Parenting provides an excellent education in mediation over disputes such as:
If the resolution is implemented immediately, that’s it, done. Complications arise when one party must wait until tomorrow to receive its part of the deal. Things can change overnight! Mum may forget which story to play; the child desperate to play cricket on Saturday may wake up on Sunday deciding the rugby season has started (and that was never part of the deal); the strawberry may have been eaten by an innocent third party. How can such risks be managed? Post-its on the fridge and mobile phone reminders are handy at home and, unsurprisingly, a written document (in a more formal medium) is essential for recording commercial deals too.
You know that already. The point to emphasise is that the written record needs to capture the deal accurately. When it comes to settlements we are seeing a trend in recording (let’s call them) “heads of agreement” only and either leaving it at that or drafting a formal document later. Why? The parties thought that was enough, they had an understanding, the deal had to be done that day and they could “paper” it later if necessary.
The trouble is this can leave a lot unaddressed and open to debate. Do the heads of agreement constitute a binding contract or an unenforceable gentlemen’s agreement? Either way, is there enough detail around each head to ensure they are properly understood? The fallout of hasty, unclear “line in the sand” agreements hits our desks quite often. Classic examples are disputes arising out of references to superseded or inconsistent programmes, unclear scopes of work or changes to contract terms that have implications not properly thought through.
A recent case in the Family Court (but relevant to all settlements) highlighted the risks. In Abberley v Abberley 2019 a family fell out over a division of land and assets. The long-running saga ended in a successful mediation. A deal was done and typed up, but IT problems caused the draft to be lost. The lawyers then prepared, and signed, a handwritten note of recording heads of agreement.
" Well, recommending a full-blown settlement agreement with every “t” crossed and “i” dotted is one thing, but what can parties do in practice to capture full and clear settlement terms when they are short of time, under pressure and without all the answers? "
Seven years later the Abberleys came to blows again, over whether the signed note was binding. The Judge decided it was. Key principles arising from his judgment are these.
The result was that a scrappy, but signed, handwritten note of key terms formed a contract even though it did not cover everything, the party relying on it had tried to draw up something more formal and the Judge had to refer back to documents shared over 7 years earlier to make sense of it. The Abberleys (or their lawyers) could have made it clearer.
Well, recommending a full-blown settlement agreement with every “t” crossed and “i” dotted is one thing, but what can parties do in practice to capture full and clear settlement terms when they are short of time, under pressure and without all the answers? Ideally, slow down, but if that is not possible try:
If you intend to replace the heads of agreement with a formal contract, get on with it ASAP.
Ultimately, the message is the usual one – record your agreement as clearly and as soon as possible. Otherwise, parties may change their minds, the agreement may be unclear and a Judge might decide that the heads of agreement have a meaning and status you had not intended. (She says, scribbling on a post-it something about playing Harry Potter in the car … tomorrow … for at least 15 minutes…. That covers it, right?)