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Collaborative Lawyers, Inc. is an association of independent Florida Collaborative Lawyers, Collaborative Family Lawyers, and Collaborative Divorce Lawyerscollaborative divorce law © 2007 Chicago Daily Law Bulletin
John Flynn Rooney, Staff Writer


Collaborative law "Moving to Mainstream"
by John Flynn Rooney

Developments are under way on two fronts that should lead to more widespread acceptance and use of the collaborative practice of law, experts say.

Collaborative lawyering involves negotiation and mediation, usually in a divorce matter, that is intended to keep a case out of court.

One perceived hurdle is a concern that lawyers who agree in advance not to go to court may have an ethical conflict.

But the American Bar Association's Standing Committee on Ethics and Professional Responsibility has issued an ethics opinion placing its imprimatur on the practice. The ethics opinion found that collaborative practice does not create an inherent conflict of interest for lawyers.

"The structure creates a problem-solving atmosphere with a focus on interest-based negotiation and client empowerment," the ABA committee's opinion states.

The second possible hindrance is the state of the law related to such practices. The National Conference of Commissioners On Uniform State Laws is working on that, and has begun drafting a Collaborative Law Act.

"Like mediation, collaborative law helps parties resolve their disputes themselves rather than having a ruling imposed upon them by a court or arbitrator," a prefatory note in a preliminary draft of the act said.

"The distinctive feature of collaborative law is that parties are represented by counsel during the negotiations that make up the collaborative law process."

The drafting committee has held two meetings this year, including one last month, said John A. Sebert, executive director of the conference of commissioners. The drafting committee hopes to have a Collaborative Law Act for potential adoption by the conference at a meeting in the summer of 2009, he added.

James R. Galvin, a partner with Schiller, DuCanto & Fleck LLP in Chicago and director of the firm's Collaborative Law Practice, said the Uniform Collaborative Law Act would be the equivalent of the Uniform Commercial Code.

The act "will add uniformity between the states so all of the state practitioners are playing by the same rules," he said.

Richard H. Marcus, director of the Family Law Clinic at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, said, "I think [collaborative law is] something that may be helpful to litigants and parties. I think it's something that will develop more significantly in the future."

James H. Feldman, a Jenner & Block LLP partner who chairs the firm's Family Law Practice, said the dual developments are likely to fuel the growth and development of the collaborative law process in Illinois and elsewhere.

"The ABA ethics opinion concludes that collaborative law is a permissible type of limited engagement and does not present a non-waivable conflict of interest by requiring an advance agreement for the attorneys to withdraw if the process fails to achieve settlement," Feldman added.

"Having a uniform act will naturally help establish uniform standards and practices among the states and serve to better inform the public about this alternative, which thus far in this country has had its greatest use and success in the divorce area."

Vivien C. Gross, a Chicago-Kent law professor who teaches professional responsibility, said, "I don't think there's anything ethically impermissible about" the collaborative practice of law.

"It's a self-selecting clientele that's going to do this," Gross added.

The ABA ethics opinion conflicts with an opinion issued earlier this year by the Colorado Bar Association. But the ABA's version is in line with ethics opinions from a handful of other states, including Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Kentucky and North Carolina.

The ABA ethics opinion is "a major decision that adds viability and credibility to the collaborative movements and should put to rest all of the discussion about whether the practice is ethical," Galvin said.


Collaborative Lawyers, Inc. is an association of independent Florida Collaborative Lawyers, Collaborative Family Lawyers, and Collaborative Divorce Lawyers

Information on this website should not be taken as legal advice. Laws change, situations differ, and there may be exceptions to general rules. Except as otherwise may be provided, this website and contents are © 2009 Collaborative Lawyers, Inc. Collaborative Lawyers, Inc., is a state-wide educational and professional development association and business directory of independent Florida licensed attorneys at law and law firms who practice in the areas of collaborative divorce and collaborative family law. It is not a law firm or attorney referral organization.

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Collaborative Lawyers, Inc. is a state-wide educational and professional development association and business directory of independent Florida licensed attorneys at law and law firms who practice in the areas of collaborative divorce and collaborative family law.  Attorneys serve North, Central, Southwest, and South Florida from the Panhandle and Tallahassee to the Keys, including Dade, Broward, and Palm Beach Counties, and the cities of Miami, Pembroke Pines, Hallandale, Hollywood, Fort Lauderdale, Pompano Beach, Palm Beach, Deerfield Beach, Delray Beach, Lauderhill, Lauderdale Lakes, Coral Springs, Weston, Parkland, Tamarac, Plantation, Sunrise, Miami Lakes, Miami Shores, Jupiter, and St. Lucie. Not a law firm or attorney referral organization. Website maintenance donated by http://www.thelizlibrary.org/ and argate.net