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MEDIATION
ARBITRATION ATTORNEY IN CALIFORNIA
ORANGE COUNTY, SAN DIEGO, LOS ANGELES,
RIVERSIDE, SAN BERNARDINO
MEDIATION SERVICES, ARBITRATION
SERVICES, SECURITIES, BUSINESS CONTRACT RESOLUTION,
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTION DISPUTES, MARRIAGE DISPUTES,
DISTRIBUTION OF PROPERTY DISPUTES, SETTLEMENTS INSTEAD
OF LAWSUITS, MEDIATION LAWYER
___________________________________________________________________________________________
"Having
Difficulty Settling?- FIND
SETTLEMENTS INSTEAD OF LAWSUITS!"
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Services:
Mediation Arbitration Securities Business
Contract Resolution Personal
Property Transactional
Disputes Marriage
Disputes Real
Estate Disputes Settlements Lawsuit
Alternative
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CALIFORNIA
ARBITRATION MEDIATION ATTORNEY, ORANGE COUNTY, SAN DIEGO,
LOS ANGELES, MEDIATOR, ARBITRATION SERVICES, Riverside County,
San Bernardino County, business contract resolution, real
estate transaction disputes, marriage disputes, distribution
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Mediator
Providing mediation and alternate dispute resolution services
by experienced mediators in Orange County California. Expertise
mediation services by qualified Mediators Los Angeles. Offers
divorce mediation, premarital mediation, Family Law Mediation,
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is an experienced California business mediator specializing
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"How
do you become famous? Helping people! Changing their lives
and making a difference in their lives. Loving them"
- Eric Brenn
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Alternative
dispute resolution
Alternative
dispute resolution (ADR)
(also known as External Dispute Resolution in some countries,
such as Australia) includes dispute resolution processes and
techniques that fall outside of the government judicial process.
Despite historic resistance to ADR by both parties and their
advocates, ADR has gained widespread acceptance among both the
general public and the legal profession in recent years. In
fact, some courts now require some parties to resort to ADR
of some type, usually mediation, before permitting the parties'
cases to be tried. The rising popularity of ADR can be explained
by the increasing caseload of traditional courts, the perception
that ADR imposes fewer costs than litigation, a preference for
confidentiality, and the desire of some parties to have greater
control over the selection of the individual or individuals
who will decide their dispute.
ADR is generally
classified into at least four types: negotiation, mediation,
collaborative law, and arbitration. (Sometimes a fifth type,
conciliation, is included as well, but for present purposes
it can be regarded as a form of mediation. See conciliation
for further details.) ADR can be used alongside existing legal
systems such as Sharia Courts within Common Law jurisdictions
such as the UK.
ADR traditions
vary somewhat by country and culture. There are significant
common elements which justify a main topic, and each country
or region's difference should be delegated to sub-pages.
ADR or Alternative
Dispute Resolution is of two historic types. First, methods
for resolving disputes outside of the official judicial mechanisms.
Second, informal methods attached to or pendant to official
judicial mechanisms. There are in addition freestanding and
or independent methods, such as mediation programs and ombuds
offices within organizations. The methods are similar, whether
or not they are pendant, and generally use similar tool or skill
sets, which are basically subsets of the skills of negotiation.
ADR includes
informal tribunals, informal mediative processes, formal tribunals
and formal mediative processes. The classic formal tribunal
forms of ADR are arbitration (both binding and advisory or non-binding)
and private judges (either sitting alone, on panels or over
summary jury trials). The classic formal mediative process is
referral for mediation before a court appointed mediator or
mediation panel. Structured transformative mediation as used
by the U.S. Postal Service is a formal process. Classic informal
methods include social processes, referrals to non-formal authorities
(such as a respected member of a trade or social group) and
intercession. The major differences between formal and informal
processes are (a) pendency to a court procedure and (b) the
possession or lack of a formal structure for the application
of the procedure.
For example,
freeform negotiation is merely the use of the tools without
any process. Negotiation within a labor arbitration setting
is the use of the tools within a highly formalized and controlled
setting.
Calling
upon an organizational ombudsman's office is never a formal
procedure. (Calling upon an organizational ombudsman is always
voluntary; by the International Ombudsman Association Standards
of practice, no one can be compelled to use an ombuds office.)
Informal
referral to a coworker known to help people work out issues
is an informal procedure. Coworker interventions are usually
informal.
Conceptualizing
ADR in this way makes it easy to avoid confusing tools and methods
(does negotiation once a law suit is filed cease to be ADR?
If it is a tool, then the question is the wrong question) (is
mediation ADR unless a court orders it? If you look at court
orders and similar things as formalism, then the answer is clear:
court annexed mediation is merely a formal ADR process).
Dividing
lines in ADR processes are often provider driven rather than
consumer driven. Educated consumers will often choose to use
many different options depending on the needs and circumstances
that they face.
Finally,
it is important to realize that conflict resolution is one major
goal of all the ADR processes. If a process leads to resolution,
it is a dispute resolution process.
The salient
features of each type are as follows:
- In negotiation,
participation is voluntary and there is no third party who
facilitates the resolution process or imposes a resolution.
(NB – a third party like a chaplain or organizational ombudsperson
or social worker or a skilled friend may be coaching one or
both of the parties behind the scene, a process called "Helping
People Help Themselves" – see Helping People Help Themselves,
in Negotiation Journal July 1990, pp. 239–248, which includes
a section on helping someone draft a letter to someone who
is perceived to have wronged them.)
- In mediation,
there is a third party, a mediator, who facilitates the resolution
process (and may even suggest a resolution, typically known
as a "mediator's proposal"), but does not impose a
resolution on the parties. In some countries (for example,
the United Kingdom), ADR is synonymous with what is generally
referred to as mediation in other countries.
- In collaborative
law or collaborative divorce, each party has an attorney who
facilitates the resolution process within specifically contracted
terms. The parties reach agreement with support of the attorneys
(who are trained in the process) and mutually-agreed experts.
No one imposes a resolution on the parties. However, the process
is a formalized process that is part of the litigation and
court system. Rather than being an Alternative Resolution
methodology it is a litigation variant that happens to rely
on ADR like attitudes and processes.
- In arbitration,
participation is typically voluntary, and there is a third
party who, as a private judge, imposes a resolution. Arbitrations
often occur because parties to contracts agree that any future
dispute concerning the agreement will be resolved by arbitration.
This is known as a 'Scott Avery Clause'. In recent years,
the enforceability of arbitration clauses, particularly in
the context of consumer agreements (e.g., credit card agreements),
has drawn scrutiny from courts. Although parties may appeal
arbitration outcomes to courts, such appeals face an exacting
standard of review.
Beyond the
basic types of alternative dispute resolutions there are other
different forms of ADR:
- Case
evaluation: a non-binding process in which parties present
the facts and the issues to a neutral case evaluator who advises
the parties on the strengths and weaknesses of their respective
positions, and assesses how the dispute is likely to be decided
by a jury or other adjudicator.
- Early
neutral evaluation: a process that takes place soon after
a case has been filed in court. The case is referred to an
expert who is asked to provide a balanced and neutral evaluation
of the dispute. The evaluation of the expert can assist the
parties in assessing their case and may influence them towards
a settlement.
- Family
group conference: a meeting between members of a family and
members of their extended related group. At this meeting (or
often a series of meetings) the family becomes involved in
learning skills for interaction and in making a plan to stop
the abuse or other ill-treatment between its members.
- Neutral
fact-finding: a process where a neutral third party, selected
either by the disputing parties or by the court, investigates
an issue and reports or testifies in court. The neutral fact-finding
process is particularly useful for resolving complex scientific
and factual disputes.
- Ombuds:
third party selected by an institution – for example a university,
hospital, corporation or government agency – to deal with
complaints by employees, clients or constituents.
An organizational
ombudsman works within the institution to look into complaints
independently and impartially.
"Alternative"
dispute resolution is usually considered to be alternative to
litigation. It also can be used as a colloquialism for allowing
a dispute to drop or as an alternative to violence.
In recent
years there has been more discussion about taking a systems
approach in order to offer different kinds of options to people
who are in conflict, and to foster "appropriate" dispute
resolution. (See Lynch, J. "ADR and Beyond: A Systems Approach
to Conflict Management", Negotiation Journal, Volume 17, Number
3, July 2001, Volume, p. 213.)
That is,
some cases and some complaints in fact ought to go to formal
grievance or to court or to the police or to a compliance officer
or to a government IG. Other conflicts could be settled by the
parties if they had enough support and coaching, and yet other
cases need mediation or arbitration. Thus "alternative" dispute
resolution usually means a method that is not the courts. "Appropriate"
dispute resolution considers all the possible responsible
options for conflict resolution that are relevant for a given
issue.
Arbitration
and mediation are the best known and most commonly used forms
of ADR within the UK. However in recent years adjudication is
rapidly gaining attention as a quick, fair and cheap was to
settle disputes.
ADR can
increasingly be conducted online, which is known as online dispute
resolution (ODR, which is mostly a buzzword and an attempt to
create a distinctive product). It should be noted, however,
that ODR services can be provided by government entities, and
as such may form part of the litigation process. Moreover, they
can be provided on a global scale, where no effective domestic
remedies are available to disputing parties, as in the case
of the UDRP and domain name disputes. In this respect, ODR might
not satisfy the "alternative" element of ADR.
Country-specific
examples
China
Chinese
trained mediators have a long history and were practicing in
court annexed mediations in the United States more than thirty
years ago.
Modern
era
Traditional
people's mediation has always involved the parties remaining
in contact for most or all of the mediation session. The innovation
of separating the parties after (or sometimes before) a joint
session and conducting the rest of the process without the parties
in the same area was a major innovation and one that dramatically
improved mediation's success rate.
Traditional
arbitration involved heads of trade guilds or other dominant
authorities settling disputes. The modern innovation was to
have commercial vendors of arbitrators, often ones with little
or no social or political dominance over the parties. The advantage
was that such persons are much more readily available. The disadvantage
is that it does not involve the community of the parties. When
wool contract arbitration was conducted by senior guild officials,
the arbitrator combined a seasoned expert on the subject matter
with a socially dominant individual whose patronage, good will
and opinion were important.
Private
judges and summary jury trials are cost and time savings processes
that have had limited penetration due to the alternatives becoming
more robust and accepted.
Iceland
The Saga
of Burnt Njal is the story of a mediator who was so successful
that he eventually threatened the local power structure. It
ends in tragedy with the unlawful burning of Njal alive in his
home, the escape of a friend of the family, a mini-war and the
eventual ending of the dispute by the intermarriage of the two
strongest survivors. It illustrates that mediation was a powerful
process in Iceland before the era of kings.
Roman
Empire
Latin has
a number of terms for mediator that predate the Roman Empire.
Any time there are formal adjudicative processes it appears
that there are informal ones as well. It is probably fruitless
to attempt to determine which group had mediation first.
India
Alternative
dispute resolution in India is not new and it was in existence
even under the previous Arbitration Act, 1940. The Arbitration
and Conciliation Act, 1996 has been enacted to accommodate the
harmonization mandates of UNCITRAL Model. To streamline the
Indian legal system the traditional civil law known as Code
of Civil Procedure, (CPC) 1908 has also been amended and section
89 has been introduced. Section 89 (1) of CPC provides an option
for the settlement of disputes outside the court. It provides
that where it appears to the court that there exist elements,
which may be acceptable to the parties, the court may formulate
the terms of a possible settlement and refer the same for arbitration,
conciliation, mediation or judicial settlement.
Due to extremely
slow judicial process, there has been a big thrust on Alternate
Dispute Resolution mechanisms in India. While Arbitration and
Conciliation Act, 1996 is a fairly standard western approach
towards ADR, the Lok Adalat system constituted under National
Legal Services Authority Act, 1987 is a uniquely Indian approach.
Arbitration
and Conciliation Act, 1996
Part I of
this act formalizes the process of Arbitration and Part III
formalizes the process of Conciliation. (Part II is about Enforcement
of Foreign Awards under New York and Geneva Conventions.)
- Arbitration
The process
of arbitration can start only if there exists a valid Arbitration
Agreement between the parties prior to the emergence of the
dispute. As per Section 7, such an agreement must be in writing.
The contract regarding which the dispute exists, must either
contain an arbitration clause or must refer to a separate document
signed by the parties containing the arbitration agreement.
The existence of an arbitration agreement can also be inferred
by written correspondence such as letters, talex, or telegrams
which provide a record of the agreement. An exchange of statement
of claim and defense in which existence of an arbitration agreement
is alleged by one party and not denied by other is also considered
as valid written arbitration agreement.
Any party
to the dispute can start the process of appointing arbitrator
and if the other party does not cooperate, the party can approach
the office of Chief Justice for appointment of an arbitrator.
There are only two grounds upon which a party can challenge
the appointment of an arbitrator – reasonable doubt in the impartiality
of the arbitrator and the lack of proper qualification of the
arbitrator as required by the arbitration agreement. A sole
arbitrator or a panel of arbitrators so appointed constitute
the Arbitration Tribunal.
Except for
some interim measures, there is very little scope for judicial
intervention in the arbitration process. The arbitration tribunal
has jurisdiction over its own jurisdiction. Thus, if a party
wants to challenge the jurisdiction of the arbitration tribunal,
it can do so only before the tribunal itself. If the tribunal
rejects the request, there is little the party can do accept
to approach a court after the tribunal makes an award. Section
34 provides certain grounds upon which a party can appeal to
the principal civil court of original jurisdiction for setting
aside the award.
Once the
period for filing an appeal for setting aside an award is over,
or if such an appeal is rejected, the award is binding on the
parties and is considered as a decree of the court.
- Conciliation
Conciliation
is a less formal form of arbitration. This process does not
require an existence of any prior agreement. Any party can request
the other party to appoint a conciliator. One conciliator is
preferred but two or three are also allowed. In case of multiple
conciliators, all must act jointly. If a party rejects an offer
to conciliate, there can be no conciliation.
Parties
may submit statements to the conciliator describing the general
nature of the dispute and the points at issue. Each party sends
a copy of the statement to the other. The conciliator may request
further details, may ask to meet the parties, or communicate
with the parties orally or in writing. Parties may even submit
suggestions for the settlement of the dispute to the conciliator.
When it
appears to the conciliator that elements of settlement exist,
he may draw up the terms of settlement and send it to the parties
for their acceptance. If both the parties sign the settlement
document, it shall be final and binding on both.
Note that
in USA, this process is similar to Mediation. However, in India,
Mediation is different from Conciliation and is a completely
informal type of ADR mechanism.
Lok
Adalat
It roughly
means "People's court". India has had a long history of resolving
disputes through the mediation of village elders. The system
of Lok Adalats is an improvement on that and is based on Gandhian
principles. This is a non-adversarial system, where by mock
courts (called Lok Adalats) are held by the State Authority,
District Authority, Supreme Court Legal Services Committee,
High Court Legal Services Committee, or Taluk Legal Services
Committee, periodically for exercising such jurisdiction as
they thinks fit. These are usually presided by retired judge,
social activists, or members of legal profession. It does not
have jurisdiction on matters related to non-compoundable offenses.
There is
no court fee and no rigid procedural requirement (i.e. no need
to follow process given by Civil Procedure Code or Evidence
Act), which makes the process very fast. Parties can directly
interact with the judge, which is not possible in regular courts.
Cases that
are pending in regular courts can be transferred to a Lok Adalat
if both the parties agree. A case can also be transferred to
a Lok Adalat if one party applies to the court and the court
sees some chance of settlement after giving an opportunity of
being heard to the other party.
The focus
in Lok Adalats is on compromise. When no compromise is reached,
the matter goes back to the court. However, if a compromise
is reached, an award is made and is binding on the parties.
It is enforced as a decree of a civil court. An important aspect
is that the award is final and cannot be appealed, not even
under Article 226 because it is a judgment by consent.
All proceedings
of a Lok Adalat are deemed to be judicial proceedings and every
Lok Adalat is deemed to be a Civil Court.
- Permanent
Lok Adalat for Public Utility Services
In order
to get over the major drawback in the existing scheme of organization
of Lok Adalats under Chapter VI of the Legal Services Authorities
Act, 1987, in which if the parties do not arrive at any compromise
or settlement, the unsettled case is either returned back to
the Court of law or the parties are advised to seek remedy in
a court of law, which causes unnecessary delay in dispensation
of justice, Chapter VI A was introduced in the Legal Services
Authorities Act, 1987, by Act No.37/2002 with effect from 11-06-2002
providing for a Permanent Lok Adalat to deal with pre-litigation,
conciliation and settlement of disputes relating to Public Utility
Services, as defined u/sec.22 A of the Legal Services Authorities
Act, 1987, at pre-litigation stage itself, which would result
in reducing the work load of the regular courts to a great extent.
Lok Adalat
(people’s courts), established by the government, settles dispute
through conciliation and compromise. The First Lok Adalat was
held in Chennai in 1986. Lok Adalat accepts the cases which
could be settled by conciliation and compromise, and pending
in the regular courts within their jurisdiction.
The Lok
Adalat is presided over by a sitting or retired judicial officer
as the chairman, with two other members, usually a lawyer and
a social worker. There is no court fee. If the case is already
filed in the regular court, the fee paid will be refunded if
the dispute is settled at the Lok Adalat. The procedural laws,
and the Evidence Act are not strictly followed while assessing
the merits of the claim by the Lok Adalat.
Main condition
of the Lok Adalat is that both parties in dispute should agree
for settlement. The decision of the Lok Adalat is binding on
the parties to the dispute and its order is capable of execution
through legal process. No appeal lies against the order of the
Lok Adalat.
Lok Adalat
is very effective in settlement of money claims. Disputes like
partition suits, damages and matrimonial cases can also be easily
settled before Lok Adalat as the scope for compromise through
an approach of give and take is high in these cases.
Lok Adalat
is a boon to the litigant public, where they can get their disputes
settled fast and free of cost.
Pakistan
The relevant
laws (or particular provisions) dealing with the ADR are summarized
as under:
1. S.89-A
of the Civil Procedure Code, 1908 (as amended in 2002) read
with Order X Rule 1-A (deals with alternative dispute resolution
methods). 2. The Small Claims and Minor Offences Courts Ordinance,
2002. 3. Sections 102–106 of the Local Government Ordinance,
2001. 4. Sections 10 and 12 of the Family Courts Act, 1964.
5. Chapter XXII of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 1898 (summary
trial provisions). 6. The Arbitration Act, 1940. 7. Articles
153–154 of the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973 (Council of Common
Interest) 8. Article 156 of the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973
(National Economic Council) 9. Article 160 of the Constitution
of Pakistan, 1973 (National Finance Commission) 10.Article 184
of the Constitution of Pakistan, 1973 (Original Jurisdiction
when federal or provincial governments are at dispute with one
another)
ADR
in the US Navy
SECNAVINST
5800.13A established the DON ADR Program Office with the following
missions:
- Coordinate
ADR policy and initiatives;
- Assist
activities in securing or creating cost effective ADR techniques
or local programs;
- Promote
the use of ADR, and provide training in negotiation and ADR
methods;
- Serve
as legal counsel for in-house neutrals used on ADR matters;
and,
- For matters
that do not use in-house neutrals, the program assists DON
attorneys and other representatives concerning issues in controversy
that are amenable to using ADR.
The ADR
Office also serves as the point of contact for questions regarding
the use of ADR. The Assistant General Counsel (ADR) serves as
the “Dispute Resolution Specialist” for the DON, as required
by the Administrative Dispute Resolution Act of 1996. Members
of the office represent the DON’s interests on a variety of
DoD and interagency working groups that promote the use of ADR
within the Federal Government.
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MEDIATION
ARBITRATION ATTORNEY IN CALIFORNIA
ORANGE COUNTY, SAN DIEGO, LOS ANGELES,
RIVERSIDE, SAN BERNARDINO
MEDIATION SERVICES, ARBITRATION SERVICES,
SECURITIES, BUSINESS CONTRACT RESOLUTION, REAL ESTATE
TRANSACTION DISPUTES, MARRIAGE DISPUTES, DISTRIBUTION
OF PROPERTY DISPUTES, SETTLEMENTS INSTEAD OF LAWSUITS,
MEDIATION LAWYER
___________________________________________________________________________________________
"Having
Difficulty Settling?- FIND
SETTLEMENTS INSTEAD OF LAWSUITS!"
|
|
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Services:
Mediation Arbitration Securities Business
Contract Resolution Personal
Property Transactional
Disputes Marriage
Disputes Real
Estate Disputes Settlements Lawsuit
Alternative
|
"How
do you become famous? Helping people! Changing their lives and
making a difference in their lives. Loving them"
- Eric Brenn
ARBITRATIONMEDIATIONATTORNEY.COM
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CALIFORNIA
ARBITRATION MEDIATION ATTORNEY, ORANGE COUNTY, SAN DIEGO,
LOS ANGELES, MEDIATOR, ARBITRATION SERVICES, Riverside County,
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