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in that mediation participants may generally prefer not to waive | their mediation privilege rights. However, there may be | situations in which one or more parties may wish to be freed | from the burden of privilege, and the waiver provision permits | that possibility. See, e.g., Olam v. Congress Mortgage Co., 68 | F.Supp.2d 1110, 1131-33 (N.D. Cal. 1999). |
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| Significantly, these provisions differ from the attorney- | client privilege in that the mediation privilege does not | permit waiver to be implied by conduct. See Michael H. Graham, | Handbook of Federal Evidence Section 511.1 (4th ed. 1996). The | rationale for requiring explicit waiver is to safeguard | against the possibility of inadvertent waiver, such as through | the often salutary practice of parties discussing their | dispute and mediation with friends and relatives. In contrast | to these settings, there is a sense of formality and awareness | of legal rights in all of the proceedings to which the | privilege may be waived if the waiver is oral. They generally | are conducted on the record, easing the difficulties of | establishing what was said. |
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| Read together with Section 4, the waiver operates as follows: |
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| For testimony about mediation communications made by a party, | all parties are the holders and therefore all parties must | waive the privilege before a party or nonparty participant may | testify or provide evidence; if that testimony is to be | provided by a mediator, all parties and the mediator must | waive the privilege. |
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| For testimony about mediation communications that are made by | the mediator, both the parties and the mediator are holders of | the privilege, and therefore both the parties and the mediator | must waive the privilege before a party, mediator, or nonparty | participant may testify or provide evidence of a mediator's | mediation communications. |
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| For testimony about mediation communications that are made by | a nonparty participant, both the parties and the nonparty | participants are holders of the privilege and therefore both | the parties and the nonparty participant must waive before a | party or nonparty participant may testify; if that testimony | is to be offered through the mediator, the mediator must also | waive. |
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| Earlier drafts included provisions that permitted waiver by | conduct, which is common among communications privileges. | However, the Drafting Committees deleted those provisions | because of concerns that mediators and parties unfamiliar with | the statutory environment might waive their privilege rights | inadvertently. That created the anomalous situation of | permitting the opportunity for one party to blurt out | potentially damaging |
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