In Re AMENDMENTS TO the FLORIDA RULES FOR CERTIFIED AND COURT-APPOINTED MEDIATORS

202 So. 3d 795, 41 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 477, 2016 Fla. LEXIS 2362
CourtSupreme Court of Florida
DecidedOctober 27, 2016
DocketSC15-875
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 202 So. 3d 795 (In Re AMENDMENTS TO the FLORIDA RULES FOR CERTIFIED AND COURT-APPOINTED MEDIATORS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Florida primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re AMENDMENTS TO the FLORIDA RULES FOR CERTIFIED AND COURT-APPOINTED MEDIATORS, 202 So. 3d 795, 41 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 477, 2016 Fla. LEXIS 2362 (Fla. 2016).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This matter is before the Court for consideration of proposed amendments to the Florida Rules for Certified and Courts Appointed Mediators (Mediator Rules). We have jurisdiction. See art. V, § 2(a), Fla. Const.; § 44.106, Fla. Stat. (2016).

BACKGROUND

The Supreme Court Committee on Alternative Dispute Resolution Rules and Policy (Committee) has filed a petition to amend the Mediator Rules. The petition represents several years of work by the Committee and the Dispute Resolution Center to redraft Part III (Discipline) of the Mediator Rules. The Committee indicates that the existing rules in Part III have often proven confusing, lacking in guidance, or inadequate to address the increasing number and complexity of grievances alleging violations of the Mediator Rules or issues of good moral character in applicants for mediator certification. Accordingly, the proposals here are intended to close existing gaps in the rules, memorialize and clarify current procedures, and address situations for which no direction existed.

Because the Committee did not publish its proposals before submitting them, the Court published the proposed amendments for comment. We received comments from the Mediation/Arbitration Division of the Eleventh Judicial Circuit, and from the Alternative Dispute Resolution Section--of The Florida Bar. The Committee filed a response to the comments; in some instances, its response included revised rule proposals. The Court heard oral argument on the proposed amendments.

We have fully considered the Committee’s proposals, the comments, and the issues raised at oral argument. As discussed in this opinion, we adopt the Committee’s proposed amendments, with some modifications. We discuss some of the more significant amendments to the Mediator Rules below.

AMENDMENTS

Initially, the title of Part III of the Mediator Rules is changed to “Mediation Certification Applications and Discipline,” in order to better reflect that this Part covers both discipline of certified mediators and the qualifications for applicants for mediator certification. Similarly, rule 10.700 (Scope and Purpose) is amended, as proposed by the Committee, to clarify that Part III applies to all proceedings before investigatory committees and adjudicatory panels of the Mediator Qualifications and Discipline Review Board (MQDRB) (formerly the Mediator Qualifications Board), including applications for certification, as well as discipline of certified and court-appointed mediators.

Rule 10.720 (Definitions) is amended to include several new definitions. Subdivision (a) (Applicant) provides that the term “applicant” encompasses any new applicant for mediator certification, applicants seeking renewal of a current certification, applicants applying for additional types of certifications, or applicants seeking reinstatement of a certification. Subdivision (e) (File) provides a new definition for the term “file,” now requiring persons to deliver any pleadings, motions, instruments, or other papers to the Dispute Resolution Center. Additionally, we add new subdivisions (j) (Panel Adviser) and (k) (Prosecutor). A panel adviser is a member of The Florida Bar retained by the Dispute Resolution Center to assist the hearing panel in performing its- functions during a hearing. The prosecutor is a member of the Bar retained by the Center to prosecute a com *797 plaint before a hearing panel. The prosecutor is authorized to perform additional investigation to prepare a case, negotiate a consent to charges and an agreement to the imposition of sanctions, and to fully prosecute the case..

Also in rule 10,720, we have amended or added several new terms to reflect the néw procedures in Part III for handling grievances. Under these amended rules, grievances alleging issues of good moral character in applicants, and grievances alleging violations of the Mediator Rules by certified and court-appointed mediators, will be processed in separate tracks. Accordingly, the general term “complaint” in existing subdivision (c) is deleted and replaced with the new terms “Good Moral Character Inquiry” in subdivision (f) and “Rule Violation Complaint” in subdivision (m). As proposed by the Committee, a “Good Moral Character Inquiry” is the process that is initiated when the Dispute Resolution Center becomes aware of information relating to the good moral character of any certified or court-appointed mediator or applicant for certification, and a “Rule Violation Complaint” is the formal submission by any person or the Dispute Resolution Center of an alleged rule violation committed by a certified or court-appointed mediator. Similarly, the terms “Qualifications Complaint Committee” and “Complaint Committee” are deleted and replaced with the terms “Qualifications Inquiry Committee,” or QIC, in new subdivision (£) and “Rule Violation Complaint Committee,” or RVCC, in new subdivision (n). The QIC is composed of four members of the MQDRB selected by rotation for a one-year term to conduct investigations and dispose of good moral character inquiries; we have revised the Committee’s proposal in subdivision (l) to clarify that the QIC will conduct investigations and address good moral character inquiries for any applicant. The RVCC will be composed of three members of the MQDRB ■ selected by rotation to investigate and dispose of a specific rule violation complaint against a certified or court-appointed mediator. The QIC and the RVCC serve as the investigatory arm of the process; once the QIC or the RVCC determines there is probable cause, the ease is assigned to a panel for adjudication. As proposed by the Committee, subdivision (i) (Panel) now provides that the panel will be composed of five members of the MQDRB selected by rotation to adjudicate formal charges resulting from a rule violation or good moral character complaint. Panel members will be selected from the division of the MQDRB where the complaint arose, unless the Director of the Dispute Resolution Center finds good reason to choose members from another division.

We next amend rule 10.730 (Mediator Qualifications and Discipline Review Board), in subdivision (a) (Generally), to authorize a fourth standing division—the Southwest Division—of the MQDRB. The existing three divisions are labeled “Northern,” “Central,” and “Southeast,” respectively. Subdivision (b)(5) (Composition of Divisions; Dependency Mediators) of rule 10.730 is amended to require that at least one dependency mediator serving as a member in each standing division of the MQDRB must be a non-lawyer. We also amend subdivision (b)(7) (Composition of Divisions; Attorneys) to allow both currently licensed attorneys and previously licensed attorneys who have or had a substantial trial or appellate practice, and who have knowledge of and experience with mediation practice, statutes, and rules, to serve as members. Subdivision (c) (Appointment and Term) is amended to provide that members of the MQDRB shall not serve more than three .consecutive terms. Finally, subdivisions (d) (Rule Violation Complaint Committee (RVCC)), (e) *798 (Qualifications Inquiry Committee (QIC)), and (f) (Panels), are amended, as proposed by the Committee, to clarify the composition of the RVCC, the QIC, and the hearing panel.

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202 So. 3d 795, 41 Fla. L. Weekly Supp. 477, 2016 Fla. LEXIS 2362, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-amendments-to-the-florida-rules-for-certified-and-court-appointed-fla-2016.