LD 1295
pg. 35
Page 34 of 67 An Act To Enact the Uniform Mediation Act Page 36 of 67
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LR 464
Item 1

 
communicated in a mediation is subject to discovery, just as it
would be if the mediation had not taken place.

 
There is no "fruit of the poisonous tree" doctrine in the
mediation privilege. For example, a party who learns about a
witness during a mediation is not precluded by the privilege
from subpoenaing that witness. This is a common exemption in
mediation privilege statutes, and is also found in Uniform
Rule of Evidence 408. See, e.g., Fla. Stat. Ann. Section
44.102 (1999) (general); Minn. Stat. Ann. Section 595.02
(1996) (general); Ohio Rev. Code Ann. Section 2317.023 (West
1996) (general); Wash. Rev. Code Section 5.60.070 (1993)
(general).

 
§10005.__Waiver and preclusion of privilege

 
1.__Waiver.__A privilege under section 10004 may be waived
in a record or orally during a proceeding if it is expressly
waived by all parties to the mediation and:

 
A.__In the case of the privilege of a mediator, it is
expressly waived by the mediator; and

 
B.__In the case of the privilege of a nonparty
participant, it is expressly waived by the nonparty
participant.

 
2.__Prejudice; precluded.__A person that discloses or makes
a representation about a mediation communication that
prejudices another person in a proceeding is precluded from
asserting a privilege under section 10004, but only to the
extent necessary for the person prejudiced to respond to the
representation or disclosure.

 
3.__Crime or criminal activity; precluded.__A person that
intentionally uses a mediation to plan, attempt to commit or
commit a crime or to conceal an ongoing crime or ongoing
criminal activity is precluded from asserting a privilege
under section 10004.

 
REPORTER'S NOTES

 
1. Section 5(a) and (b). Waiver and preclusion.

 
Section 5 provides for waiver of privilege, and for a party,
mediator, or nonparty participant to be precluded from
asserting the privilege in situations in which mediation
communications have been disclosed before the privilege has
been asserted.
Waiver must be express and either recorded through a writing
or electronic record or made orally during specified types of
proceedings. These rules further the principle of party
autonomy


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