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MASSACHUSETTS
HOUSE No. 19 version 2 -
Uniform Mediation Act, Massachusetts
HOUSE No. 19 - Uniform
Mediation Act, Massachusetts
Accompanying the
fourth recommendation of the Commission on Uniform State
Laws (House, No. 15). Labor and Workforce Development.
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UMA Final
Version with Comments
Web site with final version of UMA with all comments (approx. 70
pages)
Text, without comments, below
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An Act
MAKING
UNIFORM CERTAIN ASPECTS OF MEDIATION.
Be it enacted
by the Senate and House of Representatives in General
Court assembled, and by the authority of the same,
as follows:
SECTION 1.
The General Laws are hereby amended by inserting after
Chapter 251 the following chapter:--
CHAPTER 251A
UNIFORM MEDIATION ACT
Section 1. This chapter may
be cited as the UNIFORM MEDIATION ACT.
Section 2. In this Act:
(1) “Mediation” means a
process in which a mediator facilitates communication
and negotiation between parties to assist them in
reaching a voluntary agreement regarding their dispute.
(2) “Mediation
communication” means a statement, whether oral or in a
record or verbal or nonverbal, that occurs during a
mediation or is made for purposes of considering,
conducting, participating in, initiating, continuing, or
reconvening a mediation or retaining a mediator.
(3) “Mediator” means an
individual who conducts a mediation.
(4) “Nonparty participant”
means a person, other than a party or mediator, that
participates in a mediation.
(5) “Mediation party” means
a person that participates in a mediation and whose
agreement is necessary to resolve the dispute.
(6) “Person” means an
individual, corporation, business trust, estate, trust,
partnership, limited liability company, association,
joint venture, government; governmental subdivision,
agency, or instrumentality; public corporation, or any
other legal or commercial entity.
(7) “Proceeding” means:
(A) a judicial,
administrative, arbitral, or other adjudicative process,
including related pre-hearing and post-hearing motions,
conferences, and discovery; or
(B) a legislative
hearing or similar process.
(8) “Record” means
information that is inscribed on a tangible medium or
that is stored in an electronic or other medium and is
retrievable in perceivable form.
(9) “Sign” means:
(A) to execute or
adopt a tangible symbol with the present intent to
authenticate a record; or
(B) to attach or
logically associate an electronic symbol, sound, or
process to or with a record with the present intent to
authenticate a record.
Section 3. (a) Except as
otherwise provided in subsection (b) or (c), this
chapter applies to a mediation in which:
(1) the mediation parties
are required to mediate by statute or court or
administrative agency rule or referred to mediation by a
court, administrative agency, or arbitrator;
(2) the mediation parties
and the mediator agree to mediate in a record that
demonstrates an expectation that mediation
communications will be privileged against disclosure; or
(3) the mediation parties
use as a mediator an individual who holds himself or
herself out as a mediator or the mediation is provided
by a person that holds itself out as providing
mediation.
(b) The chapter
does not apply to a mediation:
(1) relating to the
establishment, negotiation, administration, or
termination of a collective bargaining relationship;
(2) relating to a
dispute that is pending under or is part of the
processes established by a collective bargaining
agreement, except that the chapter applies to a
mediation arising out of a dispute that has been filed
with an administrative agency or court;
(3) conducted by a
judge who might make a ruling on the case; or
(4) conducted under
the auspices of:
(A) a
primary or secondary school if all the parties are
students or
(B) a
correctional institution for youths if all the parties
are residents of that institution.
(C) If the
parties agree in advance in a signed record, or a record
of proceeding reflects agreement by the parties, that
all or part of a mediation is not privileged, the
privileges under sections 4 through 6 do not apply to
the mediation or part agreed upon. However, sections 4
through 6 apply to a mediation communication made by a
person that has not received actual notice of the
agreement before the communication is made.
Section 4. (a) Except as
otherwise provided in section 6, a mediation
communication is privileged as provided in subsection
(b) and is not subject to discovery or admissible in
evidence in a proceeding unless waived or precluded as
provided by section 5.
(b) In a
proceeding, the following privileges apply:
(1) A mediation
party may refuse to disclose, and may prevent any other
person from disclosing, a mediation communication.
(2) A mediator may
refuse to disclose a mediation communication, and may
prevent any other person from disclosing a mediation
communication of the mediator.
(3) A nonparty
participant may refuse to disclose, and may prevent any
other person from disclosing, a mediation communication
of the nonparty participant.
(c) Evidence or
information that is otherwise admissible or subject to
discovery does not become inadmissible or protected from
discovery solely by reason of its disclosure or use in a
mediation.
Section 5. (a) A privilege
under section 4 may be waived in a record or orally
during a proceeding if it is expressly waived by all
parties to the mediation and:
(1) in the case of
the privilege of a mediator, it is expressly waived by
the mediator; and
(2) in the case of
the privilege of a nonparty participant, it is expressly
waived by the nonparty participant.
(b) A person
that discloses or makes a representation about a
mediation communication which prejudices another person
in a proceeding is precluded from asserting a privilege
under section 4, but only to the extent necessary for
the person prejudiced to respond to the representation
or disclosure.
(c) A person
that intentionally uses a mediation to plan, attempt to
commit or commit a crime, or to conceal an ongoing crime
or ongoing criminal activity is precluded from asserting
a privilege under section 4.
Section 6. (a) There is no
privilege under section 4 for a mediation communication
that is:
(1) in an agreement
evidenced by a record signed by all parties to the
agreement;
(2) available to
the public under [insert statutory reference to open
records act] or made during a session of a mediation
which is open, or is required by law to be open, to the
public;
(3) a threat or
statement of a plan to inflict bodily injury or commit a
crime of violence;
(4) intentionally
used to plan a crime, attempt to commit or commit a
crime, or to conceal an ongoing crime or ongoing
criminal activity;
(5) sought or
offered to prove or disprove a claim or complaint of
professional misconduct or malpractice filed against a
mediator;
(6) except as
otherwise provided in subsection (c), sought or offered
to prove or disprove a claim or complaint of
professional misconduct or malpractice filed against a
mediation party, nonparty participant, or representative
of a party based on conduct occurring during a
mediation; or
(7) sought or
offered to prove or disprove abuse, neglect,
abandonment, or exploitation in a proceeding in which a
child or adult protective services agency is a party,
unless the case is referred by a court to mediation and
a public agency participates.
(b) There is no
privilege under section 4 if a court, administrative
agency, or arbitrator finds, after a hearing in camera,
that the party seeking discovery or the proponent of the
evidence has shown that the evidence is not otherwise
available, that there is a need for the evidence that
substantially outweighs the interest in protecting
confidentiality, and that the mediation communication is
sought or offered in:
(1) a court
proceeding involving a felony or misdemeanor; or
(2) except as
otherwise provided in subsection (c), a proceeding to
prove a claim to rescind or reform or a defense to avoid
liability on a contract arising out of the mediation.
(c) A mediator
may not be compelled to provide evidence of a mediation
communication referred to in subsection (a)(6) or
(b)(2).
(d) If a
mediation communication is not privileged under
subsection (a) or (b), only the portion of the
communication necessary for the application of the
exception from nondisclosure may be admitted. Admission
of evidence under subsection (a) or (b) does not render
the evidence, or any other mediation communication,
discoverable or admissible for any other purpose.
Section 7. (a) Except as
required in subsection (b), a mediator may not make a
report, assessment, evaluation, recommendation, finding,
or other communication regarding a mediation to a court,
administrative agency, or other authority that may make
a ruling on the dispute that is the subject of the
mediation.
(b) A mediator
may disclose:
(1) whether the
mediation occurred or has terminated, whether a
settlement was reached, and attendance;
(2) a mediation
communication as permitted under section 6; or
(3) a mediation
communication evidencing abuse, neglect, abandonment, or
exploitation of an individual to a public agency
responsible for protecting individuals against such
mistreatment.
(c) A
communication made in violation of subsection (a) may
not be considered by a court, administrative agency, or
arbitrator.
Section 8. Unless subject
to the requirements of chapters 30A, 34, 39, and 40
regarding open meetings and chapter 66 regarding public
records, mediation communications are confidential to
the extent agreed by the parties or provided by other
law or rule of this Commonwealth.
Section 9. (a) Before
accepting a mediation, an individual who is requested to
serve as a mediator shall:
(1) make an inquiry
that is reasonable under the circumstances to determine
whether there are any known facts that a reasonable
individual would consider likely to affect the
impartiality of the mediator, including a financial or
personal interest in the outcome of the mediation and an
existing or past relationship with a mediation party or
foreseeable participant in the mediation; and
(2) disclose any
such known fact to the mediation parties as soon as is
practical before accepting a mediation.
(b) If a
mediator learns any fact described in subsection (a)(1)
after accepting a mediation, the mediator shall disclose
it as soon as is practicable.
(c) At the
request of a mediation party, an individual who is
requested to serve as a mediator shall disclose the
mediator’s qualifications to mediate a dispute.
(d) A person
that violates subsection (a), (b), or (g) is precluded
by the violation from asserting a privilege under
section 4.
(e) Subsections
(a), (b), (c), and (g) do not apply to an individual
acting as a judge.
(f) This
chapter does not require that a mediator have a special
qualification by background or profession.
(g) A mediator
must be impartial, unless after disclosure of the facts
required in subsections (a) and (b) to be disclosed, the
parties agree otherwise.
Section 10. An attorney or
other individual designated by a party may accompany the
party to and participate in a mediation. A waiver of
participation given before the mediation may be
rescinded.
Section 11. This chapter
modifies, limits, or supersedes the federal Electronic
Signatures in Global and National Commerce Act, 15 U.S.C.
section 7001 et seq., but this chapter does not modify,
limit, or supersede section 101(c) of that Act or
authorize electronic delivery of any of the notices
described in section 103(b) of that Act.
Section 12. In applying and
construing this chapter, consideration should be given
to the need to promote uniformity of the law with
respect to its subject matter among States that enact
it.
Section 13. (a) This
chapter governs a mediation pursuant to a referral or an
agreement to mediate made on or after the effective date
of this chapter.
(b) On or after
one year from the effective date of this chapter, this
chapter governs an agreement to mediate whenever made.
SECTION 2.
This Act takes effect on July first, two thousand and
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