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Public Act 100-0205 Public Act 0205 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY |
Public Act 100-0205 | SB0067 Enrolled | LRB100 00354 HEP 10358 b |
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| AN ACT concerning alternative dispute resolution.
| Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
| represented in the General Assembly:
| Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the | Collaborative Process Act. | Section 5. Definitions. In this Act: | (1) "Collaborative process communication" means a | statement, whether oral or in a record, or verbal or nonverbal, | that: | (A) is made to conduct, participate in, continue, or | reconvene a collaborative process; and | (B) occurs after the parties sign a collaborative | process participation agreement and before the | collaborative process is concluded. | (2) "Collaborative process participation agreement" means | a written agreement by persons acting with informed consent to | participate in a collaborative process, in which the persons | agree to discharge their collaborative process lawyer and law | firm if the collaborative process fails. | (3) "Collaborative process" means a procedure intended to | resolve a collaborative process matter without intervention by | a court in which persons: | (A) sign a collaborative process participation |
| agreement; and | (B) are represented by collaborative process lawyers. | (4) "Collaborative process lawyer" means a lawyer who | represents a party in a collaborative process and helps carry | out the process of the agreement, but is not a party to the | agreement. | (5) "Collaborative process matter" means a dispute, | transaction, claim, problem, or issue for resolution, | including a dispute, claim, or issue in a proceeding, which is | described in a collaborative process participation agreement | and arises under the family or domestic relations law of this | State, including: | (A) marriage, divorce, dissolution, annulment, legal | separation, and property distribution; | (B) significant decision making and parenting time of | children; | (C) maintenance and child support; | (D) adoption; | (E) parentage; and | (F) premarital, marital, and post-marital agreements. | "Collaborative process matter" does not include any | dispute, transaction, claim, problem, or issue that: (i) is the | subject of a pending action under the Juvenile Court Act of | 1987; (ii) is under investigation by the Illinois Department of | Children and Family Services pursuant to the Abused and | Neglected Child Reporting Act; or (iii) resulted in a currently |
| open case with the Illinois Department of Children and Family | Services. | (6) "Law firm" means: | (A) lawyers who practice law together in a partnership, | professional corporation, sole proprietorship, limited | liability company, or association; and | (B) lawyers employed in a legal services organization, | law school or the legal department of a corporation or | other organization. | (7) "Nonparty participant" means a person, other than a | party and the party's collaborative process lawyer, that | participates in a collaborative process. | (8) "Party" means a person other than a collaborative | process lawyer that signs a collaborative process | participation agreement and whose consent is necessary to | resolve a collaborative process matter. | (9) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business | trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company, | association, joint venture, public corporation, government or | governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any | other legal or commercial entity.
| (10) "Proceeding" means a judicial or other adjudicative | process before a court, including related prehearing and | post-hearing motions, conferences, and discovery. | (11) "Prospective party" means a person that discusses with | a prospective collaborative process lawyer the possibility of |
| signing a collaborative process participation agreement. | (12) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a | tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other | medium and is retrievable in perceivable form. | (13) "Related to a collaborative process matter" means | involving the same parties, transaction or occurrence, nucleus | of operative fact, dispute, claim, or issue as the | collaborative process matter. | (14) "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or | adopt a record: | (A) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or | (B) to attach to or logically associate with the record | an electronic symbol, sound, or process. | Section 10. Applicability. This Act applies to a | collaborative process participation agreement that meets the | requirements of Section 15 signed on or after the effective | date of this Act. | Section 15. Collaborative process participation agreement; | requirements. | (a) A collaborative process participation agreement must: | (1) be in a record; | (2) be signed by the parties; | (3) state the parties' intention to resolve a | collaborative process matter through a collaborative |
| process under this Act; | (4) state the parties' agreement to discharge their | collaborative process lawyers and law firms if the | collaborative process fails. | (5) describe the nature and scope of the matter; | (6) identify the collaborative process lawyer who | represents each party in the process; and | (7) contain a statement by each collaborative process | lawyer confirming the lawyer's representation of a party in | the collaborative process. | (b) Parties may agree to include in a collaborative process | participation agreement additional provisions not inconsistent | with this Act.
| Section 20. Beginning and concluding the collaborative | process.
| (a) A collaborative process begins when the parties sign a | collaborative process participation agreement. | (b) A court may not order a party to participate in a | collaborative process over that party's objection. | (c) A collaborative process is concluded by: | (1) resolution of a collaborative process matter as | evidenced by a signed record of the parties; | (2) resolution of a part of the collaborative process | matter, evidenced by a signed record of the parties, in | which the parties agree that the remaining parts of the |
| matter will not be resolved in the process; or | (3) termination of the process. | (d) A collaborative process terminates: | (1) when a party gives notice to other parties in a | record that the process is ended; | (2) when a party: | (A) begins a proceeding related to a collaborative | process matter without the agreement of all parties; or | (B) in a pending proceeding related to the matter: | (i) initiates a pleading, motion, order to | show cause, or request for a conference with the | court; | (ii) requests that the proceeding be put on the | court's active calendar; or | (iii) takes similar action requiring notice to | be sent to the parties; | (3) except as otherwise provided by subsection (g), | when a party discharges a collaborative process lawyer or a | collaborative process lawyer withdraws from further | representation of a party; or | (4) when the process no longer meets the definition of | collaborative process matter. | (e) A party's collaborative process lawyer shall give | prompt notice to all other parties in a record of a discharge | or withdrawal. | (f) A party may terminate a collaborative process with or |
| without cause. | (g) A collaborative process continues, despite the | discharge or withdrawal of a collaborative process lawyer, if | not later than 30 days after the date that the notice of the | discharge or withdrawal of a collaborative process lawyer | required by subsection (e) is sent to the parties: | (1) the unrepresented party engages a successor | collaborative process lawyer; and | (2) in a signed record: | (A) the parties consent to continue the process by | reaffirming the collaborative process participation | agreement; | (B) the agreement is amended to identify the | successor collaborative process lawyer; and
| (C) the successor collaborative process lawyer | confirms the lawyer's representation of a party in the | collaborative process. | (h) A collaborative process does not conclude if, with the | consent of the parties, a party requests a court to approve a | resolution of the collaborative process matter or any part | thereof as evidenced by a signed record. | (i) A collaborative process participation agreement may | provide additional methods of concluding a collaborative | process. | Section 25. Proceedings pending before a court; status |
| report.
| (a) Persons in a proceeding pending before a court may sign | a collaborative process participation agreement to seek to | resolve a collaborative process matter related to the | proceeding. The parties shall file promptly with the court a | notice of the agreement after it is signed. Subject to | subsection (c) and Sections 30 and 35, the filing operates as | an application for a stay of the proceeding.
| (b) The parties shall file promptly with the court notice | in a record when a collaborative process concludes. The stay of | the proceeding, if granted, under subsection (a) is lifted when | the notice is filed. The notice may not specify any reason for | termination of the process. | (c) A court in which a proceeding is stayed under | subsection (a) may require the parties and collaborative | process lawyers to provide a status report on the collaborative | process and the proceeding. A status report may include only | information on: (i) whether the process is ongoing or | concluded; or (ii) the anticipated duration of the | collaborative process. | (d) A court may not consider a communication made in | violation of subsection (c). | (e) A court shall provide parties notice and an opportunity | to be heard before dismissing a proceeding in which a notice of | collaborative process is filed based on delay or failure to | prosecute.
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| Section 30. Emergency order. Nothing in the collaborative | process may prohibit a party from seeking an emergency order to | protect the health, safety, welfare, or interest of a party or | person identified as protected in Section 201 of the Illinois | Domestic Violence Act of 1986, or may prohibit a party or | nonparty participant from making a report of abuse, neglect, | abandonment, or exploitation of a child or adult under the law | of this State. | Section 35. Approval of agreement by the court. A court may | approve an agreement resulting from a collaborative process. An | agreement resulting from the collaborative process shall be | presented to the court for approval if the agreement is to be | enforceable. | Section 40. Disclosure of information. Voluntary informal | disclosure of information related to a matter is a defining | characteristic of the collaborative process. Except as | provided by law other than this Act, during the collaborative | process, on the request of another party, a party shall make | timely, full, candid, and informal disclosure of information | related to the collaborative process matter without formal | discovery. A party also shall update promptly previously | disclosed information that has materially changed. The parties | may define the scope of disclosure during the collaborative |
| process. | Section 45. Standards of professional responsibility and | mandatory reporting not affected. This Act does not affect:
| (1) the professional responsibility obligations and | standards applicable to a lawyer or other licensed | professional; or
| (2) the obligation of a person to report abuse or | neglect, abandonment, or exploitation of a child or adult | under the law of this State.
| Section 50. Confidentiality of collaborative process | communication. A collaborative process communication is | confidential to the extent agreed by the parties in a signed | record or as provided by law of this State other than this Act. | Section 55. Privilege against disclosure for collaborative | process communication; admissibility; discovery.
| (a) Subject to Sections 60 and 65, a collaborative process | communication is privileged under subsection (b), is not | subject to discovery, and is not admissible in evidence. | (b) In a proceeding, the following privileges apply:
| (1) A party may refuse to disclose, and may prevent any | other person from disclosing, a collaborative process | communication. | (2) A nonparty participant may refuse to disclose, and |
| may prevent any other person from disclosing, a | collaborative process communication of the nonparty | participant.
| (c) Evidence or information that is otherwise admissible or | subject to discovery does not become inadmissible or protected | from discovery solely because of its disclosure or use in a | collaborative process. | Section 60. Waiver and preclusion of privilege.
| (a) A privilege under Section 55 may be waived in a record | or orally during a proceeding if it is expressly waived by all | parties and, in the case of the privilege of a nonparty | participant, it is also expressly waived by the nonparty | participant.
| (b) A person that makes a disclosure or representation | about a collaborative process communication which prejudices | another person in a proceeding may not assert a privilege under | Section 55, but this preclusion applies only to the extent | necessary for the person prejudiced to respond to the | disclosure or representation.
| Section 65. Limits of privilege.
| (a) There is no privilege under Section 55 for a | collaborative process communication that is: | (1) available to the public under the Freedom of | Information Act or made during a session of a collaborative |
| process that is open, or is required by law to be open, to | the public; | (2) a threat or statement of a plan to inflict bodily | injury or commit a crime of violence as defined in Section | 1-10 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency | Act; | (3) intentionally used to plan a crime, commit or | attempt to commit a crime, or conceal an ongoing crime or | ongoing criminal activity; or | (4) in an agreement resulting from the collaborative | process, evidenced by a record signed by all parties to the | agreement. | (b) The privileges under Section 55 for a collaborative | process communication do not apply to the extent that a | communication is: | (1) sought or offered to prove or disprove a claim or | complaint of professional misconduct or malpractice | arising from or related to a collaborative process; or | (2) sought or offered to prove or disprove abuse, | neglect, abandonment, or exploitation of a child or adult. | (c) There is no privilege under Section 55 if a court | finds, after a hearing in camera, that the party seeking | discovery or the proponent of the evidence has shown the | evidence is not otherwise available, the need for the evidence | substantially outweighs the interest in protecting | confidentiality, and the collaborative process communication |
| is sought or offered in: | (1) a court proceeding involving a felony or | misdemeanor; or | (2) a proceeding seeking rescission or reformation of a | contract arising out of the collaborative process or in | which a defense to avoid liability on the contract is | asserted. | (d) If a collaborative process communication is subject to | an exception under subsection (b) or (c), only the part of the | communication necessary for the application of the exception | may be disclosed or admitted. | (e) Disclosure or admission of evidence excepted from the | privilege under subsection (b) or (c) does not make the | evidence or any other collaborative process communication | discoverable or admissible for any other purpose. | (f) The privileges under Section 55 do not apply if the | parties agree in advance in a signed record, or if a record of | a proceeding reflects agreement by the parties, that all or | part of a collaborative process is not privileged. This | subsection does not apply to a collaborative process | communication made by a person that did not receive actual | notice of the agreement before the communication was made.
| Section 70. Authority of the Illinois Supreme Court. This | Act is subject to the supervisory authority of the Illinois | Supreme Court. |
Effective Date: 1/1/2018
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