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ALTA Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 7 October 2011
DUELING EXPERTS IN MEDIATION AND NEGOTIATION: HOW TO RESPOND TO DUELING EXPERTS’ SYNDROME[*]
By Professor John H. Wade[a]
There are a number of normal hurdles which are presented to negotiators and mediators. Dueling experts is one of these predictable hurdles. This concept is described, and a routine process in response is set out – normalizing, reframing, and turning this barrier into a standard problem solving question such as “What can be done about the current differing views of the experts?” Twelve standard responses to this question (each with inevitable advantages and disadvantages) are systematized for mediators and negotiators to learn and possibly “add value” to any negotiation.
Introduction
A common cause of conflict is missing information or
data perceived to be inaccurate. One response to data conflict involves the
employment of two or more alleged experts to support the opinions of each party
to the conflict. One definition of an “expert”
is “a person
who has special skill or knowledge in some particular
field”.[1] These
alleged experts may be medical doctors, engineers, lawyers, valuers, builders,
accountants or psychologists – to name
a few. Experts who are asked to
give opinions frequently give diverse opinions on causes, values, and predicted
futures. Disputants
are often astounded that two experts can be “so far
apart”.[2]
One
positive side of employing experts is that they may be able to reduce data
conflicts:
- What caused the concrete to crack?
- What degree of pain the injury will cause in the future?
- How much is the corner store worth?
- What is a judge likely to decide in two years’ time?
- How much will the repairs cost?
- How much profit will the business lose over the next ten years due to X?
Many data conflicts are settled due to the dispassionate
opinions of one or more alleged experts about history, causation or the
future.
However, there is a darker side to the practice of seeking expert
opinions in order to settle
conflict.[3] This
problematic side often emerges as the conflict escalates. Instead of being part
of the solution, the alleged experts become
part of the problem for the clients,
and for the mediator or facilitators. The writer has labelled this common
phenomenon as “Dueling
experts’
syndrome”.[4]
Mediators and professional negotiators become voyeuristic observers of the
darker sides of expert assistance.
Dueling Experts’ Syndrome
This syndrome involves some or all of the following
patterns of behaviour: each disputant employs a different expert (“ours
is the best in the field”); each disputant hires an expert who has a
reputation for favouring that disputant’s preferred outcome
(“reputational partiality” eg a plaintiff’s doctor);
tells different stories to their own expert (“garbage in, garbage
out”); expressly or impliedly hints at the advice she wants from the
expert (“remember who is paying you”).The experts initially
do not consult with each other (“delusionary isolation”); the
expert, in order to curry favour and ensure future employment from a repeat
player, tells the client in writing what
(s)he wants to hear (“you get
what you pay for”); the written overconfident report does not set out
either a clear list of factual presumptions made, or the details of the
terms of
the expert’s employment instructions (“garbage in, garbage
out” again), or a clear list of alternative interpretations, or a
range from best to worst of alternative “legitimate”
views in the
field (“delusionary certainty”); the report is long, rambling
and sometimes incomprehensible to the average citizen (“mysterious
complexity”); each expert is instructed not to show draft reports to
the other (“no early doubts or compromises”).
Once
the over-confident (versions of the) expert reports are published, each expert
defends his/her version with increasing verbal
intensity and insult in order to
preserve reputation, ego (“now it is personal”), future
employment, even up old scores and does what is expected as a snarling doberman
(“this is our opening offer”). The disputants then invest
large amounts of time and money to resolve a personal conflict between the two
experts as a pre-requisite
to resolving their own conflict.
There are other
fascinating psychological and economic dynamics to dueling experts’
syndrome, particularly when the dueling
experts know each other well, enjoy the
game, and carry personal baggage from frequent past encounters. More troubling
is the repeated
pattern whereby many experts, who advocate a particular view,
actually begin both to believe in and emotionally support their own
view.[5]
Wayne Brazil
has commented:
“It is commonly believed by many litigators that to simply turn over all the relevant data to a consultant expert is to flirt with disaster: namely, the possibility that your expert will reach a negative conclusion about the role of your client. To reduce the chances of such an eventuality, many litigators carefully control the flow of information to their consultants. Their hope is that the expert will form a positive opinion, will identify with the attorney’s client, and will develop an ego investment in the positive conclusion that the attorney wants reached. Thereafter, the attorney may feed the expert some negative data about the client’s conduct in order prepare the expert to withstand cross-examination. By the time the expert receives the bulk of the negative information (at least so goes the litigator’s theory of manipulation), he has so heavily identified with the client’s position and has invested so much of his own professional ego in his positive opinion that all his impulses are in the direction of defending rather that reevaluating that opinion. Thus the lawyer hopes to capitalize on the expert’s relatively predictable reactions to cognitive dissonance.”[6]
The Dynamics of Negotiation and Experts
The normal dynamics of negotiation add additional
complexity to, and justification for, dueling experts’ syndrome. Firstly,
dueling experts know consciously or subconsciously that they are part of a
predictable process. It is well known by negotiation,
research, anecdote and
mythology that exaggerated claims usually achieve better number outcomes than
moderate claims. Therefore,
if an expert report is both over-confident and near
to the “insult zone”, then it will usually achieve a better outcome
for their clients, than if the report is balanced, qualified and closer to
“the truth” or the settlement
zone.[7]
Where an
expert produces a “moderate” report, then this shifts the bargaining
range considerably in favour of the other
expert who has produced an extreme
report.[8]
Secondly,
an enthusiastic dueling expert provides a useful “bad cop” for the
ubiquitous good cop – bad cop negotiation
routine. “Deal with the
pleasant client, or else we will have to hand this dispute over to our rabid
(lawyers, valuers, psychologists,
doctors, engineers, etc)”. As one CEO
whispered to me during a mediation “Can we go outside and talk? We will
never get
anywhere with all those people arguing their theories” (nodding
towards a group of entrenched expert engineers and lawyers).
Whereupon the two
CEOs and the mediator went for a long walk and settled the dispute under a gum
tree. In that case, were the dueling
experts being efficient or
inefficient?
Thirdly, well-known experts who produce long reports may be a
useful part of a strategy of attrition to wear out the other disputants.
Those
other disputants then feel obliged to keep spending on opposing, well-known and
highly priced experts in order to create doubt
by appearing credible,
argumentative, persistent and willing to respond with reactive attrition.
Once again, such apparently dysfunctional routines by dueling experts may
sometimes become functional. These are important negotiation
dynamics for
negotiators and mediators to recognize and try to respond to constructively,
even if we do not always approve of these
sometimes tiresome, expensive,
self-serving and inflammatory
routines.[9]
How Can Negotiators and Mediators Respond to Dueling Experts?
Let us assume that the “problem” of
dueling experts has already arisen. That is, as conflict managers we are not
here
considering the important question of how to avoid or minimize
pre-emptively the dynamics of dueling experts. That pre-emptive question
will
continue to be a major item for law reform agencies and for negotiation
tacticians in the future. The writer’s preference
is for the roadblock of
dueling experts to be anticipated by smart conflict managers. Anticipation can
then lead to a number of preventive
tactics.
As the majority of conflicts
are settled or abandoned, mediators and lawyers are often left with the
“hard cases”, or
escalated disputes. This residue often has
attracted the dynamics of dueling experts, such as doctors, lawyers or
accountants, who
are “far apart”. What can a negotiator, lawyer or
mediator do in these cases?
Preparation Meetings
Where a mediator or professional negotiator is able to have preparation meetings with individual disputants in person, by email, or over the phone, this provides the ideal time to identify any dueling experts, define the problem of experts in conflict, lower expectations, and begin to foreshadow the “normal” range of responses to dueling experts. Examples of “preparatory” mediator’s language include:
More specifically, when confronted with a standard hurdle in negotiations, mediators and negotiators are often taught to go through the following three steps.
Step 1 – When in Doubt, Reframe or Summarise
In joint or separate meetings, the first thing that
mediators (and many other skilled helpers) are taught to do is to put a new or
old name humbly on what is
happening.[10]
“Reframing”
is the skill of taking an existing feeling or perspective, and putting this into
a new set of words, images
or metaphors. Reframing has many potential benefits,
including giving new vocabulary, creating doubt and providing a new set of
spectacles
with which to view an old problem. New perspectives may create
changed negotiation behaviour.
For example, the problem here might be
reframed as, “You both believe that your experts are right, and yet they
are so far apart”;
“How is it that two experts can come to such
different conclusions?”; “Your experts seem to have left you with
a
problem”; “Expert one says that the grass is blue, and expert two
says that the grass is yellow – is that correct?”
Step 2 – Convert the Standard Problem into Standard Problem-Solving Questions
Orthodox problem-solving and decision-making
literature emphasizes that “the right question is half the
answer”.[11]
The
standard hurdle of dueling experts can routinely be converted into standard
problem-solving questions on flip-charts or whiteboards
in words such as:
- How to respond to conflicted expert opinions?
- What do others do when confronted by differing experts?
- How to solve (y)our problem of dueling experts?
- What can be done about differing (legal) opinions?
- How can (y)our two experts be so far apart?
Step 3 – Brainstorm Non-Judgmentally the (Standard) Range of Options
In the writer’s experience as a mediator, it is
very helpful to disputants to realise that their conflict or
“problem”
is normal, that thousands before them have experienced the
same situation, and that the same thousands of disputants have brainstormed
through a list of optional solutions, and found one which is at least
“satisfactory” to both.
Ideally, this list of options should be
extracted slowly and put on a flip chart arising out of the suggestions of the
disputants.
Visible charts can promote clarity and ownership. Prompts may be
used such as:
- “What do you do when two plumbers suggest opposite solutions to a roof leak?”
- “How have other businesses handled such conflicting advice?”
These prompts can become more directive:
- “I’m not suggesting that you should do this, but I have had clients who asked the conflicted experts to write a joint report explaining how two experts could be so far apart. Should I add that to the list of possibilities?”
- “Would you like me to write up some of the 12 ways I have seen clients respond to this common problem? You may have other ideas also.”
- “Of the 12 methods we have recorded on the board, which have you seen used most often? If you wish, I can circle the three that I have seen people like you use most often.”
The Range of Responses to Dueling Experts
Here are twelve common responses to the problem of
dueling experts. It is worthwhile memorising these, together with the advantages
and disadvantages of each. Thereby a mediator, lawyer or other skilled helper
can “add value” to the decision-making
process of clients. There may
be other responses or hybrids of the twelve options which follow.
It should
be emphasized that, in any dispute, several of these responses can be tried.
They are not exclusive. Some of these listed
solutions will be so unsatisfactory
to one or more of the disputants, that the range of options may be narrowed
quickly.
Each of these possible responses will now be considered in more detail.
1. Try to Convince – “Mine Is Better Than Yours”
This first predictable response involves the
disputants and their respective experts attempting to create doubt for the other
side
in a joint meeting, perhaps preceded by a written exchange of questions or
assertions. Each party orally points out the strengths
in their own
expert’s reports and opinions, and the weaknesses in the others’
reports and opinions. A mediator can structure
a question and answer time period
for each of the experts and/or the disputants. Sometimes the questions can be
put in writing by
one or more of the parties ahead of the meeting; or asked
through the mediator, in order to reduce ambushes and aggressive
cross-examination.
This procedure has many potential benefits –
clarification, reducing garbage in – garbage out decision-making, and
witnessing
the skills of each expert when questioned. It is a systematic form of
creating doubt and new information to assist better decision-making.
However,
these debates have the obvious potential to degenerate quickly into attempts to
publicly humiliate, and can lead to entrenchment
of existing views, hiding
information, and expert strutting. Experts, once scarred by such meetings, may
be reluctant to face further
semi-public batterings unless protected by clear
procedures and a strong mediator as chairperson. Some judges, arbitrators and
mediators
adapt this type of meeting by excluding clients, and just convening a
“conference of experts”, in the hope of reducing
loss of face. Like
all interventions, this has both advantages and disadvantages.
2. Experts Jointly Explain to the Disputants Why Differences Exist
This second response is different in emphasis than
the first. However, both overlap and may happen simultaneously.
The
predominant goal is not for each expert to justify why (s)he is
“right”, and the other is “wrong”. Rather,
each expert
tries to explain visually, orally and in simple language to everyone present,
how each conclusion was formed and therefore
why they are so
different.
Obviously, this has the same potential benefits and detriments as
the first response.
The writer has seen this response used effectively where
groups of accountants have sat around the table and attempted to explain
to
everyone present why their valuations of businesses were so disparate. The
clients have appreciated having underlying assumptions
of each expert clarified,
and hearing that valuation methods involve discretionary factors. In this way,
posturing certainty was
reduced to create realistic uncertainty.
The
predictable traps observed at these meetings have been that the experts slide
quickly into professional jargon, speed of language
and thought, and become
defensive during questioning. All of these may be remedied by a mediator’s
use of visuals, reframing,
strategic ignorance, admonitions and
triangulation.[12]
3. Each Expert Answers a List of Written Questions
The third response is to negotiate a procedural
agreement whereby each disputant agrees to send a written list of question to
the
“opponent’s” experts who are instructed to respond with
written answers within an agreed time period. The cost
of the written answers is
usually borne by (s)he who asks for them.
There are some obvious benefits to
this process including clarification, creating of doubt ( for all sides),
avoidance of hostile
public cross-examination, considered responses and saving
of face. Some of these benefits may be absent in relation to the first
two
responses.
4. Experts Write a Jointly Signed Explanation
This fourth response to dueling experts is potentially one of the most helpful. This usually requires pre-mediation or pre-negotiation meetings between a mediator and each of the parties where the mediator identifies the dueling expert hurdle and engages in soft or hard brinkmanship.
- “I do not want to waste your time and money by convening a meeting where we listen to experts making speeches”
- “Do you predict that either of your experts will back down at a public meeting?”
- “How can you help your experts to save face?”
- “I don’t know about you, but I cannot understand these 52 pages of contradictory opinions. Who can decipher that maze for us all in words of one syllable?”
- “What if you both instruct your experts to sit in a room together for two hours and write out no more than two pages in point form explaining why their reports are so different?”
- “Of course, they would both have to sign those two pages or else we will end up with two more contradictory reports.” etc.
If persuaded, the disputants each employs his/her own expert for a fixed period of time (say 3 hours), to sit in a room with the other expert; and write a ”no more than two page document”; explaining in simple language and dot point form; why their conclusions are different; and most importantly, both experts must sign that single explanation. The temptation is always to create two more documents and two new explanations of “ why I am right and (s)he is wrong”.
This response to dueling experts is also reflected in rules of court in many
jurisdictions. Judges as decision-makers, like disputants
as decision-makers,
want to reduce the confusing garbage
in.[13]
If this
response is potentially so helpful during negotiations or mediation, then
anecdotally why is it apparently so uncommon? Here
are some observed and
hypothesized reasons for resistance by various parties to the dispute to use
this response:
5. Third Advisory Expert Attends the Mediation or Negotiation
This response to dueling experts involves both
disputants agreeing that they need help, selecting a trusted “extra”
expert
from a list, or based on a recommendation, and agreeing on how to share
payment for this person. Additionally, the parties may agree:
that neither
disputant will talk to the advisory expert privately; what telephone calls and
inquiries can be made, and documents
read by the advisory expert; how many
meetings will the advisory expert attend; what oral comments are sought from the
advisor and
whether or not (s)he write a final joint report.
The writer has
seen this response to dueling experts used very successfully in mediations
involving disputes:
The
advisory expert should normally define his/her role and limit liability
carefully in writing. For example, the written contract
could restrict his/her
role to that of a “commentator” using “limited”
information and state that each party
is relying on his/her own expert’s
advice. Otherwise both disputants may turn on the advisor later and declare
“but at
the mediation/negotiation you told us.....”.
A skilled
and gracious oral commentary by an extra expert, particularly if the commentary
suggests “ranges” of possible
outcomes, may avoid loss of face for
the dueling experts. This intervention may also allow the experts to resume
bad-cop warfare
untouched by diplomacy, if that round of negotiation is
unsuccessful.[14]
6. Third Expert Writes a Non-Binding Opinion
This sixth response to dueling experts is analogous
to the previous option, except that the advisory expert is contracted to write
a
written report explaining differences, and recommending possible
solutions.
The disputants usually record in this agreed process that neither
will be bound by the opinion; that both are free to produce the
opinion in later
litigation; and that both are free to rely on their own experts if they
wish.
The downsides of this response include increasing costs for the
provision of a written report; wariness of professionals about publicly
criticizing work of colleagues in documents; numerous reservations in the
written report based on the ubiquitous proposition “I
do not have all the
facts”; and the tendency to split the difference between the existing
dueling experts’ reports.
7. Third Expert Writes a Binding Decision
This seventh response to dueling experts involves
the disputants agreeing to a specified process whereby a named third expert will
decide the issue being debated by the dueling experts.
The disputants may
wish to define the process as an “arbitration” so that the decision
is registrable in a
court.[15]
Alternatively, the disputants can each agree to be bound by the expert’s
decision (eg relating to valuation; cause of injury;
extent of damages) and
thereby create costs and estoppel risks if either tries to relitigate the
decided question.
Many third party experts will prefer a form of arbitration
as this substantially reduces any risk of liability for professional negligence
while making the binding decision.
Most mediators and negotiators have been
involved in successful referrals to binding decisions by third parties. This
process has
many advantages, including privacy. Arbitration also provides
nervous middle managers, CEOs, and governments with a third party to
“blame” for the outcome when they are reluctant to take personal
responsibility for a negotiated
outcome.[16]
However,
it should be repeated that this arbitral response to dueling experts also has a
litany of well documented disadvantages,
such as:
8. Create Doubt by Introducing New or Hypothetical Facts
This eighth response is common, and is often
combined with other responses to dueling experts.
A mediator or negotiator
identifies a number of factual, evidentiary or “rule” assumptions
which apparently provide the
building blocks for each expert’s opinion.
These foundations may helpfully emerge if and when each expert
“attacks”
the other’s report as “wrong”. A
mediator or negotiator can then gently and systematically go through this list
of assumed facts and ask each expert in turn, first privately and then after
rehearsal again in joint sessions – “What
if the following new fact
was accepted by a judge, would your existing opinions need any updating or
variation?”[19]
This
process of suggesting new hypothetical facts, has potential benefits of:
Therefore, hypothesizing new or even surprising “facts” or inferences is not an unrealistic decision-making routine.
10. Split the Difference
A very common method of managing the real or fake war between dueling experts is to split the difference between those experts. Obviously, this downstream negotiation practice encourages the upstream practice of hiring dueling experts! That is, hiring an extreme expert drags a subsequent split the difference outcome in your favour.
For some
disputants, this option of splitting the difference is frustrating as it appears
to reward the blatant tactic of generating
“false” reports. It also
appears to punish further the person who has spent time and money to generate
what is perceived
to be a more balanced expert report. Nevertheless, the
anecdotally frequent use or suggestion of splitting the difference, suggests
that negotiators and mediators need to be ready to manage this
frustration.
Splitting the difference between experts is a frequent outcome
in certain types of disputes. For example, in the writer’s experience
in
matrimonial property disputes, lawyers routinely prepare for mediations and
negotiations a single page summarizing the list of
assets and alleged values of
each asset. It is common for the right hand side of this summary to have three
columns—namely
“husband’s value”, “wife’s
value”, and “mean” or “average value”. The
average
value column gently prophesises a possible or probable outcome of dueling
valuations, at least in poor and middle class families.
10. Trade Chips
This tenth response to dueling experts is the
standard negotiation behaviour of trading chips: “If I was prepared to
accept
(or move towards) your expert’s opinion, would you be prepared to
give me X?”
Sometimes this strategy may produce a similar substantive
result to splitting the difference between the experts. Nevertheless, it
may be
more psychologically satisfying for one or more disputants who has personal
priorities about which element of the packaged
outcome is most important. The
writer has frequently seen this kind of “trade” eventually take
place in matrimonial property
negotiations and mediations. Husbands often want
their dueling expert’s valuation of a business to prevail in order to
placate
business partners, to control future possible tax assessments, or
because they have personal insights into the history of the business.
Accordingly, the husband eventually is persuaded to make an offer to his wife as
follows:
“If I was prepared to move towards your percentage, would you
be prepared to move towards my expert’s valuation of the
business?”
To which eventually comes the predictable response from his
wife: “As a matter of principle, yes... but what do you mean by
‘move towards’?”
11. Toss a Coin
Another possible, and more startling, method to
resolve dueling experts is for the disputants to use chance. For example, they
can
toss a coin and the “winner’s” expert
prevails.
Ironically, this use of chance has a number of benefits:
Obviously, such an arbitrary and uncontrollable method as coin tossing may be very unattractive to a risk adverse negotiator, or where the experts are far apart. Nevertheless, merely listing “toss a coin” as a possible solution is so shocking to some disputants, that they search more diligently for a more acceptable option from the rest of the list.
12. Refer the Decision to a Judge
The twelfth response to dueling experts is analogous
to the previously-mentioned possibility of consensually appointing an
arbitrator.
However, this twelfth option can be elected consensually or imposed
unilaterally when all other options (momentarily) are unacceptable.
Additionally, the third person decision-maker is assigned by the state, rather
than personally chosen like an arbitrator.
However, judges also may decide to
choose one or more of the responses set out above, before they accept the buck
being passed to
them. For example, ordering the experts to confer and submit a
single report explaining why they are at odds seems to be an increasingly
popular judicial response.
Once the use of a tax-payer funded decision-maker
is the “chosen” response, then all the advantages and disadvantages
of litigation are also chosen. There is a vast and growing literature on the
advantages and disadvantages of
litigation.[22]
More
specifically, there is a large body of rules and policy which judges attempt to
balance when deciding upon which of two or more
dueling experts should be given
more
credibility.[23]
The
vastness of the judicial and legislative rules concerning dueling experts is
both cause and effect of the uncertainty, expense,
and delay attached to this
last option – namely “We’ll leave it to the judicial
lottery”; or “ Of course,
you can always leave it to a judge to
decide which parts of each expert’s report are acceptable”.
Paralysis by Analysis?
Having “objectified” dueling
experts’ syndrome into a standard question, and having created a visual
list of “normal”
responses to this question, what next? The writer
has found that one helpful procedure is to give each disputant the list of
options
they have created (with some prompting), and give them time to
prioritise their preferred and less preferred options. This enables
a clarified
resumption of negotiations and decision-making. The ubiquitous presence of their
own list of options on a flip-chart
helps the mediator, experts and the parties
to categorise, with some grimaces, silences and humour, their subsequent
reversions to
rhetoric, threats, lies and bluffs.
As with all problem-solving
exercises, this analysis of possible responses to dueling experts may stun and
shock inexperienced negotiators
in such areas as personal injury, family,
workplace, discrimination, estate and environmental conflict. Their search for
“justice”,
slow progress through grief, and the words or silence of
their lawyers, may not have prepared less experienced disputants emotionally
for
such a routine and mechanized list of options.
Nevertheless, in the
writer’s opinion, disputants should be introduced to these realistic
options as early as they, or their
constituents have ears to hear. If
professional advisers are concerned about later client recriminations concerning
money and time
“wasted” on dueling experts and about uninformed
consent, then the options should be expressed in
writing.[24]
If the
preferred versions of “justice” are not available in the vast
majority of conflicts, then disputants need to know
what lies ahead. They need
to be prepared gradually to make wise choices from the routine menus available.
Such mechanistic rationality,
even when conveyed with skill and compassion, may
not be heard, at least the first hundred
times.[25]
Conclusion
There are a number of “normal” hurdles
which are faced by negotiators and mediators. dueling experts is one of
these.[26] Ideally,
wise negotiators, lawyers and conflict managers should anticipate dueling
experts syndrome and act preventively. However,
more commonly mediators and
negotiators will be required to react to what has already occurred.
This
chapter has attempted to give negotiators and mediators confidence by
normalizing this hurdle, reframing, and turning the barrier
into a standard
problem-solving question such as, “What can be done about the current
differing views of the experts?”
Finally, twelve possible standard
responses to this question have been systematised. No doubt, there are hybrid
and other responses
which need to be added to this list. Disputants can then
discuss which of the twelve standard responses, or hybrids, they prefer,
or do
not prefer, and in what order of priority. Learning the process and responses
can add confidence and tools to the skilled helper’s
toolbox.
[*] A version of this chapter was originally published in 21 CONFLICT RESOLUTION Q. 419 (2004).
[a] Director, Dispute
Resolution Centre, Faculty of Law, Bond University, Gold Coast, Queensland,
Australia jwade@staff.bond.edu.au.
[1] THE
MACQUARIE DICTIONARY (1982)
628.
[2] Eg Crystal
Auburn Pty Ltd v I. L. Wollerman Pty Ltd [2004] FCA 821 (four valuers decided
value of a business anywhere between $41,670 to
$859,915).
[3] Gerald
Egan, THE SKILLED HELPER, (1994) systematically identifies the
“shadow side” of each strategy to “help” clients
solve
their
problems.
[4] John H.
Wade, REPRESENTING CLIENTS AT MEDIATION AND NEGOTIATION (2000) 3. See an
earlier reference to this term in Transformation Management Services, MEDICAL
PANELS (A report for the WorkCover
Authority of New South Wales), 39
(1995).
[5] See
Leon Festinger, COGNITIVE DISSONANCE (1957) Festinger identified the tendency of
most human beings to attempt to bring behaviour,
emotions and beliefs into a
degree of harmony, and conversely, to avoid personal “dissonance” or
disharmony in these
three areas. Lawyers’ letters and expert reports are
behaviours which tend to drag the writers’ emotions and beliefs
into line
with the
rhetoric.
[6] Wayne
D. Brazil, The Attorney as Victim: Towards More Candour About the
Psychological Price Tag of Litigation Practice 3 J. OF THE LEGAL PROF 107,
109
(1978-79).
[7] See
Roy J. Lewicki, Bruce Barry, David M. Saunders & John W. Minton, NEGOTIATION
Ch.3 (2003). The tradition of beginning negotiations
just inside the
“insult zone” is being challenged by a variety of legislation. For
example, the Legal Profession Act 1987 (NSW), s.198J imposes a duty upon
lawyers not to make a claim or defence of a claim for damages unless these have
“reasonable prospects of
success”. See Nicholas Beaumont, What
are Reasonable Prospects of Success 40 L. SOC’Y J. (NSW)
42 (2002) for an attempt to interpret “reasonable” as “not
fanciful”.
[8] Lewicki
supra note
7.
[9] Predictably,
judges and legislators wrestle continually with these standard tactical uses of
“experts”. See Australian
Law Reform Commission (ALRC) Managing
Justice: A Review of the Federal Civil Justice System (Report no. 89)
418-436 (2000); ALRC, Review of the Federal Civil Justice System (DP 62)
ch. 13 (1999); Robert E. Cooper, Federal Court Expert Witness Guidelines
16 AUSTRALIAN BAR REV 203 (1997-98). The Australian Federal Court has published
GUIDELINES FOR EXPERT WITNESSES (1998). These guidelines
include provision
that:
- an expert witness is not an advocate for a party
- the expert
witness’s paramount duty is to the Court and not to the person retaining
the expert
- all instructions, whether in writing or oral, should be
attached to the expert report, or summarised in it.
See also the influential
guidelines in THE IKARIAN REEFER [1993] 2 Lloyds Rep 68, 81-82; [1995] 1 Lloyds
Rep 45, 49; Ian Freckelton, & Hugh Selby, THE EXPERT EVIDENCE: LAW PRACTICE,
PROCEDURE AND ADVOCACY (2002); EXPERT EVIDENCE IN FAMILY LAW
(1999).
[10]
Laurence Boulle, MEDIATION SKILLS AND TECHNIQUES (2001) at
129ff.
[11] eg John
S. Hammond, Ralph L. Keeney & Howard Raiffa, SMART CHOICES- A PRACTICAL
GUIDE TO MAKING BETTER DECISIONS
(1999).
[12] One
meaning of “triangulation” involves asking or insisting that the
disputants speak to the mediator /facilitator/chairperson
rather that to each
other. The mediator can then summarise or reframe what has been said. This may
change the speaker’s tone,
speed and complexity, especially if the
mediator strategically or genuinely alleges
ignorance.
“Triangulation” has other meanings including where one
negotiator attempts to forge an alliance with the mediator against
another
negotiator.
[13]
ALRC, Managing Justice supra note 9 at 424 states “(C)ritics
assert that the present use of expert evidence----does not assist judges and
other decision
makers to understand, and often clouds
issues”.
[14] Forrest
S. Mosten,. THE COMPLETE GUIDE TO MEDIATION, (1997) 296-297 describes a
“confidential mini-evaluation” which
is an oral and confidential
opinion on a possible range of outcomes by an expert. This avoids some of the
risks of written reports
by an
expert.
[15] See
Commercial Arbitration Acts in each state of Australia; Family Law
Act 1975 (Cth) ss 19D,19E; John H. Wade, Arbitration of Matrimonial
Property Disputes 11 BOND L. REV. 395 (1999).; John H. Wade,
Arbitral Decision Making in Family Property Disputes – Lotteries,
Crystal Balls and Wild Guesses, 17 AUSTRALIAN J. FAM. L. 224
(2003).
[16] See
John H. Wade, Don’t Waste My Time on Negotiation and Mediation: This
Dispute Needs a Judge 18 MEDIATION Q. at 259, 263, 265
(2001).
[17] The
tendency of arbitrators to split the difference between experts may be
controlled by use of final-offer or “baseball”
arbitration. See John
S. Murray, Alan S. Rau & Edward F. Sherman, ARBITRATION 240-245
(1996).
[18] See
John H. Wade, Arbitration of Matrimonial Property Disputes, 11 BOND L.
REV. 395 at 408-409; 432
(1999).
[19] The
words “what if...”, “assuming that...”, or
“if...” are fundamental for any successful negotiator,
mediator,
decision-maker or communicator. See the remarkable reference to this in William
Shakespeare, AS YOU LIKE IT, (1623) Act
V, Scene IV, “Your If is the only
peacemaker; much virtue in
If”.
[20] Eg
Jerome Frank, Facts are Guesses, ch 3 and The ‘Fight’
Theory versus the ‘Truth’ Theory in ch 6 of COURTS ON TRIAL
(1949); William Twining, Taking Facts Seriously 34 J. OF LEGAL EDUCATION
22
(1984).
[21] See
JOHN H. WADE ,The Last Gap (Gasp) in Negotiations in chapter x at
y??
[22] eg ALRC,
Managing Justice supra note 9; David Luban, Settlements and the
Erosion of the Public Realm, 83 GEORGETOWN L. REV: 2619 (1995); Geoffrey L.
Davies, Fairness in a Predominantly Adversarial System, Ch. 7 of Helen
Stacey & Michael Lavarch, (eds). BEYOND THE ADVERSARIAL SYSTEM; (1999) Wade
supra note
16.
[23] See
Freckelton & Selby supra note
9.
[24] See
John H. Wade, Risk Analysis in Mediation and Negotiation; How to Help Clients
Make Better Decisions 13 BOND L. REV. 462
(2001).
[25] eg See
John S. Hammond, Ralph L. Keeney, & Howard Raiffa,. SMART CHOICES-A
PRACTICAL GUIDE TO MAKING BETTER DECISIONS (1999); Austin Sarat, &
William Felstiner, DIVORCE LAWYERS AND THEIR CLIENTS (1995). Sarat and
Felstiner recorded many conversations between lawyers and clients whereby
lawyers attempt to lower client expectations
and teach them by repetitious
stories how the legal system “really”
operates.
[26] Obviously,
it is possible to systematise reactive and preventive responses to other
standard hurdles in negotiation and mediation
including influential outsiders,
lack of authority to settle, requests for apology, ending an
“unsuccessful” meeting,
strong emotions, and extreme offers. Two
other predictable glitches, namely the last gap in negotiations and influential
outsiders
are discussed in Chapters xxxx of this book.
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