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STATE BAR’S DISPUTE RESOLUTION SECTION ISSUES NEW REPORT ON USE OF DISCOVERY IN ARBITRATIONReport addresses problem of controlling discovery in domestic commercial arbitration ALBANY – A new report issued by the New York State Bar Association’s Dispute Resolution Section sets forth Precepts that will help arbitrators handle discovery in domestic commercial cases in a cost-effective and fair manner, consistent with the expectation of the parties who select the arbitration process. The Report On Arbitration Discovery in Domestic Commercial Cases can be a significant tool particularly as the use of arbitration grows for large, complex commercial cases, as well as smaller cases. “The Dispute Resolution Section’s report is a particularly exciting development for the still growing field of alternative dispute resolution. I am deeply grateful for, and proud of, the work of the drafting committee – Carroll Neesemann, Sherman Kahn, and John Wilkinson – for creating what will be an essential guide to arbitrators in orchestrating discovery and making discovery determinations in domestic commercial arbitration,” said Simeon H. Baum of New York (Resolve Mediation Services, Inc.), the first, and immediate past, chair of the Dispute Resolution Section. “The State Bar has a longstanding tradition of responding to the critical issues that affect our profession. The approval of this report will go a long way toward helping arbitrators resolve future discovery disputes in a manner balancing the values of efficiency, responsiveness to party expectations, procedural due process, and fairness. The result should greatly benefit practitioners, parties, and administrators – in short all users of the arbitration process,” he concluded. At the request of Immediate Past State Bar President Bernice K.
Leber of New York (Arent Fox LLP), the Dispute Resolution Section
studied the use of arbitration in domestic commercial matters. The
section performed research, conducted interviews with members of the
arbitration bar and representatives of arbitration organizations, and
reviewed work done by such organizations and other literature on the
subject of arbitration discovery. Among the many arbitration discovery Precepts contained in the report are:
In addition to the Precepts, the report also includes Factors an arbitrator should consider in determining the appropriate scope of discovery, including the nature of the dispute, the characteristics of the parties, the terms of their agreement, the relevance of requested discovery and the parties' reasonable need for it, and matters of privilege and confidentiality. To view the Dispute Resolution Section’s report visit: www.nysba.org/drreport. Established in 2008 as the 24th Section of the New York State Bar Association, the Dispute Resolution Section provides a forum for improving the processes and the understanding of dispute resolution alternatives, for enhancing the proficiency of practitioners, and for increasing the knowledge and availability of party-selected solutions. The 76,000-member New York State Bar Association is the official statewide organization of lawyers in New York and the largest voluntary state bar association in the nation. Founded in 1876, State Bar programs and activities have continuously served the public and improved the justice system for more than 130 years. ### |
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