br />
owed her under the agreement. Id. at 681-83</p>
<p>The Kraft court rejected the brother&#8217;s champerty defense. The court reasoned<br />
that times have changed since the medieval era when champerty was strongly<br />
disfavored. The court held that officious intermeddling was a necessary element<br />
of proving a champerty defense, and found no such intermeddling. The trial court<br />
correctly had rejected the champerty argument because the sister had simply<br />
loaned her brother money to continue an ongoing case.<br />
Accordingly, under Kraft and our Court of Appeals&#8217; opinion in this case, an<br />
agreement is void for champerty when the champertor is a &quot;stranger&quot; to the<br />
lawsuit with no legitimate interest in it; the champertor provides money to<br />
litigate the suit; the champertor is entitled by the agreement to share in the<br />
proceeds of the suit; and the champertor is an officious intermeddler who<br />
intended to stir up strife or unnecessarily prolong the suit. Officious<br />
intermeddling occurs when the champertor offers unnecessary and unwanted advice<br />
or services, especially in a highhanded or overbearing way. Osprey, 333 S.C. at<br />
330-31, 509 S.E.2d at 279.<br />
Some observers have asserted the doctrine of champerty ought to be limited in<br />
such a manner, and urge courts to avoid linking champerty today to the champerty<br />
of medieval times. &quot;Under all circumstances, it would be well to omit all<br />
attempts to connect [champerty] with the medieval offenses which had a rationale<br />
of their own, and deal with it as a modern phenomenon to be judged by modern<br />
standards and in relation to existing conditions.&quot; Radin, supra, at 66.<br />
Instead of voiding agreements that appear champertous as a matter of law, courts<br />
should scrutinize the agreement and the surrounding circumstances to determine<br />
whether to enforce the agreement. Such scrutiny &quot;will substitute judgment by<br />
reality for judgment by category.&quot; Id. at 78.<br />
Courts following this view typically reason that &quot;[i]t sometimes may be useful<br />
and convenient, when one has a just demand which he is not able from poverty to<br />
enforce, that a more fortunate friend should assist him, and wait for his<br />
compensation until the suit is determined, and be paid out of the fruits of it.&quot;<br />
Metropolitan Life Ins. Co. v. Fuller, 23 A. 193, 196 (Conn. 1891); see also<br />
Richardson v. Rowland, 40 Conn. 565 (Conn. 1873) (applying law of New York to<br />
reject champerty defense and allow plaintiff who helped defendant resolve a<br />
mortgage dispute recover half of proceeds of settlement; opinion lists cases<br />
illustrating states were evenly split in nineteenth century on validity of<br />
champertous agreements); Ari Dobner, Litigation for Sale, 144 U. Pa. L. Rev.<br />
1529,1543-55 (1996) (discussing modern view of champerty in various states and<br />
explaining that, although states take different approaches, most seek to limit<br />
evils traditionally associated with champerty &#8211; frivolous lawsuits or<br />
speculation in groundless suits).<br />
The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court recently eschewed medieval concepts of<br />
champerty, choosing instead to rely on other well-developed principles of law to<br />
prevent evils traditionally associated with champertous agreements. In Saladini<br />
v. Righellis, 687 N.E.2d 1224 (Mass. 1997), Saladini advanced litigation<br />
expenses to Righellis to enable him to pursue his claims in a real estate<br />
dispute. In return, Saladini would receive half of any net recovery, after<br />
payment of attorney&#8217;s fees. Saladini, who had no other interest in the real<br />
estate dispute, paid some $19,000 in expenses on Righellis&#8217; behalf. Righellis<br />
settled the suit for $130,000, but did not tell Saladini. When Saladini learned<br />
of the settlement, she brought an action to enforce the agreement. Righellis<br />
asserted the agreement was champertous and thus unenforceable.<br />
The Saladini court disagreed, and abolished the doctrines of champerty,<br />
barratry, and maintenance after reviewing their &quot;checkered history&quot; in<br />
Massachusetts and elsewhere. The court explained that causes of action and<br />
contract rights are freely assignable today, unlike in medieval times. More<br />
importantly, &quot;the decline of champerty, maintenance, and barratry as offences is<br />
symptomatic of a fundamental change in society&#8217;s view of litigation &#8211; from a<br />
social ill, which, like other disputes and quarrels, should be minimized to a<br />
socially useful way to resolve disputes.&quot; Id. at 1226 (internal quotes omitted).<br />
The court no longer was persuaded that the champerty doctrine is needed to<br />
protect against the evils once feared: speculation in lawsuits, the bringing of<br />
frivolous lawsuits, or financial overreaching by a party of superior bargaining<br />
position . . . . To the extent that we continue to have the concerns that the<br />
doctrine of champerty was thought to address, we conclude that it is better to<br />
do so directly, rather than attempting to mold an ancient doctrine to modern<br />
circumstances. As Justice Holmes . . . said a century ago: &quot;It is revolting to<br />
have no better reason for a rule of law than that so it was laid down in the<br />
time of<br />
Henry IV. It is still more revolting if the grounds upon which it was laid down<br />
have vanished long since, and the rule simply persists from blind imitation of<br />
the<br />
past.&quot; Saladini, 687 N.E.2d at 1226-27. (quoting O.W. Holmes, The Path of the<br />
Law, 10 Harv. L. Rev. 457, 469 (Jan. 8, 1897)).<br />
We find persuasive the reasoning of our own Court of Appeals and the Saladini<br />
and Kraft courts. However, instead of limiting the doctrine of champerty as the<br />
Court of Appeals did, we abolish champerty as a defense. We are convinced that<br />
other well-developed principles of law can more effectively accomplish the goals<br />
of preventing speculation in groundless lawsuits and the filing of frivolous<br />
suits than dated notions of champerty. <br />
For example, a lawyer is prohibited from prosecuting a frivolous lawsuit and may<br />
face various sanctions if he or she files frivolous pleadings. SeeRule 3.1 of<br />
the Rules of Professional Conduct (RPC) contained in Rule 407, SCACR (&quot;A lawyer<br />
shall not bring or defend a proceeding, or assert or controvert an issue<br />
therein, unless there is a basis for doing so that is not frivolous, which<br />
includes a good faith argument for an extension, modification or reversal of<br />
existing law.&quot;); Rule 11, SCRCP (allowing sanctions against attorney if there is<br />
no good ground to support a pleading or if it is interposed for delay). A<br />
litigant forced to endure a frivolous lawsuit has a statutory remedy in the<br />
South Carolina Frivolous Civil Proceedings Sanctions Act. S.C. Code Ann. §§<br />
15-36-10 to -50 (Supp. 1999).<br />
Furthermore, the doctrines of unconscionability, duress, and good faith<br />
establish standards of fair dealing between opposing parties. E.g., U.S. for Use<br />
and Benefit of Williams Elec. Co. v. Metric Constructors, Inc., 325 S.C. 129,<br />
480 S.E.2d 447 (1997) (&quot; [e]very contract contains implied obligation of good<br />
faith and fair dealing&quot;); Fanning v. Fritz&#8217;s Pontiac-Cadillac-Buick, Inc., 322<br />
S.C. 399, 472 S.E.2d 242 (1996) (discussing unconscionability). In addition, the<br />
Legislature has defined barratry, i.e., the promotion or exciting of groundless<br />
judicial proceedings, as a misdemeanor offense. S.C. Code Ann. §§ 16-17-10 &amp;<br />
16-1-100(B) (1985 &amp; Supp. 1999) (defining offense of barratry); S.C. Code Ann.<br />
§16-17-50 (1985) (statutory barratry provisions are cumulative and not intended<br />
to repeal any common law provisions regarding barratry).<br />
Our abolition of champerty as a defense does not mean that all such agreements<br />
are enforceable as written. When an agreement to finance a lawsuit is<br />
challenged, the court must &quot;consider whether the fees charged are excessive or<br />
whether any recovery by a prevailing party is vitiated because of some<br />
impermissible overreaching by the financier.&quot; Saladini, 687 N.E:2d at 1227. The<br />
court must be guided by an analysis of what is fair and reasonable under the<br />
circumstances.<br />
The court may examine (1) whether the respective bargaining position of the<br />
parties at the time the agreement was made was relatively equal, (2) whether<br />
both parties were aware of the terms and consequences of the agreement, (3)<br />
whether the borrowing party may have been unable to pursue the lawsuit at all<br />
without the financier&#8217;s help, (4) whether the financier would retain a<br />
disproportionate share of the recovery, and (5) whether the financier engaged in<br />
officious intermeddling. See Saladini, 687 N.E.2d at 1227; Osprey, 333 S.C. at<br />
330-31, 509 S.E.2d at 279. A financier becomes an officious intermeddler when he<br />
or she offers unwanted advice or otherwise attempts to control the litigation<br />
for the purpose of stirring up strife or continuing a frivolous lawsuit. See<br />
Smith v. Hartsell, 63 S.E. -172, 174 (N.C. 1908) (stating it has come to be<br />
generally accepted that an agreement will not be condemned as champertous<br />
unless&#8217;-the interference is clearly officious and for the purpose of stirring up<br />
strife and continuing litigation); Osprey, supra; Kraft, supra. After analyzing<br />
these factors and any others the court deems relevant, the court may enforce,<br />
modify, or set aside the financing agreement.<br />
We note two peripheral matters that we do not address today. First, the case<br />
before us involves a financial arrangement between non-lawyers. Various ethical<br />
constraints closely control and in many instances prohibit business transactions<br />
between a lawyer and his or her client. See Rule 1.8, RPC. <br />
In particular, a lawyer may not acquire a proprietary interest in the subject<br />
matter of litigation the lawyer is conducting for a client, except that the<br />
lawyer may acquire a lien to secure the lawyer&#8217;s fees or expenses, and the<br />
lawyer may contract with a client for a reasonable contingent fee in a civil<br />
case. Rule 1.80), RPC. We do not address whether a lawyer may act as a financier<br />
in a case involving a litigant who is not the lawyer&#8217;s client. See Susan Lorde<br />
Martin, Syndicated Lawsuits: Illegal Champerty or New Business Opportunity?, 30<br />
Am. Bus. L.J. 485, 488 (1992) (listing statutes in several states that prohibit<br />
attorneys or others connected with the judicial process from engaging in<br />
maintenance and champerty) Second, our decision today neither addresses nor<br />
authorizes the syndication of lawsuits, a practice in which a litigant sells<br />
shares<br />
in his lawsuit to investors. See Martin, supra; Dobner, supra (discussing<br />
syndication of lawsuits).<br />
CONCLUSION<br />
We abolish champerty as a defense because we believe it no longer is required to<br />
prevent the evils traditionally associated with the doctrine as it developed in<br />
medieval times. Accordingly, we affirm, with the modifications we have outlined,<br />
the Court of Appeals&#8217; decision to reverse the grant of summary judgment to<br />
Defendants. We remand this case to circuit court for further proceedings<br />
consistent with our opinion.<br />
Because the issue may arise again upon remand, we reject Defendants&#8217; argument<br />
that Plaintiffs have no claim to the $650,000 paid to Defendants&#8217; attorneys by<br />
Greyhound to settle the federal litigation. Although the money was not paid<br />
directly to Cabana, it was paid to the Tompkins &amp; McMaster firm on Cabana&#8217;s<br />
behalf and for its benefit. See Tompkins &amp; McMaster, supra. We have considered<br />
Defendants&#8217; remaining arguments and find them unpersuasive.</p>
<p>AFFIRMED AS MODIFIED.<br />
FINNEY, C.J., TOAL, MOORE, and BURNETT, JJ., concur.<br />
&nbsp;</font></p>
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