European Directive on
Mediation
Key Components
·
The Directive obliges
·
The Directive gives every judge in the Community, at any stage of
the procedure, the right to suggest that the parties attend an information
meeting on mediation and, if he deems it to be appropriate, to invite the parties to have recourse to
mediation.
·
The Directive enables parties to give an agreement concluded following mediation a status similar to
that of a judgment by rendering it enforceable. This can be achieved, for
example, by way of judicial approval or notarial
certification, thereby allowing such agreements to be enforceable in the Member
States under existing Community rules.
·
The Directive ensures that mediation takes place in an atmosphere
of confidentiality and that
information given or submissions made by any party during mediation cannot be
used against that party in subsequent judicial proceedings if the mediation
fails. This provision is essential to give parties confidence in, and to
encourage them to make use of, mediation. To this end, the Directive provides
that the mediator cannot be compelled to give evidence
about what took place during mediation in subsequent judicial proceedings
between the parties.
·
The provision of the Directive on periods of limitation and
prescription will ensure that parties that have recourse to mediation will
not be prevented from going to court as a result of the time spent on
mediation. The Directive thus preserves the parties’ access to justice should
mediation not succeed.
Following adoption of the Directive, Member States will be given 36
months to convert the new rules into national law.
The Directive applies to processes where two or
more parties to a cross-border dispute of a civil or commercial nature attempt
by themselves, on a voluntary basis, to reach an amicable settlement to their
dispute with the assistance of a mediator. The Directive only applies to
cross-border disputes, although it does not prevent Member States from applying
the provisions of the Directive to internal mediation processes.