LD 1295
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Page 24 of 67 An Act To Enact the Uniform Mediation Act Page 26 of 67
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LR 464
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the expiration of the collective bargaining agreement.
Mediations of disputes in these contexts remain within the
protections and responsibilities of the Act.

 
4. Section 3(b)(3). Exclusion of certain judicial conferences.

 
Difficult issues arise in mediations that are conducted by
judges during the course of settlement conferences related to
pending litigation, and this Section excludes certain
judicially conducted mediations from the Act. Some have the
concern that party autonomy in mediation may be constrained
either by the direct coercion of a judicial officer who may
make a subsequent ruling on the matter, or by the indirect
coercive effect that inherently inures from the parties'
knowledge of the ultimate presence of that judge. See, e.g.,
James J. Alfini, Risk of Coercion Too Great: Judges Should Not
Mediate Cases Assigned to Them For Trial, 6 Disp. Resol. Mag.
11 (Fall 1999), and Frank E.A. Sander, A Friendly Amendment, 6
Disp. Resol. Mag. 11 (Fall 1999).

 
This concern is further complicated by the variegated nature
of judicial settlement conferences. As a general matter,
judicial settlement conferences are typically conducted under
court or procedural rules that are similar to Rule 16 of the
Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, and have come to include a
wide variety of functions, from simple case management to a
venue for court-ordered mediations. See Mont. R. Civ. P., Rule
16(a). In situations in which a part of the function of
judicial conferences is case management, the parties hardly
have an expectation of confidentiality in the proceedings,
even though there may be settlement discussions initiated or
facilitated by the judge or judicial officer. In fact, such
hearings frequently lead to court orders on discovery and
issues limitations that are entered into the public record. In
such circumstances, the policy rationales supporting the
confidentiality privilege and other provisions of the Act are
not furthered.

 
On the other hand, there are judicially-hosted settlement
conferences that for all practical purposes are mediation
sessions for which the Act's policies of promoting full and
frank discussions between the parties would be furthered. See
generally Wayne D. Brazil, Hosting Settlement Conferences:
Effectiveness in the Judicial Role, 3 Ohio St. J. on Disp.
Resol. 1 (1987); Carrie Menkel-Meadow, For and Against
Settlement: Uses and Abuses of the Mandatory Settlement
Conference, 33 UCLA L. Rev. 485 (1985).

 
The Act recognizes the tension created by this wide variety of
settlement functions by drawing a line with regard to those
conferences that are covered by the Act and those that are not
covered by the Act. The Act excludes those settlement
conferences in which information from the mediation is
communicated to a


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