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