Description of Study: Evaluation of the efficacy of a civil case mediation program in Minnesota.
Method: Randomly assigned cases. Examined court records and distributed questionnaires to litigants and attorneys to gauge their satisfaction.
Comparative: Yes
Comparison Groups: Cases randomly assigned to a group that could be referred to mediation and a group for which mediation was not an option
Sample Size: 1186 total cases examined; questionnaires distributed in 182 mediated cases, 209 arbitrated cases, and 170 litigated cases
Variables Examined: Time to disposition, costs of litigation, trial rates, number of court appearances, satisfaction with the handling of the case, perceived fairness of process, efficiency
Program Variables: Voluntary program mediated for-fee. Program was just established at the time of the study
Case types: Civil, Commercial/Contract, Mechanics Lien, Medical Malpractice/Negligence, Personal Injury
Findings: No difference in time to disposition was found. There was no real sense that costs were saved if mediation resulted in agreement, but there was consensus among lawyers and litigants that costs were greater if parties did not reach agreement in mediation. Trial rates were not affected. Mediated cases had fewer court appearances. Litigants were more satisfied with the mediation process (attorneys thought they were more satisfied with the adjudication process). Litigants perceived the mediation process to be fairer; attorneys thought adjudication was.