Ethics/Professional Responsibility,
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Feb. 13, 2026
The power of communication in keeping cases moving and clients happy
Cases stall not from law, but from silence. A quick call or mediated chat can clear confusion, build trust and move settlements forward.
Robyn E. Frick
Robyn Frick Law, P.C.Email: Robyn@RobynFrickMediation.com
Robyn E. Frick is a full-time mediator with over 19 years of experience as a litigator representing both plaintiffs and defendants. She mediates business, employment, real estate and personal injury disputes, bringing legal insight, emotional intelligence and ego-free efficiency to every case. Robyn has also served extensively on court panels conducting mediations and settlement conferences.
By this point in the year, most New Year's resolutions
have quietly faded. Calendars are full again, inboxes are overflowing, and
whatever good intentions were set in January have been overtaken by deadlines
and daily pressure. There is little appetite for adding one more obligation to
an already demanding practice.
Fortunately, improving efficiency does not always require
doing more.
Background
The way lawyers communicate with one another has changed
significantly over the last several years, and not always for the better.
Email, text, electronic filings and virtual appearances have made practice more
efficient, but they have also reduced the number of direct conversations
between counsel.
As a result, communication has become more guarded and
more positional. Important information is often exchanged slowly or
incompletely, and misunderstandings linger longer than they should. These
changes may seem minor, but their impact on case resolution is substantial.
The problem
The problem is not a lack of diligence or professionalism,
but a breakdown in direct communication. Many cases do not stall because the
law is unclear or the numbers cannot work. They stall because
information is not exchanged early enough, clearly enough, or in a way that
builds trust.
Written communication has its place, but it often
reinforces positions rather than clarifying them. Without conversation,
uncertainty grows, assumptions harden and mistrust can
take hold. Once that happens, even otherwise resolvable cases become difficult
to move forward.
Effective communication is also tied to core professional
obligations under the California Rules of Professional Conduct. Competence
under Rule 1.1 and diligence under Rule 1.3 require more than knowing the law
and meeting deadlines. They require actively engaging with the substance of a
case, understanding what information is necessary to evaluate it, and
communicating in a way that allows the matter to move forward rather than
stagnate.
Examples from practice
From a mediator's chair, the consequences of inconsistent
communication are apparent.
In one recent mediation involving multiple parties,
counsel for some of the parties had been in regular contact well before the
session. They exchanged key information, including materials necessary for
meaningful evaluation, and discussed the strengths, risks and settlement
considerations of the case. By the time the mediation began, those parties
shared a common understanding of the issues and entered the process with
realistic expectations.
Communication among the remaining participants was less
consistent. Outreach in advance of the mediation had been sporadic, and
information was exchanged in a more limited and incomplete way. That gap became
apparent during the session, as issues surfaced that others
believed had already been addressed. The result was predictable. The parties
who had meaningfully communicated before the mediation were able to reach a
resolution, while the others were not. The gap was not just legal. It was
communicative.
That same dynamic appeared in a different way in another
recent mediation.
In that case, the parties were close to resolution but
stalled on a final issue. Each side needed additional information before the
remaining gap could be bridged. Without that exchange, uncertainty developed,
along with concern that important details remained unresolved. That uncertainty
became the obstacle to settlement.
One lawyer expressed hesitation about communicating
directly and asked that the exchange take place with the mediator's assistance.
That request was entirely appropriate. Using a mediator to structure
communication is often exactly what allows the process to move forward. Once
the information was shared in a clear and supported way, concerns eased and positions became more flexible. Although the case
did not resolve that day, the parties agreed to reconvene. When they returned,
the earlier uncertainty was no longer the obstacle and the case ultimately
settled.
The solution
The solution is straightforward: when communication
stalls, direct conversation, whether between counsel or with a mediator's
guidance, can make the difference between impasse and resolution. Direct
communication does not undermine advocacy. In practice, it often strengthens
it.
A brief conversation can clarify what information is
missing, identify what actually matters to each side
and prevent misunderstandings from hardening into positions. This is especially
important at key inflection points, such as before mediation or when
negotiations begin to narrow.
This can be particularly challenging for newer lawyers.
Many entered the profession in an era shaped by email, text and remote
learning, where picking up the phone may feel uncomfortable or risky. That
discomfort is understandable, but it has consequences. Issues that could be
resolved through a short conversation instead turn into prolonged disputes,
unnecessary motion practice and increased costs for clients.
The California Rules of Professional Conduct also
emphasize fairness in dealing with opposing parties and counsel under Rule 3.4.
In mediation, that principle shows up through meaningful participation and
good-faith information exchange. While advocacy remains essential, withholding
communication or avoiding engagement can undermine both the process and the
potential for resolution.
Conclusion
Most civil cases do not need more briefing or sharper
motions. They need clearer communication at the right moment. The State Bar's
MCLE civility requirements reflect this reality, but civility is not a box to
check. It shows up in how lawyers communicate with judges, courtroom staff,
opposing counsel, mediators and settlement officers.
In practice, very few cases are ever decided by a jury.
They resolve through exchanged information, candid assessment of risk, and
conversations that happen long before trial. Mediation works best when those
conversations have already begun, or when the parties are at least open to
starting them.
As the year moves on and the initial momentum of
resolutions fades, this is one practice still worth trying. Before drafting the
next email or filing the next motion, consider a conversation. A little
cooperation, at the right moment, can go a long way toward getting cases
resolved.
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