An equitable exception to the standard American rule (where each party typically pays their own attorney’s fees). The Common Fund Doctrine allows a litigant whose legal efforts successfully create, preserve, increase, or protect a specific fund of money or assets, from which other non-litigating parties also benefit, to recover their reasonable attorney’s fees and litigation costs directly from that common fund before it is distributed. In California probate or trust litigation, this doctrine frequently applies when a beneficiary takes legal action (e.g., suing a third party or a fiduciary for breach of duty) that successfully recovers assets for the benefit of the entire estate or trust, thereby benefiting all beneficiaries. In such cases, the court may authorize payment of the litigating beneficiary’s attorney’s fees and costs from the recovered fund itself before the net proceeds are distributed among all the beneficiaries.