A Call for Face-to-Face Communication in Litigation

Victoria Pynchon posted an article she wrote (not sure where it was published) at her IP ADR Blog -- click here for the post and the article.  Pynchon argued that the common practice of communicating with opposing counsel largely by email, except during depositions or hearings, tends to increase animosity and conflict of a litigation.  In the asocial world of email we tend to write more aggressively and we tend to read more aggression into emails we receive.  Pynchon supports these theories with studies, but I suspect most litigators are aware of the email aggression problem from practice. 
It is no surprise that increased aggression in a naturally aggressive proceeding has negative consequences.  For example, parties that often meet for the first time at a mediation or settlement conference arrive not trusting or respecting each other, making resolution much more difficult.  Pynchon suggested a somewhat radical solution to the email problem -- live meetings with opposing counsel.  She suggested that you routinely have live meetings with opposing counsel throughout the course of a litigation, including perhaps even doing some meetings over a meal.  The face-to-face contact would generate the trust and respect needed to resolve issues that always arise during  a litigation.  I have always advocated live meetings with co-counsel in a multi-party litigation.  Email communications (or even conference calls) tend to get out of hand and the parties tend not to pay enough attention to others' positions.  I am going to expand that practice to opposing counsel.

One other thought, that I do not know if Pynchon will agree with.  Those who still avoid email and continue using letters as a main communication means are not off the hook.  I started practicing when letters, not emails, were how you communicated with opposing counsel.  Those letters tended to be far more aggressive than the attorneys were in a live conversation.  And I suspect people tended to read extra aggression into the letters they received.  I do not know if aggression is stronger in emails than letters, but the same problem exists whether you hit send, hit print or use a pen to write to opposing counsel.

Chicago IP Litigator James Amend Appointed Chief Federal Circuit Mediator

Jim Amend, a founder of the Kirkland & Ellis intellectual property group and longtime Chicagoan, was recently appointed the Federal Circuit's Chief Circuit Mediator.  Jim will take charge of the Federal Circuit mediation program in January 2007, shortly after it was changed from a voluntary to a mandatory program.

I worked with Jim while I was at Kirkland & Ellis and can say that, in addition to having extensive intellectual property litigation and mediation experience, he is an excellent person and will do a tremendous job running the Federal Circuit's mediation program.  Congratulations to Jim on this exciting opportunity and to the Federal Circuit for making such an astute appointment.  Also, a practice tip for anyone in mediation with Jim:  be prepared, Jim is extremely hard working and sharp and, I suspect, he will hold counsel in his mediations to the same high standards he sets for himself.

Thanks to Dennis Crouch at Patently-O for the heads up to Jim's appointment.