1 Toe Down And 9 To Go
Posted: Friday, October 09, 2009
by Lucille Uttermohlen
Uttermohlen Law Office
If you read my blog yesterday, you would have seen my rant about the guardian ad litem who was appointed in one of my guardianship cases. I am reminded of one of those incidents that should be embarrasssing, but make you giggle so much when you remember it that it is hard to keep a straight face. If grumpiness was a sign of judicial competence, this man would be on the Supreme Court. Yesterday morning, for instance, I had what I call a "hearing to set a hearing" in his court. Since I live 30 miles away, and would have to hire a driver to get there, and would only have to call my office to consult my calendar, I told opposing counsel I would attend the hearing by telephone. Mr. Judge accepted my call, but he was not happy. "You realize, Miss Uttermohlen, that allowing you to participate by telephone goes against my long standing rule."
Before his good luck in the election, Mr. Judge was one of us commoners. He has forgotten us little people in his climb to fame, but I remember His Honor when he was a mere attorney. In fact, he used to scrape part of his living from divorce mediations. These are conferences where couples pay their own attorneys as well as an objective third party to decide for them who gets the microwave oven or the 1998 Buick. His honor conducted a mediation in one of my cases, and it was the first, and among the very few such conferences in my career. In short, I'd slept since then, and was only reminded of his honor's participation in the incident in a later divorce case in his court.
HH: Miss Uttermohlen, do you think mediation might help in this case?"
MU: "No sir, I don't. I hate to say it, but I've only hired a mediator once in my career, and it was a waste of money. All the mediator did was blunder back and forth between the two rooms and tell the parties what the other party wanted. We knew that much when we got there, and the mediator didn't help a bit. No, sir, it truly was a waste of time, money and breath."
No mediator was appointed in that particular case. I rose and left the courtroom, and my client admired me for my bravery, and the fact that I had probably saved him $1000.00. I preened myself in the glow of his admiration until I remembered my first, and only mediation, and the fact that I had just informed my first mediator that his participation was worth less than a bucket of spit, and that he had acted with less competence then a trained monkey. As I finished swallowing my size 10 foot in the elevator, it did occur to me that the Chinese custom of foot binding might have served me well just then.
Copyright (c) 2009 Lucille Uttermohlen
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Lucille Uttermohlen has been a family law attorney for 27 years. She covers law, relationships and stories from own practice at http://www.couple-or-not.com Lucille would love to hear from you at lucille@couple-or-not.com and she promises to write back.
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