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Dispute Regulation

Learn about the U.S. Civil Court system and how individuals utilize it to resolve disputes, exploring alternatives like ADR. Discover jurisdiction concepts, types of courts, and the benefits of Alternative Dispute Resolution methods like negotiation, mediation, and arbitration. Dive into the complexities of court procedures and understand when to opt for ADR over traditional litigation. Enhance your knowledge to make informed decisions in dispute resolution processes.

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Dispute Regulation

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  1. Dispute Regulation U.S. Civil Court system and how individuals use it to (hopefully) resolve their dispute and Alternatives to that system (Alternative Dispute Resolution or “ADR”) OBE-118, Section 3 Fall 2004 John McKinsey

  2. So you have a dispute…. Do I sue? What are my goals in resolving this dispute? Agreement between parties, resolution, quick, less expensive, private, etc. Lawsuit, attorney’s fees, courtroom, judge, jury, public, etc.

  3. Using Courts to Resolve Disputes • What court? (Jurisdiction) • How does the court system work? (Civil Procedure)

  4. What Court • The Federal Court System? • The State Court Systems? (really 50)

  5. Jurisdiction 3 Concepts of Jurisdiction • Court Jurisdiction (political boundaries) • Subject Matter Jurisdiction • Personal Jurisdiction

  6. Federal versus State Jurisdiction Exclusive Federal Jurisdiction Federal crimes and certain federal matters such as antitrust, patent, bankruptcy Concurrent Federal Jurisdiction Diversity of citizenship cases Federal matters not exclusive Exclusive State Jurisdiction All matters not covered above (State crimes, non-diversity civil suits based on state law, etc.)

  7. Court Jurisdiction Concurrent Federal Jurisdiction Exclusive Federal Jurisdiction Exclusive State Jurisdiction Federal Court State #1 Court State #2Court

  8. What Type of Court? • Courts of Limited versus General Jurisdiction • Trial versus appellate courts This is really all “Subject Matter Jurisdiction”

  9. What State Court Systems Can Be Used? • State where incident occurred • State where defendant “lives” • Other states? • Generally, the answer to this question is limited by “Personal Jurisdiction” and principals of Due Process

  10. Personal Jurisdiction In personam jurisdiction • Court must have subject matter jurisdiction over the complaint • Serve the person a summons within the state • Long arm statute can solve out-of-state problems

  11. The Jurisdiction Triangle Court Juris Personal Juris S/M Juris

  12. Trials Formal procedure is followed Text is great in this area

  13. Appeals • Not always mandatory that court must take it • Scope of review • Errors of law- yes • Errors of fact- no*

  14. Alternative Dispute Resolution • Solving a dispute by reaching mutual agreement is always better than relying upon civil court system. • Negotiation • Mediation • Arbitration • Arbitration clauses

  15. Arbitration Clauses • Waiving right to Jury Trial • Waiving right to sue or use court system • Increasingly being allowed by courts • To be effective against individual or consumer they usually must be conspicuous and directly acknowledged by individual

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