Self-Represented Mediation
Let me make a few things clear:
- People should not be their own lawyers in family court or in pursuing their personal injury claim with an insurance company;
- The average person, even with due diligence, cannot cope with the power imbalance, the myriad rules, the statutes, the case law, and the techniques necessary to prepare and negotiate their own cases;
- Even with the help of a skilled mediator, there are risks for the self-represented party, whether the other party has a lawyer or not;
- Even a well prepared party will often lack the negotiating skills or emotional perspective to obtain a just agreement, and;
- A failed mediation leaves the unrepresented party with all the challenges of a contested trial.
- They are essentially in agreement? Or,
- There are clear, even strong, differences, but there is civility?
- A mediator must be prepared to back off or not prepare documents when he/she "smells a rat".
- A mediator must be prepared to announce that the parties really should have lawyers and to explain why.
- A mediator must get signed waivers if the mediator is going to "ghost write" a pleading to be signed by just one of them. And I am dubious that the mediator can draft the responsive pleading. Personally, I think that should be allowed, assuming both parties agree.
- A mediator who is going to experiment with this kind of unbundling must have fine "antennae" and excellent mediation skills and family law expertise. It is not a job for sissies.