Illinois General Assembly - Full Text of SB0067
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Full Text of SB0067  100th General Assembly

SB0067 100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY

  
  

 


 
100TH GENERAL ASSEMBLY
State of Illinois
2017 and 2018
SB0067

 

Introduced 1/11/2017, by Sen. Michael E. Hastings

 

SYNOPSIS AS INTRODUCED:
 
New Act

    Creates the Collaborative Process Act. Defines terms. Provides that the Act applies to collaborative process participation agreements that meet the requirements of the Act signed on or after the effective date of the Act. Contains provisions concerning: requirements of collaborative process participation agreements; the beginning and conclusion of the collaborative process; proceedings before the court; disclosure of information; standards of professional responsibility and mandatory reporting; confidentiality; and privileges. Provides that the Act is subject to the supervisory authority of the Illinois Supreme Court.


LRB100 00354 HEP 10358 b

 

 

A BILL FOR

 

SB0067LRB100 00354 HEP 10358 b

1    AN ACT concerning alternative dispute resolution.
 
2    Be it enacted by the People of the State of Illinois,
3represented in the General Assembly:
 
4    Section 1. Short title. This Act may be cited as the
5Collaborative Process Act.
 
6    Section 5. Definitions. In this Act:
7    (1) "Collaborative process communication" means a
8statement, whether oral or in a record, or verbal or nonverbal,
9that:
10        (A) is made to conduct, participate in, continue, or
11    reconvene a collaborative process; and
12        (B) occurs after the parties sign a collaborative
13    process participation agreement and before the
14    collaborative process is concluded.
15    (2) "Collaborative process participation agreement" means
16a written agreement by persons acting with informed consent to
17participate in a collaborative process, in which the persons
18agree to discharge their collaborative process lawyer and law
19firm if the collaborative process fails.
20    (3) "Collaborative process" means a procedure intended to
21resolve a collaborative process matter without intervention by
22a court in which persons:
23        (A) sign a collaborative process participation

 

 

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1    agreement; and
2        (B) are represented by collaborative process lawyers.
3    (4) "Collaborative process lawyer" means a lawyer who
4represents a party in a collaborative process and helps carry
5out the process of the agreement, but is not a party to the
6agreement.
7    (5) "Collaborative process matter" means a dispute,
8transaction, claim, problem, or issue for resolution,
9including a dispute, claim, or issue in a proceeding, which is
10described in a collaborative process participation agreement
11and arises under the family or domestic relations law of this
12State, including:
13        (A) marriage, divorce, dissolution, annulment, legal
14    separation, and property distribution;
15        (B) significant decision making and parenting time of
16    children;
17        (C) maintenance and child support;
18        (D) adoption;
19        (E) parentage; and
20        (F) premarital, marital, and post-marital agreements.
21    (6) "Law firm" means:
22        (A) lawyers who practice law together in a partnership,
23    professional corporation, sole proprietorship, limited
24    liability company, or association; and
25        (B) lawyers employed in a legal services organization,
26    law school or the legal department of a corporation or

 

 

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1    other organization.
2    (7) "Nonparty participant" means a person, other than a
3party and the party's collaborative process lawyer, that
4participates in a collaborative process.
5    (8) "Party" means a person other than a collaborative
6process lawyer that signs a collaborative process
7participation agreement and whose consent is necessary to
8resolve a collaborative process matter.
9    (9) "Person" means an individual, corporation, business
10trust, estate, trust, partnership, limited liability company,
11association, joint venture, public corporation, government or
12governmental subdivision, agency, or instrumentality, or any
13other legal or commercial entity.
14    (10) "Proceeding" means a judicial or other adjudicative
15process before a court, including related prehearing and
16post-hearing motions, conferences, and discovery.
17    (11) "Prospective party" means a person that discusses with
18a prospective collaborative process lawyer the possibility of
19signing a collaborative process participation agreement.
20    (12) "Record" means information that is inscribed on a
21tangible medium or that is stored in an electronic or other
22medium and is retrievable in perceivable form.
23    (13) "Related to a collaborative process matter" means
24involving the same parties, transaction or occurrence, nucleus
25of operative fact, dispute, claim, or issue as the
26collaborative process matter.

 

 

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1    (14) "Sign" means, with present intent to authenticate or
2adopt a record:
3        (A) to execute or adopt a tangible symbol; or
4        (B) to attach to or logically associate with the record
5    an electronic symbol, sound, or process.
 
6    Section 10. Applicability. This Act applies to a
7collaborative process participation agreement that meets the
8requirements of Section 15 signed on or after the effective
9date of this Act.
 
10    Section 15. Collaborative process participation agreement;
11requirements.
12    (a) A collaborative process participation agreement must:
13        (1) be in a record;
14        (2) be signed by the parties;
15        (3) state the parties' intention to resolve a
16    collaborative process matter through a collaborative
17    process under this Act;
18        (4) state the parties' agreement to discharge their
19    collaborative process lawyers and law firms if the
20    collaborative process fails.
21        (5) describe the nature and scope of the matter;
22        (6) identify the collaborative process lawyer who
23    represents each party in the process; and
24        (7) contain a statement by each collaborative process

 

 

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1    lawyer confirming the lawyer's representation of a party in
2    the collaborative process.
3    (b) Parties may agree to include in a collaborative process
4participation agreement additional provisions not inconsistent
5with this Act.
 
6    Section 20. Beginning and concluding the collaborative
7process.
8    (a) A collaborative process begins when the parties sign a
9collaborative process participation agreement.
10    (b) A court may not order a party to participate in a
11collaborative process over that party's objection.
12    (c) A collaborative process is concluded by:
13        (1) resolution of a collaborative process matter as
14    evidenced by a signed record of the parties;
15        (2) resolution of a part of the collaborative process
16    matter, evidenced by a signed record of the parties, in
17    which the parties agree that the remaining parts of the
18    matter will not be resolved in the process; or
19        (3) termination of the process.
20    (d) A collaborative process terminates:
21        (1) when a party gives notice to other parties in a
22    record that the process is ended;
23        (2) when a party:
24            (A) begins a proceeding related to a collaborative
25        process matter without the agreement of all parties; or

 

 

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1            (B) in a pending proceeding related to the matter:
2                (i) initiates a pleading, motion, order to
3            show cause, or request for a conference with the
4            court;
5                (ii) requests that the proceeding be put on the
6            court's active calendar; or
7                (iii) takes similar action requiring notice to
8            be sent to the parties; or
9        (3) except as otherwise provided by subsection (g),
10    when a party discharges a collaborative process lawyer or a
11    collaborative process lawyer withdraws from further
12    representation of a party.
13    (e) A party's collaborative process lawyer shall give
14prompt notice to all other parties in a record of a discharge
15or withdrawal.
16    (f) A party may terminate a collaborative process with or
17without cause.
18    (g) A collaborative process continues, despite the
19discharge or withdrawal of a collaborative process lawyer, if
20not later than 30 days after the date that the notice of the
21discharge or withdrawal of a collaborative process lawyer
22required by subsection (e) is sent to the parties:
23        (1) the unrepresented party engages a successor
24    collaborative process lawyer; and
25        (2) in a signed record:
26            (A) the parties consent to continue the process by

 

 

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1        reaffirming the collaborative process participation
2        agreement;
3            (B) the agreement is amended to identify the
4        successor collaborative process lawyer; and
5            (C) the successor collaborative process lawyer
6        confirms the lawyer's representation of a party in the
7        collaborative process.
8    (h) A collaborative process does not conclude if, with the
9consent of the parties, a party requests a court to approve a
10resolution of the collaborative process matter or any part
11thereof as evidenced by a signed record.
12    (i) A collaborative process participation agreement may
13provide additional methods of concluding a collaborative
14process.
 
15    Section 25. Proceedings pending before a court; status
16report.
17    (a) Persons in a proceeding pending before a court may sign
18a collaborative process participation agreement to seek to
19resolve a collaborative process matter related to the
20proceeding. The parties shall file promptly with the court a
21notice of the agreement after it is signed. Subject to
22subsection (c) and Sections 30 and 35, the filing operates as
23an application for a stay of the proceeding.
24    (b) The parties shall file promptly with the court notice
25in a record when a collaborative process concludes. The stay of

 

 

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1the proceeding, if granted, under subsection (a) is lifted when
2the notice is filed. The notice may not specify any reason for
3termination of the process.
4    (c) A court in which a proceeding is stayed under
5subsection (a) may require the parties and collaborative
6process lawyers to provide a status report on the collaborative
7process and the proceeding. A status report may include only
8information on: (i) whether the process is ongoing or
9concluded; or (ii) the anticipated duration of the
10collaborative process.
11    (d) A court may not consider a communication made in
12violation of subsection (c).
13    (e) A court shall provide parties notice and an opportunity
14to be heard before dismissing a proceeding in which a notice of
15collaborative process is filed based on delay or failure to
16prosecute.
 
17    Section 30. Emergency order. Nothing in the collaborative
18process may prohibit a party from seeking an emergency order to
19protect the health, safety, welfare, or interest of a party or
20person identified as protected in Section 201 of the Illinois
21Domestic Violence Act of 1986.
 
22    Section 35. Approval of agreement by the court. A court may
23approve an agreement resulting from a collaborative process. An
24agreement resulting from the collaborative process shall be

 

 

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1presented to the court for approval if the agreement is to be
2enforceable.
 
3    Section 40. Disclosure of information. Voluntary informal
4disclosure of information related to a matter is a defining
5characteristic of the collaborative process. Except as
6provided by law other than this Act, during the collaborative
7process, on the request of another party, a party shall make
8timely, full, candid, and informal disclosure of information
9related to the collaborative process matter without formal
10discovery. A party also shall update promptly previously
11disclosed information that has materially changed. The parties
12may define the scope of disclosure during the collaborative
13process.
 
14    Section 45. Standards of professional responsibility and
15mandatory reporting not affected. This Act does not affect:
16        (1) the professional responsibility obligations and
17    standards applicable to a lawyer or other licensed
18    professional; or
19        (2) the obligation of a person to report abuse or
20    neglect, abandonment, or exploitation of a child or adult
21    under the law of this State.
 
22    Section 50. Confidentiality of collaborative process
23communication. A collaborative process communication is

 

 

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1confidential to the extent agreed by the parties in a signed
2record or as provided by law of this State other than this Act.
 
3    Section 55. Privilege against disclosure for collaborative
4process communication; admissibility; discovery.
5    (a) Subject to Sections 60 and 65, a collaborative process
6communication is privileged under subsection (b), is not
7subject to discovery, and is not admissible in evidence.
8    (b) In a proceeding, the following privileges apply:
9        (1) A party may refuse to disclose, and may prevent any
10    other person from disclosing, a collaborative process
11    communication.
12        (2) A nonparty participant may refuse to disclose, and
13    may prevent any other person from disclosing, a
14    collaborative process communication of the nonparty
15    participant.
16    (c) Evidence or information that is otherwise admissible or
17subject to discovery does not become inadmissible or protected
18from discovery solely because of its disclosure or use in a
19collaborative process.
 
20    Section 60. Waiver and preclusion of privilege.
21    (a) A privilege under Section 55 may be waived in a record
22or orally during a proceeding if it is expressly waived by all
23parties and, in the case of the privilege of a nonparty
24participant, it is also expressly waived by the nonparty

 

 

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1participant.
2    (b) A person that makes a disclosure or representation
3about a collaborative process communication which prejudices
4another person in a proceeding may not assert a privilege under
5Section 55, but this preclusion applies only to the extent
6necessary for the person prejudiced to respond to the
7disclosure or representation.
 
8    Section 65. Limits of privilege.
9    (a) There is no privilege under Section 55 for a
10collaborative process communication that is:
11        (1) available to the public under the Freedom of
12    Information Act or made during a session of a collaborative
13    process that is open, or is required by law to be open, to
14    the public;
15        (2) a threat or statement of a plan to inflict bodily
16    injury or commit a crime of violence as defined in Section
17    1-10 of the Alcoholism and Other Drug Abuse and Dependency
18    Act;
19        (3) intentionally used to plan a crime, commit or
20    attempt to commit a crime, or conceal an ongoing crime or
21    ongoing criminal activity; or
22        (4) in an agreement resulting from the collaborative
23    process, evidenced by a record signed by all parties to the
24    agreement.
25    (b) The privileges under Section 55 for a collaborative

 

 

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1process communication do not apply to the extent that a
2communication is:
3        (1) sought or offered to prove or disprove a claim or
4    complaint of professional misconduct or malpractice
5    arising from or related to a collaborative process; or
6        (2) sought or offered to prove or disprove abuse,
7    neglect, abandonment, or exploitation of a child or adult,
8    unless a child protective services agency or adult
9    protective services agency is a party to or otherwise
10    participates in the process.
11    (c) There is no privilege under Section 55 if a court
12finds, after a hearing in camera, that the party seeking
13discovery or the proponent of the evidence has shown the
14evidence is not otherwise available, the need for the evidence
15substantially outweighs the interest in protecting
16confidentiality, and the collaborative process communication
17is sought or offered in:
18        (1) a court proceeding involving a felony or
19    misdemeanor; or
20        (2) a proceeding seeking rescission or reformation of a
21    contract arising out of the collaborative process or in
22    which a defense to avoid liability on the contract is
23    asserted.
24    (d) If a collaborative process communication is subject to
25an exception under subsection (b) or (c), only the part of the
26communication necessary for the application of the exception

 

 

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1may be disclosed or admitted.
2    (e) Disclosure or admission of evidence excepted from the
3privilege under subsection (b) or (c) does not make the
4evidence or any other collaborative process communication
5discoverable or admissible for any other purpose.
6    (f) The privileges under Section 55 do not apply if the
7parties agree in advance in a signed record, or if a record of
8a proceeding reflects agreement by the parties, that all or
9part of a collaborative process is not privileged. This
10subsection does not apply to a collaborative process
11communication made by a person that did not receive actual
12notice of the agreement before the communication was made.
 
13    Section 70. Authority of the Illinois Supreme Court. This
14Act is subject to the supervisory authority of the Illinois
15Supreme Court.