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‘Exorbitant legal fees’ under government microscope

With the growing number of class action proceedings in Australia, the government is looking at how to prevent litigation costs associated with lawyers fees from being unfair and disproportionate.

user iconMelissa Coade 18 December 2017 The Bar
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Commonwealth regulation for third-party litigation funders will be considered by the Australian Law Reform Commission (ALRC), with a report to government expected to be available late next year.

The ALRC will consider specific matters about class action funders, including the proportionality of lawyers’ costs and the lack of ethical constraints on their operation such as those binding legal practitioners.

Attorney-General George Brandis QC said it was time to address whether the structure, operation and terms on which litigation funders operated should come under federal regulation.

“With class actions becoming more common in courts across Australia, the Turnbull government wants to ensure the costs of such proceedings are appropriate and proportionate and that the interests of plaintiffs and class members are protected,” Senator Brandis said.

In a statement issued last week, the AG noted that third-party funding entities were not bound to the same professional ethical obligations as lawyers. He said this was an issue given the “significant role” third-party funding entities played in enabling and maintaining class actions, and where plaintiff groups risked paying big fees.

“There is a significant risk, in such proceedings, that members of plaintiff groups may be required to pay lawyers’ fees which are exorbitant and unjustifiable,” Senator Brandis said.

The ALRC will consult widely with relevant litigation class action stakeholders, as well as the legal profession and courts. It will report to government by 21 December, 2018.

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    Sounds like the article is trying to have its cake and eat it too. Litigation funders aren't lawyers. Litigation funders need to be regulated and their fees need to be re-thought. The need for a lawyer's fees to proportionate already exists in the legislation, but the courts seem very shy to implement those provisions to their full extent, save and except against John Blow, sole practitioner from Nowhere Creek who's a soft target. Not too many from the big end of town on the wrong end of one of those rulings.
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