Legacy 2017 South Florida: 25 Most Powerful Women Issue | Page 9
FRIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 2017
MEDIATION/ARBITRATION
AN INDEPENDENT SUPPLEMENT BY MIA MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS GROUP TO THE MIAMI HERALD
BB9
An Alternative To Litigation: Getting What You Want in Mediation
pressionless face. Something recently
happened, and that something was
not good.
As each side gave its opening state-
ment they mentioned the results of
a Summary Judgment hearing that
took place just two hours prior to the
commencement of this mediation.
The judge made a partial ruling that
enabled both parties to claim some
sort of victory.
In short, for more than three years
of litigation, multiple businessmen in
two consolidated cases spent millions
By Stanley Zamor
of dollars with prominent law firms
SET THE STAGE
to keep pushing their positions until
As the parties entered the room,
the eve of trial. But now, after long
I stood smiling and welcomed each
eloquent statements outlining how
person as they took their seat around the law supports their positions, I
the conference table. I stood at the
asked them something that seemed
head of the table and observed the
to perplex the entire group. “Now
perfectly coiffed group of 10. They all that we have heard each perspective
seemed to share the same blank, ex- and how right each party thinks it is,
what do you want?” They all agreed
that they wanted finality. I said,
“Good. Then let’s get to work.”
AT THE READY
One of the difficult defining points
of mediation is to reduce barriers in
communication. Litigation is innately
adversarial in tone and process. Me-
diation conversely encourages collab-
oration while reframing the tone of
the dispute to where parties may feel
able to design their own resolution.
Mediation will not replace litiga-
tion. It is simply an option that works
when parties need an alternative.
Legal rights and duties are import-
ant, but many times when parties
are given a neutral space to express
what they want, they are able resolve
issues themselves.
THEIR WANTS:
So, what did these disputants
want and did mediation give it to
them? After a five-hour mediation, the
disputants created an agreement that
satisfied their desire to:
1. Have someone admit wrongdoing
and be held accountable
2. Be able to move forward and be-
yond their business dispute
3. Take the lessons learned and estab-
lish better systems to protect them-
selves from future litigation
4. Recoup a portion of monies spent on
legal fees
5. Make more money in a smarter way
Stanley Zamor is a Florida Supreme Court certified Cir-
cuit, Family, and County Mediator, a Primary Trainer,
and Qualified Arbitrator.
[email protected]
www. effectivemediationconsultants.com
www.LinkedIn.com/in/stanleyzamoradr
(954) 261-8600