Over the years, litigation has become more complex, more protracted and often more expensive. An action started in the High Court can then progress to the Court of Appeal and sometimes even on to the Supreme Court. This can add years and huge costs to the case and make litigation prohibitive for all but the wealthy.
In recent years, non-court options have become more popular and terms like Mediation and Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR) are well known to the public. Reference to mediation has moved from the Family Law Courts to all other courts who entertain disputes. You read in the papers how a judge might gently advise the parties to think about mediation as an alternative, but the question is often asked: can a judge effectively compel parties to enter into mediation?
A recent superior court decision in the UK, which is more than likely to be followed here, suggests that a judge can be equally forceful in pushing the parties towards settlement of their dispute by mediation.
On 29 November 2023, the Court of Appeal in London issued its judgement on whether litigants can, in effect, be compelled to use other alternatives to the court process such as mediation.
In this case, the plaintiff sued his local council alleging it had negligently allowed Japanese Knotweed on their adjacent site to enter into and infest his garden. The council asked him to suspend his case while their internal complaints department investigate and try to resolve the matter.
The court was asked whether parties in dispute could be compelled to use other non-court-based resolution methods, such as using the council’s housing dispute scheme.
The trial judge, in the High Court, felt his hands were tied by an earlier 2004 decision where the presiding judge, Lord Dyson suggested that compelling parties to enter into mediation would be a denial of their right to access the courts.