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69 Judicature 279 (1985-1986)
Early Neutral Evaluation: An Experimental Effort to Expedite Dispute Resolution

handle is hein.journals/judica69 and id is 281 raw text is: Early neutral evaluation:
an experimental effort to
expedite dispute resolution
A program now being tested in the Northern District of
California could help reduce the scope of disputes and       V
focus discovery early in a case, resulting in more effective
subsequent negotiations.                                     '
by Wayne D. Brazil, Michael A. Kahn, Jeffrey P. Newman and Judith Z. Gold

n October of 1982, the chief judge
of the federal district court for the
Northern District of California,
Robert E Peckham, appointed a
task force to which he gave one overrid-
ing charge: to determine if there are ways
the court can help make litigation less
expensive for clients. Judge Peckham
expressed deep concern about the weight
of the financial burdens that even rela-
tively routine litigation imposes on the
parties. He shared his fear that these
burdens impair access to justice and
might be compromising the quality of
the product that emerges from the adjud-
icatory process. He asked the lawyers
and judges on the task force to try to
develop new procedures that would make
the system more economically sensible.
While parts of the task force examined
the court's arbitration and settlement con-
ference procedures, Judge Peckham asked
a separate committee to look for other
kinds of procedures that might help cut
litigation costs. This committee began by
studying the considerable body of mate-
rial that has been developed by propon-
ents of various forms of alternative dis-
pute resolution. It then interviewed ex-
perts in emerging dispute resolution
techniques and studied contemporary
analyses of the cost of litigation, attempt-
ing to identify where the most money is
spent and the causes of the cost problem.
A consensus gradually developed in

the committee. It became convinced that
the place where the most could be saved
is in the formative stages of litigation. It
is in those stages that patterns and expec-
tations are set and thus it is in those
stages where an infusion of intellectual
discipline, common sense, and more
direct communication might have the
most beneficial effects.
The committee identified several facts
of early litigation life that make it diffi-
cult for lawyers and clients to resolve
disputes efficiently. One is notice plead-
ing. Complaints and answers often do
not communicate a great deal about the
parties' positions and what supports
them. Moreover, pleadings often exag-
gerate the size of the dispute. To preserve
options and, perhaps, for tactical pur-
poses, parties tend to assert multitudes of
causes of action and defenses, a practice
that makes it difficult to locate the true
center of their dispute.
These pleading practices have at least
two ill effects on the cost of litigation:
parties must use discovery to learn their
opponent's basic position and to assay
its underpinnings; and the scope of the
discovery parties must conduct is very
broad because the scope of the litigation,
as presented through the pleadings, is so
broad. And the discovery process itself is
notoriously expensive, especially in
cases where parties are unsure of their
opponent's theories or are not inclined

to be forthcoming in response to discov-
ery probes.
The committee concluded, however,
that uncertainty about opponents' posi-
tions is not the sole source of inefficiency
in the early stages of litigation. Another
problem is that some lawyers and lit-
igants seem to find it difficult to squarely
face their own situations early in the life
of a lawsuit. Sometimes counsel have
difficulty developing at the outset a
coherent theory of their own case. Some-
times clients are not prepared to be real-
istic about their situations. Sometimes
litigants and lawyers are so pressed by
other responsibilities that they can bring
themselves to systematically analyze their
own cause only when some external
event forces them to do so. Sometimes
formidable psychological barriers may
stand in the way of such confrontations.
It is difficult to make big decisions. It is
easier, psychologically, to launch a cam-
paign to collect information, thus post-
poning serious efforts to come to terms
with one's situation.
Early, realistic analysis
The committee recognized that these
barriers to prompt, forthright commun-
ication and to early, realistic case analy-
sis are major sources of litigation costs.
Thus it set out to design a procedure that
might help litigants overcome these dif-
ficulties. The goal was to design a proce-
dure that could take place early in litiga-

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