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Vol. 73, No. 4, April 2000 |
President's Perspective
The Art of Negotiation
by Leonard L. Loeb
As lawyers, we are negotiators. Negotiation is one of our
premier tools of the trade. Negotiations should be entered into
in a "win-win" mode. Since most cases are settled by
negotiation rather than by litigation, one of my goals of office
is to create a set of guidelines that will assist practitioners
with negotiations. Last summer, I appointed a forum of knowledgeable,
experienced practitioners to discuss and draft guidelines under
the able chair of Robert Elliott. Ultimately, I hope that the
guidelines will be approved by the State Bar Board of Governors
and will be disseminated statewide for the membership's
benefit.
The
forum is charged with formulating guidelines, which express for
both novice and seasoned lawyers, what the bar expects from attorneys
engaged in negotiations. In addition, it is hoped that all parties
who are engaged in negotiations will agree to comply with the
guidelines.
The Wisconsin Guidelines of Negotiation Forum includes chair
Robert Elliott, Michael Bamberger, Andrew Barnes, Thomas Brown,
Steven Kravit, Patrick Matthews, Kathleen Miller, Howard Meyers,
Kathy Nusslock, Prof. Andrea Schneider, and Joseph Tierney III.
These are experienced lawyers who use the tool of negotiation
regularly in their practices. Their practices range from labor
law to family law, from financial and business transactions to
civil and criminal litigation.
The forum met regularly for six months and drew initially
upon the wealth of published materials that exists on this subject,
including publications from the American Bar Association, the
Delaware State Bar Association, Chapter 20 of the Wisconsin Supreme
Court Guidelines (preamble
to 20:1.7 and 20:2.1
to end), a December 1998 State Bar CLE Seminar entitled "Ethics
of Negotiation," and numerous law review articles.
Forum members found that they share a number of similar personal
negotiation guidelines. They also discovered that concepts that
appeared on their face to not be disputed were, in fact, vigorously
debated. For example, the forum debated whether an attorney has
an obligation to correct an opponent's misapprehension of
a law or fact if it operates to that attorney's client's
advantage and whether an attorney has an obligation to not take
advantage of an unrepresented party to a negotiation. Answers
to such questions differ according to the interpretation of attorneys'
obligation to the public in relation to their obligation to the
client.
The Wisconsin Guidelines of Negotiation are, as their preface
states, intended to be read and applied in conjunction with the
Rules of Professional Conduct, adopted by the Wisconsin Supreme
Court as SCR 20 (preamble
to 20:1.7 and 20:2.1
to end). Essentially, they are an articulation of what each
attorney would determine to be fair and honest under the circumstances,
either as to that attorney's client, opposing attorney,
or opposing unrepresented party.
The guidelines will be presented to the Board at its April
meeting. I invite your comments and annotations. The guidelines
can be found online. Please fax your comments to either Robert Elliot
at (414) 225-9063 or me at (414) 272-7918.
As always, you can reach me by email.
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