financialright claims GmbH v. Burford German Funding LLC

CourtDistrict Court, D. Delaware
DecidedNovember 18, 2024
Docket1:23-cv-01481
StatusUnknown

This text of financialright claims GmbH v. Burford German Funding LLC (financialright claims GmbH v. Burford German Funding LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
financialright claims GmbH v. Burford German Funding LLC, (D. Del. 2024).

Opinion

IN THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF DELAWARE In re Application of financialright claims GmbH For an Order Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. , § 1782 to Conduct Discovery for Use in a Foreign Proceeding Civil Action No. 23-1481-CFC

Bindu A. Palapura and Jacqueline A. Rogers, POTTER ANDERSON & CORROON LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Jeffrey A. Rosenthal, Christopher P. Moore, and Lina Bensman, CLEARY GOTTLIEB STEEN & HAMILTON LLP, New York, NY Counsel for Petitioner Elena C. Norman, Anne Shea Gaza, and Samantha G. Wilson, YOUNG CONAWAY STARGATT & TAYLOR, LLP, Wilmington, Delaware; Derek T. Ho, Travis G. Edwards, and Dustin G. Graber, KELLOGG, HANSEN, TODD, FIGEL & FREDERICK, P.L.L.C., Washington, DC; Edward P. Boyle and Allison M. Cunneen, VENABLE LLP, New York, NY Counsel for Respondents

MEMORANDUM OPINION

November 18, 2024 . Wilmington, Delaware

COLM F. CON ue CHIEF JUDGE financialright claims GmbH (FRC) initiated this action with the filing of an Ex Parte Application for an Order Pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1782 to Conduct Discovery for Use in a Foreign Proceeding. D.I. 2. Section 1782 provides that “upon the application of any interested person” a district court “may order” “a

person [who] resides or is found” in the district “to give his testimony or statement

or to produce a document or other thing for use in a proceeding in a foreign or international tribunal.” 28 U.S.C. § 1782(a). A “person” for § 1782 purposes “include[s] corporations, companies, associations, firms, partnerships, societies, and joint stock companies, as well as individuals.” 1 U.S.C. § 1. FRC seeks by its application an order granting it permission to obtain discovery from three Delaware LLCs “for use in connection with the foreign proceeding financialright claims GmbH v. Hausfeld Rechtsanwalte LLP, Case No. 11162-22/ST/sg, brought by FRC against Hausfeld Rechtsanwdalte, LLP [(Hausfeld)] in the Berlin Regional Court” in Germany (the Hausfeld Litigation). D.I. 48 at 1. The three LLCs are: Burford Capital LLC (Burford Capital), Burford German Funding LLC (Burford Germany), and German Litigation Solutions LLC (GLS). I will refer to them collectively as either Burford or the Burford Entities.

Pending before me in addition to FRC’s application is a motion filed by

_ Burford to compel arbitration and stay this action pending arbitration (D.I. 20). I. The circumstances that ultimately gave rise to the German lawsuit for which FRC seeks discovery by its § 1782 application trace their roots to truck sales in Europe in the late 1990s. In 2016, the European Commission announced that it had imposed approximately three billion dollars in fines against certain manufacturers that had participated in a cartel to fix the price of medium-duty and heavy-duty trucks in Europe between 1997 and 2011. DI. 5 9 4; Antitrust: Commission fines truck producers € 2.93 billion for participating in a cartel, Eur. Comm’n (July 18, 2016), https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/el/ 2582 [https://perma.cc/HT7R-RUBL]. In the wake of this announcement, FRC began a campaign to acquire the legal claims of consumers who had purchased trucks at inflated prices from the manufacturers that had engaged in the unlawful price fixing. To fund the acquisition and prosecution of these claims, FRC turned to Burford Capital. Negotiations between Sven Bode of FRC and Bernd Pill of Burford Capital resulted in a so-called Capital Provision Agreement (CPA). 37 Jf 3, 7. According to Bode, “[a]s these negotiations progressed, Burford [Capital] informed [him] that FRC’s counterparty to the CPA would be an entity

named Burford German Funding LLC [(i.e., Burford Germany)].” D.I. 37 4 4. And, indeed, the only parties to the CPA, which was signed in April 2017, are FRC and Burford Germany. D.I. 4 at 4; D.I. 5-1 at 63. Under the CPA, Burford Germany agreed to fund FRC’s acquisition and prosecution of truckers’ claims against certain manufacturers in exchange for a share of any damages garnered from FRC’s assertion of those claims. D.I. 4 at 4; 5-1 at 64-66. Two paragraphs of the CPA bear on the matters before me. First, paragraph 5.3(a)(ii) requires FRC to “retain and remunerate” the German law firm of Hausfeld Rechtsanwalte, LLP (Hausfeld) “to prosecute [FRC’s claims] vigorously in a commercially reasonable manner in order to bring about the reasonable monetization of’ FRC’s trucker claims. D.I. 5-1 at 69. Second, paragraph 27(a) of the CPA, referred to by the parties before me as “the Arbitration Agreement,” provides: Any dispute, controversy or claim arising out of or in connection with this Agreement, including any question regarding its formation, existence, validity, interpretation, performance, breach or termination ... shall (to the exclusion of any other forum) be referred to and finally resolved by arbitration under the Arbitration Rules of The London Court of International Arbitration (the “LCIA”), which rules are deemed to be incorporated by reference into this Section. Any attempt by [FRC] to seek relief or remedies in any other forum shall constitute a breach of this Agreement and entitle [Burford Germany] to damages, equitable relief and full indemnification against all costs and expenses incurred in connection therewith.

.

[FRC] shall be obliged to post security for costs as directed by the arbitral tribunal (“Tribunal”). D.I. 5-1 at 86-87 (emphasis in the original). Consistent with paragraph 5.3(a)(ii), FRC retained Hausfeld in 2017 to litigate the claims it had acquired from truckers. D.I. 37 47. FRC’s engagement letter with Hausfeld provides in relevant part that FRC shall compensate Hausfeld for its services in the form of a “fee, which is calculated on the basis of time spent and hourly rates.” D.J. 37-1 at 10. The engagement letter also states that “the exclusive place of jurisdiction for all claims in connection with this [retainer] agreement is Berlin.” D.I. 37-1 at 12. FRC maintains—and Burford does not dispute—that this latter sentence requires FRC to litigate in German courts in Berlin any disputes with Hausfeld relating to Hausfeld’s representation of FRC with respect to FRC’s trucker claims. D.I. 36 at 8-9; D.I. 37 7 10; D.I. 38 at 3-4. Fast forward to late 2022. FRC alleges in its briefing that Bode learned at that time that Burford Germany “was part-owned by GLS, an entity owned by Hausfeld partners, including one of FRC’s lead lawyers [retained to litigate FRC’s trucker claims].” D.I. 36 at 9; see also D.I. 5 § 6—7; D.I. 5-1 at 28. According to FRC, this ownership structure allowed Hausfeld lawyers who worked on FRC’s trucker claims to share in recoveries gained from the assertion of those claims in violation of both the terms of FRC’s engagement letter with Hausfeld and German law’s prohibition of attorney contingency fees.

On December 29, 2023, FRC filed the Hausfeld Litigation in the Berlin Regional Court. FRC and Hausfeld are the only parties in that case. FRC alleges in the Hausfeld Litigation that by virtue of ownership interests in GLS, Hausfeld partners shared in Burford Germany’s recoveries from FRC’s trucker claims in violation of Germany’s prohibition of attorney contingency fee compensation. D.I. 5-1 at 30. FRC also alleges that it is entitled to restitution of any proceeds Hausfeld and its partners obtained or will obtain in the future from FRC’s trucker claim recoveries. D.I. 5-1 at 30. The same day it filed the Hausfeld Litigation, FRC filed its § 1782 application in this Court. D.I. 2.

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