 Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
Wisconsin 
  Lawyer
  Vol. 81, No. 6, June 
2008
  
Mediating Complex Construction Claims 
Large and complex construction 
claims cases often involve 20 
  or more parties, millions of dollars in claims, complicated 
  factual and legal issues, intricate insurance coverage questions, and 
a host of 
  conflicting motivations and perspectives and often occur while 
  construction is ongoing. Here are some broad lessons learned from 
  mediating complex multiparty cases. 
   
by Roy E. Wagner & Terry 
F. Peppard
Sidebar:
 espite the current weakness in the 
national economy, construction spending in 
  the United States still accounts for more than $1 trillion annually, 
or more than 8 
  percent of the country's total gross domestic product of nearly $14 
  trillion.1 Many building projects, whether 
fully completed or still under construction, 
  generate disputes. And while the law affecting the industry 
continually evolves even 
  as project owners' and their advisors' expectations as to the 
performance of 
  builders grow more sophisticated, the flow of construction claims 
disputes continues 
  unabated. This is especially the case with large and complex ventures.
espite the current weakness in the 
national economy, construction spending in 
  the United States still accounts for more than $1 trillion annually, 
or more than 8 
  percent of the country's total gross domestic product of nearly $14 
  trillion.1 Many building projects, whether 
fully completed or still under construction, 
  generate disputes. And while the law affecting the industry 
continually evolves even 
  as project owners' and their advisors' expectations as to the 
performance of 
  builders grow more sophisticated, the flow of construction claims 
disputes continues 
  unabated. This is especially the case with large and complex ventures.
     Resolving large and complex construction claims cases presents 
significant challenges for lawyers and mediators. Such cases typically 
involve up to 20 or 
more parties, millions of dollars in claims, complicated factual and 
legal issues, 
and intricate insurance coverage questions. They also contain a witches' 
brew of 
conflicting motivations and perspectives. Project designers worry that 
their best 
laid plans have not been faithfully executed. Owners are troubled that 
they have not 
received the quality or timeliness they paid for. Builders are concerned 
that no 
one understands the difficulties they have faced from unpredictable 
weather and the 
need to coordinate the activities of many independent subcontractors and 
suppliers, 
some of whom may have been imposed on them by designers or owners.
     The successful resolution of such cases through mediation 
therefore 
requires sophisticated insight into the norms of the construction 
industry, detailed 
knowledge of related legal standards, an exceptional degree of mediative 
skill and 
diligence, and the application of a mediation process tailored to the 
unique 
circumstances these disputes present. Construction claims counsel must 
be prepared to 
advise their clients not only how to provide for mediation in their 
contracts, but whether 
and when to mediate, what mediation styles to employ, what mediation 
process to follow, and 
who their mediator(s) should be. 
     Although no two construction claims cases are precisely alike, 
some broad lessons can 
be gleaned from previous complex multiparty cases. 
Why Mediate
One of the ways in which large and complex construction claims cases 
tend to differ 
from other business cases is that parties involved in a building project 
frequently have long 
and continuing relationships that transcend the immediate situation. The 
desire, even the need, 
to preserve those vital relationships tends to suggest the wisdom of 
using mediation instead of 
a costly and disruptive trial to resolve the parties' dispute. 
   
    Roy E. Wagner, Marquette 1978, practices with von Briesen & 
Roper s.c., Milwaukee, 
chairing the firm's Construction Law Section. He concentrates his 
practice in construction law 
counseling and related claims litigation. He is also a mediator and 
arbitrator in construction 
cases and currently chairs the State Bar Construction & Public 
Contracting Law Section. 
 
Another difference between the construction claims case and the 
typical business case 
  is that quite often disputes will arise among owners, design 
professionals, builders, 
  suppliers, and subcontractors while a construction project is ongoing. 
When this occurs, it may be 
  imperative that the parties' differences be resolved as quickly as 
possible. Mediation offers 
  the speed and flexibility necessary to achieve such a result. 
     In addition, large construction claims cases may test the 
financial strength of 
parties who must fund completion efforts or repairs while simultaneously 
prosecuting or 
defending expensive litigation in which legal liability and insurance 
coverage responsibility are 
determined over many months or years. Because time is money in the 
construction industry, an 
accelerated mediation process promises relief from the fiscal stresses 
that inhere in 
construction claims cases. 
Providing for Mediation
Only a single brief contractual sentence is required to permit the 
parties to a 
construction project to provide for mediation if a dispute arises. If 
such a provision is included 
in a contract entered before a dispute has arisen, the provision usually 
is called a 
"pre-dispute mediation clause." A pre-dispute mediation 
agreement (or clause) can take the following 
form: "If a dispute arises out of or relates to this contract, or 
the breach thereof, and if 
the dispute cannot be settled through direct negotiation, the parties 
agree first to try in 
good faith to settle the dispute by mediation before resorting to 
arbitration, litigation, or 
some other dispute resolution procedure."
     Even when no such clause exists, the parties still may employ 
mediation after a 
dispute has arisen, and this agreement to mediate normally is called a 
"mediation submission 
agreement." A mediation submission agreement may take the following 
form: "The undersigned 
parties hereby agree to submit to mediation a dispute that has arisen 
between them with regard 
to [here briefly describe the nature of the dispute]."
When to Mediate
Traditional mediation doctrine argues that the best time to mediate a 
dispute is as soon 
as possible, preferably even before formal claims are filed. In 
construction disputes, 
including large and complex ones, this is preferred, even essential, if 
the project out of which 
claims arise is still underway or if the parties deem the relationships 
among themselves to be 
worth preserving. On the other hand, if the project is substantially 
completed when disputes 
surface, or if the parties' relationships are not highly valued or have 
diminished in 
importance, it may be best for them to acquire a sufficient quantum of 
evidence through the 
traditional litigation discovery process before mediating. Using the 
discovery process helps to 
ensure that everyone involved can, before sitting down at the bargaining 
table, effectively 
evaluate the nature, scope, strengths, weaknesses, and economic value of 
their respective claims 
and defenses. 
   
    Terry F. Peppard, U.W. 1973, is a commercial and construction 
claims 
arbitrator and mediator with offices in Madison. He is past chair of the 
State Bar Alternative 
Dispute Resolution Section and author of Arbitration and Mediation of 
Business 
Disputes, published by State Bar CLE Books. He also teaches 
negotiation and mediation at the U.W. 
Law School. 
 
Indeed, the ideal time to mediate a large and complex construction 
claims case in 
  which the project has been completed, or when the parties lack a 
relationship they judge worth 
  preserving, may be immediately after the close of discovery, with only 
weeks or, at most, a 
  few months remaining before the scheduled trial date. The parties, 
their counsel, and 
  insurers should by then have acquired the information they need 
through the discovery process, and 
  all concerned can focus on weighing the benefits of a mediated 
resolution against the costs 
  and risks of trial.
Mediation Styles
Should the mediator in a large and complex construction claims case 
employ a 
facilitative style or instead an evaluative style, which often is 
appropriate in a litigation claims 
setting?2 Facilitative techniques frequently 
offer the best opportunity for the parties to 
preserve their valued relationships, while evaluative methods enable 
them to have the benefit 
of an expert parsing of the issues in the case without risking the costs 
or consequences of 
a public trial. Experience teaches that in large and complicated 
construction cases the 
parties usually want an expert evaluation of the issues as well as 
traditional facilitated 
negotiation. Therefore, the best approach is for mediators in such cases 
to use a blend of both 
facilitative methods and industry-specific evaluative methods. 
The Mediation Process
Traditional practice is to follow a standardized format during a 
mediation session. 
This normally means beginning in a plenary (or joint) session with all 
parties and counsel 
present for opening statements by the mediator(s) and counsel. The 
plenary session is 
customarily followed by a series of private caucus 
sessions3 in which the mediator(s) 
confidentially 
explore with each party and the party's counsel their interests, needs, 
and settlement 
options. Once the caucus process has produced an agreement, the custom 
is to reassemble the parties 
and counsel for a brief signing ceremony to memorialize the essential 
terms of the 
agreement reached in the mediation, with a more detailed formal 
agreement to 
follow.4 In a large and complex construction 
claims case, however, it may be best to significantly modify the 
standard mediation process to optimize the prospects for its success. 
     One modification is for the mediator(s) to conduct separate 
preliminary caucus 
sessions with each party a few days before the scheduled plenary 
mediation session. This technique 
has the advantage not only of allowing the mediator(s) to become 
personally acquainted with 
all parties and their counsel in advance of the plenary session but also 
of ensuring that 
all participants, including the least-involved suppliers and 
subcontractors, have a chance 
for their concerns to be heard. The use of preliminary pre-session 
caucuses also reduces the 
expensive down time otherwise experienced by parties and attorneys left 
waiting for their 
individual caucuses with the mediator(s) when all parties are assembled 
simultaneously. By 
the conclusion of these pre-session caucuses, the mediator(s) should be 
able readily to 
organize the information thus gleaned from the parties in a manner that 
will greatly facilitate, 
and abbreviate, the normal caucus process that customarily follows the 
plenary session.
     Another helpful modification to the mediation process is for the 
mediator(s) to 
conduct separate caucus sessions with each insured party and with each 
insurer. This technique 
gives the participants the opportunity to obtain from the mediator(s) 
the evaluative input 
they often desire. It allows all concerned parties to explore with the 
mediator(s) both the 
coverage issues and the merits of the claims and defenses affecting each 
party without 
compromising the conflicting positions often taken by insurers and 
insureds.5 
     Yet another effective technique is for the mediator(s), with the 
informed consent of 
all parties, to assemble a blind settlement pool from financial 
contributions made by each 
participant without the participants knowing how much the others have 
contributed.6 The blind pool method helps to 
minimize the tendency toward a kind of comparison shopping among 
contributors to the pool, based on the parties' various perceptions of 
comparative liability or 
financial wherewithal of the several members of the construction 
"team," a tendency which often 
prevents an effective settlement. To address this problem, all 
contributions to the settlement pool 
can be deposited to a trust account maintained by the mediator(s), from 
which settlement 
distributions are made, thus preserving the confidentiality of the 
individual contributions. 
     The deft use of techniques such as these has been shown to be 
effective in resolving 
the most intractable construction cases, including those in which prior 
use of more routine 
mediation methods has failed. 
Who Should Mediate 
One of the lessons learned from mediating large and complex 
construction claims cases 
is that mediation often is best done by a team of two mediators. 
Experienced comediators, 
especially those who have proven to work well together, add value to the 
mediation process 
by pooling their strengths, dividing tasks efficiently, and vetting 
their evaluative 
assessments within the team. Experience shows that effective comediators 
save the parties time, and 
therefore money, by streamlining and expediting the mediation 
process.7 The use of comediators with the 
right mix of industry expertise and mediation process skills also gives 
the parties 
and their attorneys confidence that they will not need to waste time 
educating their 
mediator(s) about the intricacies of the construction business or 
related legal principles. 
     The argument for comediation in large and complex construction 
claims cases has 
been succinctly summarized by commentators:8
  - With comediation, chances are improved that settlement 
negotiations can be 
    concluded within a normal working day."  
- "The cost savings from a more efficient co-mediation process 
easily outweigh the 
    relatively small added expense of utilizing a second mediator when 
there are more than five or 
    six parties and the issues are relatively complex."  
     For these reasons, comediation is used increasingly in large and 
complex 
construction claims cases across the United States.
     With this in mind, in today's practice environment, any 
construction claims case 
with seven or more parties and an amount in controversy of seven figures 
or more (the 
"pair-of-sevens" test) is a natural, indeed a prime, candidate 
for comediation. 
Selecting the Mediator(s)
A particular challenge for counsel in the large and complex 
construction claims case is 
to select a mediator or mediators with the best mix of industry 
expertise and mediation 
skills for the task at hand. The best mediators for a large and complex 
construction claims case 
will have the ability to understand the competing perspectives of all 
participants because 
they possess a broad experience in construction law, the economics of 
the building industry, 
claims litigation, insurance coverage, and mediation methodology. In 
addition, the right 
mediators will have shown the capacity to both design and execute a 
successful mediation process 
for large and complex cases and will have demonstrated a commitment to 
distribute fairly the 
inevitable discomfort of the mediation process.
Conclusion
For the reasons described above, mediation is the tool of choice for 
resolving large 
and complex construction claims cases. Lawyers who represent parties in 
such cases can do much 
to advance their clients' interests by taking account of the character 
of large multiparty 
construction claims and applying suitable mediation techniques.
Endnotes 
Wisconsin Lawyer