LD 1295
pg. 37
Page 36 of 67 An Act To Enact the Uniform Mediation Act Page 38 of 67
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LR 464
Item 1

 
information in the midst of a trial and then use the privilege
to block the other party from contesting the truth.

 
To address this anomaly, the Drafters added Section 5(b), a
preclusion provision to cover situations in which the parties
do not expressly waive the privilege but engage in conduct
inconsistent with the assertions of the privilege, and that
cause prejudice. As under existing interpretations for other
communications privileges, waiver through preclusion would not
typically constitute a waiver with respect to all mediation
communications, only those related in subject matter. See
generally Unif. R. Evid. R. 510 and 511 (1986).

 
Critically, the preclusion provision applies only if the
disclosure prejudices another in a proceeding. It is not
intended to encompass the casual recounting of the mediation
session to a neighbor that is not admissible in court, but
would include disclosure that would, absent the exception,
allow one party to take unfair advantage of the privilege. For
example, if one party's attorney states in court that the
other party admitted destroying evidence during mediation,
that party should not be able to block the use of testimony to
refute that statement later in that proceeding. Such
advantage-taking or opportunism would be inconsistent with the
policy rationales that support continued recognition of the
privilege, while the casual conversation would not. Thus, if
Andy and Betty were the parties in a mediation, and Andy
affirmatively stated in court that Betty admitted destroying
evidence during the mediation, Andy is precluded from
asserting that A did not waive the privilege. If Betty decides
to waive as well, evidence of Andy's and Betty's statements
during mediation may be admitted.

 
Analogous doctrines have developed regarding constitutional
privileges, Harris v. New York, 401 U.S. 222, 224 (1971)
(shield provided by Miranda cannot be perverted into a license
to use perjury by way of a defense, free from the risk of
confrontation with prior inconsistent utterances), and the
rule of completeness in Rule 106 of the Uniform Rules of
Evidence, which states that if one party introduces part of a
record, an adverse party may introduce other parts when to do
otherwise would be unfair.

 
Finally, it is worth noting that in arbitration, which is
sometimes conducted without an ongoing record, it will be
important for waiving parties to ask the arbitrator to note
the waiver. Any individual who wants notice that another has
received a subpoena for mediation communications or has waived
the privilege can provide for notification as a clause in the
agreement to mediate or the mediated agreement.


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