Current through Register Vol. 54, No. 44, November 2, 2024
(a) A lawyer serves as a third-party neutral
when the lawyer assists two or more persons who are not clients of the lawyer
to reach a resolution of a dispute or other matter that has arisen between
them. Service as a third-party neutral may include service as an arbitrator, a
mediator or in such other capacity as will enable the lawyer to assist the
parties to resolve the matter.
(b)
A lawyer serving as a third-party neutral shall inform unrepresented parties
that the lawyer is not representing them. When the lawyer knows or reasonably
should know that a party does not understand the lawyer's role in the matter,
the lawyer shall explain the difference between the lawyer's role as a
third-party neutral and a lawyer's role as one who represents a client.
Comment:
(1) Alternative dispute resolution has become
a substantial part of the civil justice system. Aside from representing clients
in dispute-resolution processes, lawyers often serve as third-party neutrals. A
third-party neutral is a person, such as a mediator, arbitrator, conciliator or
evaluator, who assists the parties, represented or unrepresented, in the
resolution of a dispute or in the arrangement of a transaction. Whether a
third-party neutral serves primarily as a facilitator, evaluator or decision
maker depends on the particular process that is either selected by the parties
or mandated by a court.
(2) The
role of a third-party neutral is not unique to lawyers, although, in some
court-connected contexts, only lawyers are allowed to serve in this role or to
handle certain types of cases. In performing this role, the lawyer may be
subject to court rules or other law that apply either to third-party neutrals
generally or to lawyers serving as third-party neutrals. Lawyer-neutrals may
also be subject to various codes of ethics, such as the Code of Ethics for
Arbitration in Commercial Disputes prepared by a joint committee of the
American Bar Association and the American Arbitration Association or the Model
Standards of Conduct for Mediators jointly prepared by the American Bar
Association, the American Arbitration Association and the Society of
Professionals in Dispute Resolution.
(3) Unlike nonlawyers who serve as
third-party neutrals, lawyers serving in this role may experience unique
problems as a result of differences between the role of a third-party neutral
and a lawyer's service as a client representative. The potential for confusion
is significant when the parties are unrepresented in the process. Thus,
paragraph (b) requires a lawyer-neutral to inform unrepresented parties that
the lawyer is not representing them. For some parties, particularly parties who
frequently use dispute-resolution processes, this information will be
sufficient. For others, particularly those who are using the process for the
first time, more information will be required. Where appropriate, the lawyer
should inform unrepresented parties of the important differences between the
lawyer's role as third-party neutral and a lawyer's role as a client
representative, including the inapplicability of the attorney-client
evidentiary privilege. The extent of disclosure required under this paragraph
will depend on the particular parties involved and the subject matter of the
proceeding, as well as the particular features of the dispute-resolution
process selected.
(4) A lawyer who
serves as a third-party neutral subsequently may be asked to serve as a lawyer
representing a client in the same matter. The conflicts of interest that arise
for both the individual lawyer and the lawyer's law firm are addressed in Rule
1.12.
(5) Lawyers who represent
clients in alternative dispute-resolution processes are governed by the Rules
of Professional Conduct. When the dispute-resolution process takes place before
a tribunal, as in binding arbitration (see Rule
1.0(m)), the
lawyer's duty of candor is governed by Rule
3.3. Otherwise, the lawyer's duty
of candor toward both the third-party neutral and other parties is governed by
Rule 4.1.