Monday, March 10, 2008

Mediation and Walden Pond


I spent Thursday and Friday mediating E. coli cases involving Wendys and its supplier. About 35 attorneys, company representatives and 6 layers of insurance showed up in a confined area in Federal Court for the District of Utah. We settled three of the cases and still have two remaining. For our clients that are irreparably injured, it is by far the worst thing they have ever endured. For the insurance companies, producers and retailers of the tainted product, it seems to be more of a business decision. However, I did see in the face of one senior executive real concern for our clients. He appears to have what I call humanity.

Henry David Thoreau was a 27-year-old former schoolteacher when he went to live at Walden Pond in the summer of 1845. His friend Ralph Waldo Emerson, who had recently purchased 14 wooded acres of on the northwestern shore of Walden Pond, agreed to let the young writer conduct his "experiment in simplicity" there. Henry built a small cabin next to the large pond and spent a couple of years thinking about what was important. He sought balance. I suspect he took many deep breaths and listened to the silence.

Being in a place where there are over 35 lawyers trying to make a good decision is not a Walden experience. It is however, a necessary step to help seriously injured people. I suspect Thoreau spent a few stormy nights in his small one-room cabin. It allowed him to appreciate the open expanse of thought and the promise of renewal. Although I am disappointed not all of our cases settled, I am hopeful that as the main decision makers have now had time to step outside the small spaces that they occupied last week, they now have an opportunity to find perspective and return with a new expanse of thought to settle the storm that has occurred in the lives of our clients.

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