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"Divorce with
Dignity"
Dignity, Law and Mediation
In September, I attended a
seminar on Guardianship Reform and listened to an
impassioned and eloquent presentation by Joyce Hall of the
Department of Elderly Affairs (DEA) about our elders and
about the efforts of her department to preserve their
dignity. Our elder citizens "deserve" dignity, she said.
Her point was well-stated and well-taken. "Would we want
less for our own parents?"
The word "dignity" was
especially significant to me for another reason. The
Newport County Association of Mediators (NCAM), has
recently sent to press and distributed a brochure entitled
"Divorce With Dignity." Much thought was given to the
title of the brochure. If we are touting "Divorce With
Dignity" to potential clients, what are we saying about
mediation and what are we saying about the adversarial
system of divorce? Is it true that our current system of
divorce deprives divorcing parties (or some of them) of
their dignity? Does mediation offer divorcing parties (or
some of them) more dignity?
I have devoted more than 20
years to the practice of Family Law and it has been my
primary legal arena, especially in the last decade. I
attended monthly meetings of the Family Court Bench-Bar
for years and witnessed first-hand the dedication of its
members (both judges and lawyers) to the improvement of
the legal process. More recently, I have been proud to be
included as an attorney in the Rhode Island Family Court
Inn of Court, which meets monthly to discuss methods to
improve the Family Court legal process and its
practitioners. What message is NCAM sending to these
dedicated people? What is the relationship between lawyers
and mediators? Between law and mediation? Is it law or
mediation or is it law and mediation?
The August 1996, issue of
the ABA Journal bore the headlines "The Lawyer Turns
Peacemaker" and the cover summary said: "With mediation
emerging as the most popular form or alternative dispute
resolution, the quest for common ground could force
attorneys to reinterpret everything they do in the
future." The Rhode Island Supreme Court, as of May 20,
1996, adopted Standards for Professional Conduct within
the Rhode Island Judicial System. In the preamble, it says
that "Judges and lawyers are expected to make a mutual and
firm commitment" to the principles enunciated in those
standards. Under the sub-heading "Lawyers' Obligations to
Clients:", item number seven (7) reads: "I will endeavor
to achieve my client's lawful objectives in business
transactions and in litigation as expeditiously and
economically as possible." Item number eight (8) reads:
"In appropriate cases, I will counsel my client with
respect to mediation, arbitration and other alternative
methods of resolving disputes." These two significant
messages should speak to all lawyers.
I make the following series
of assertions which are pertinent to the questions raised
above and the changing legal climate:
- Parties in conflict
are capable of playing an important role in the
resolution of their conflict provided they are guided
well by a trained person or persons.
- We, as a society and
as a profession, have traditionally divided issues into
legal (business) issues or personal (emotional) issues.
No dispute is solely either, yet we try and solve our
problems as if they were one or the other.
- Both lawyers and
psychologists or counselors are capable of acting as
mediators (guides) in that they can insure that the
parties make informed decisions by leading the parties
back to their attorneys and other experts for advice and
counsel when necessary and by delivering generic
information can help the parties to understand their
problems and generate options; can time the process so
it will proceed at a rate appropriate to the needs of
both parties; can empower each of the parties as
required.
- Mediation is usually
cost effective.
So what does the
foregoing have to do with dignity? I also assert that
(in the adversarial system):
- If either or both of
the attorneys involved refuse to negotiate in good
faith or are incompetent, then the system drives the
parties to destructive litigation.
- The legal system
itself is over-burdened, slow and risky to the
participants.
- Judges are heavily
burdened and this affects their ability to give full
hearings to all the cases before them.
- A "battle of the
experts" is expensive and the sum of two opinions can
often be of little assistance.
- It is demeaning to
wait in the corridors (sometimes endlessly) for your
day (or days or ten minutes) of court time.
In sum, it is healthy
and dignified for two parties in conflict (especially
divorcing parties) to privately confront their issues
face-to-face under the careful guidance of a neutral
person or persons with the counsel and advice of their
respective attorneys.
We as lawyers should
accept mediation as an appropriate challenge to our
profession and our professionalism. It is up to each
of us to consider our own actions as we represent our
clients. Are we doing everything in our power to
preserve the dignity of litigants through the process?
To reiterate the words of Joyce Hall: "Would we want
anything less for our own family members?" Likewise,
mediators must ensure that mediating parties are fully
advised and that they have equal power as they
mediate. The
legal system and mediation will "compete" for clients
into the next century. I suggest that most parties in
conflict will lean towards the professionals who are
more concerned with their dignity. Lawyers and
mediators must learn to work together and to
appreciate each others proper place in the system. The
competition and the cooperation will be healthy and
will benefit everyone in the system.
from The Rhode Island
Bar Journal April, 1997
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