Wisconsin Lawyer
Vol. 75, No. 5, May
2002
Collaborative process, itself, doesn't lead to malpractice
In collaborative divorce, there is no direct professional
relationship to the other spouse. In the actual CD process, each party
knows which attorney is theirs. There is no blurring of the
attorney-client relationship.
Read the other viewpoints:
by Daniel R. Cross & Jolene D.
Schneider
Many attorneys are attracted to collaborative family law. For the
right spouses, collaborative divorce provides a civil, open process for
achieving fair and creative results with the least damage to family
relationships. For the practitioners, it is both professionally
challenging and invigorating. Gary Young asserts that the attractions of
collaborative family law are dangerous traps, ensnaring the lawyer in a
web of malpractice.
Mr. Young's entire analysis hangs on his assertion that the
collaborative lawyer, by signing the initial collaborative divorce
documents, makes contractual commitments to the "other spouse," thereby
creating a direct professional relationship with the "other spouse." Mr.
Young's assertion stands in sharp contrast to the actual collaborative
process. Each party knows which attorney is theirs. There is no blurring
of the attorney-client relationship.
The
collaborative documents do several things. They state each party's
desire to resolve the divorce through the collaborative process. They
describe the collaborative process. They set out each party's commitment
to honor the collaborative process, as long as the parties remain in the
collaborative process. Family lawyers regularly enter into similar
agreements without fear that they have taken on the "other spouse" as
their client. For example, most lawyers regularly employ many of the
collaborative techniques in their practices, including informal
discovery, joint appraisals, and civil and nonthreatening behavior. At
the end of the day, collaborative law is an alternative dispute
resolution process, and family lawyers regularly employ other forms of
ADR.
What the collaborative documents do not do is bind either party or
either attorney to the collaborative process. Each commits to the
process for only so long as each wishes to continue the process. Mr.
Young avoids this important component of the collaborative process in
his analysis, and perhaps he must. His assertion that the collaborative
documents create contractual duties between the lawyer and the other
spouse is a tough argument to sell when there is no limitation upon the
lawyer's ability to withdraw from the collaborative process. The
solutions to the two problems posed in his article are clear when the
voluntary nature of the collaborative process is kept in mind. If a tax
error is discovered that the client does not wish to correct, or if
remarriage plans are made that the client does not wish to disclose,
then the collaborative process is simply over. There is no double bind
for the lawyer.
Mr. Young correctly highlights the importance of obtaining the
client's informed consent to begin the collaborative process. And he
rightly points out the difficulty of divining and discussing with the
client all possible risks attendant to the collaborative process at its
outset. He is wrong, however, to suggest that the client's informed
consent is obtained once and irrevocably. The lawyer's obligation to the
client, and the solution to the dilemma posed by Mr. Young, is the
continuing obligation to discuss issues and to receive appropriate
consents from the client as the collaborative process unfolds. The
option of reverting to traditional litigation is always open. The
client's decision to use the collaborative process is not made the first
day. It is made every day.
Collaborative lawyers have an exciting and successful new process to
offer their clients, but the collaborative lawyers' professional
obligations owed their clients are the same as any family lawyer's. The
collaborative lawyer must exercise appropriate professional judgment in
recommending the collaborative process, monitoring the process, and, if
the process is not working, advising the client to leave the process. A
lawyer can surely commit malpractice by misusing the collaborative
process, just as in the traditional adversarial process. Mr. Young
fails, however, to make a convincing argument that the collaborative
process, itself, leads the lawyer to malpractice.
Daniel
R. Cross, Iowa 1981, and Jolene D. Schneider,
U.W. 1997, practice with Robinson, Peterson, Berk & Cross S.C.,
Appleton.
Wisconsin
Lawyer