Bill Filed to Protect the Right to Sue in the Public Interest in Alaska
February 25, 2016
“Individuals and organizations should be free to challenge laws and decisions if such a challenge is in the public interest,” said Rep. Josephson. “However, in Alaska many of these public interest litigants are wary of taking a case to court for fear of having to pick up huge sums in attorney’s fees. My bill puts that discretion back in the hands of judges who can best judge if a case was brought to protect the public interest.” The sections of Alaska Statutes subject to repeal under Rep. Josephson’s bill were put in place in 2003 and follow the ‘loser pays’ principle for attorney’s fees. The new law was invalidated by a trial court but in 2007 the Alaska Supreme Court reversed that ruling and eliminated the public interest exception in Alaska, except for cases dealing with constitutional issues. “The change in statutes in 2003 had a significant chilling effect on the filing of public interest litigation in Alaska,” said Rep. Josephson. “It’s unfortunate that some lawsuits that could protect the public interest were never filed for fear of the cost of losing the case. Money should not be the determining factor for whether or not we protect the public’s interest.” Under Rep. Josephson’s bill, the courts in Alaska may rely on jurisprudence and the guidelines of Civil Rule 82 in determining the distribution of attorney’s fees and whether a litigant must put up a bond.
Edited by Mary Kauffman, SitNews
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