A large family, descended from a successful San Francisco businessman, owned a vacation compound in the middle of the Rocky Mountains. Originally purchased in the late 1800s, the land consisted of approximately 750 acres high atop a mountain. Over the years, it had been improved with several houses, mountain cabins, stables and hiking trails leading to streams filled with speckled trout. Six generations of the family had enjoyed the use of this land, holding family gatherings, vacationing, and participating in the ongoing life of the compound.
The land was held in a trust, created many years before, that was scheduled to dissolve within several months, with all proceeds to be distributed to the beneficiaries. The trust's four trustees - each representing one branch of the family tree - were stymied. They had the legal authority to decide how to allocate the trust's approximately $20 million in land, improvements, and financial assets (mostly highly appreciated stocks and bonds); however, with almost forty income beneficiaries and many more remainder beneficiaries, they faced a potential law suit if one group of beneficiaries or another felt short-changed - indeed, one group of beneficiaries was ready to file suit to force a liquidation of all assets. For two years, the various factions within the family sought to break the impasse but failed to reach a consensus.
The trustees decided to mediate the dispute, and solicited proposals from several mediation firms. Boston Law Collaborative's proposal, which was accepted, involved a three-person mediation team consisting of the three of us. David Hoffman was available as a resource for information about some of the complex legal issues of the situation and to guide the pace and direction of the mediation itself; Susan Miller could educate and inform the group about the financial and tax implications of the dissolution process; and Richard Wolman could attend to the interpersonal and family dynamics that had already threatened to scuttle the entire process.
Our first task as mediators was to consult with the trustees about a negotiation process that would fit the ungainly alignment of parties. Approximately 60% of the beneficiaries - the 'Continuing Beneficiaries' - wanted to retain the compound and form a corporation to own it. The other 40% - the 'Withdrawing Beneficiaries' - wanted cash, and did not want their interest diluted by what they considered to be the purely theoretical capital gains tax exposure of the Continuing Beneficiaries.
The Withdrawing Beneficiaries and the Continuing Beneficiaries were also conflicted over the fair price for each share. In addition, because the beneficiaries had widely differing financial circumstances, some were willing to accept appreciated securities as payment for their interest in the land and others were not. If the trust were to sell securities to raise cash for the Withdrawing Beneficiaries, a decision had to be made as to how that substantial tax liability should be allocated among the beneficiaries. The trust documents contained no dissolution methodology, and, as a result, the acrimony between the two camps had intensified.
We proposed a two-day mediation session, to be preceded by a conference call with the trustees. That call prepared the way for a pre-mediation exchange of comprehensive dissolution proposals by the two groups of beneficiaries - first from the Continuing Beneficiaries, and then a week later from the Withdrawing Beneficiaries. The proposals and various explanatory memos and spreadsheets (showing tax effects of the proposals) were posted at our web site in a confidential, password-protected area that only the trustees and beneficiaries could access.
On the first day of the mediation, nineteen members of the family - including all four trustees and some of the beneficiaries - came to the table in Boston from as far as Seattle, San Jose, Denver, Santa Fe and New York. After a brief joint session to discuss ground rules and logistics, we chose the "shuttle diplomacy" strategy of separating the two groups of beneficiaries into two rooms. In this way, it was possible to address the issues between the groups in a private setting and also to deal with the conflict within the groups that could make resolution even more difficult to achieve. Near the end of the first day, the withdrawing group requested a new offer from the continuing group, and indicated that they would likely leave the mediation and turn to court if the next proposal they received was not a substantial increase in the price to be paid for the Withdrawing Beneficiaries' interest in the compound.
The Continuing Beneficiaries arrived an hour early on day two of the mediation to prepare their proposal. In discussions with us, they concluded that, if there were to be any hope of escaping the nightmare of a full-blown litigation, involving expensive tax and real estate experts and multiple legal teams, boldness was required. By mid-morning a new proposal was presented, involving a cash-plus-stock buyout and an escrow to cover potential (but not necessarily inevitable) tax consequences for the continuing group. After several back-and-forth sessions with each group to refine the new proposal, we met with the Withdrawing Beneficiaries, who looked over the new proposal in detail, and, after crunching the numbers, finally nodded their heads in agreement.
We took the answer back to the Continuing Beneficiaries, and were greeted by audible sighs of relief and applause. Members of the family - some of whom had not been on cordial terms for many years - reconvened with a palpable sense of accomplishment for breaking through the years-long impasse.
While the relief over reaching a settlement was still fresh, we set out to help the parties draft and edit a settlement document. We set up a laptop computer and LCD projector in a conference room, where the trustees and representatives from each group met for more than three hours, laboriously crafting, on a screen where all could see, a five-page settlement document. At 7:00 p.m., when the last of the parties left our office, the trustees had a signed agreement.
As a follow-up, we asked ourselves and the members of the family what elements contributed to the success of this unusual and gratifying cliff-hanger outcome. Several variables stood out, including:
It is a rare case in which a three-mediator team is needed. Only where the stakes are high and the issues unusually complex - as in this case - would we propose such an approach. And while it is true, as we all know, that two heads are better than one, this was a case that required three.
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