Practice Areas
- Family Law
- Divorce
- Complex Property Division
- Marital Torts
- Asset Tracing
- Divorce Finanical Recovery
- Child Custody
- Child Support
- Visitation
- Modifications and Relocation
- Prenuptial Agreements
- After Marriage Agreements
- Pre and Post-divorce Planning
- Enforcement of Orders
- Hague Convention
- Mediation
- Collaborative Family Law
- Paternity and Support
Raggio & Raggio
3316 Oak Grove Ave., Ste. 100,
                Dallas, Texas
TEL: 214.880.7500
                FAX: 214.880.7506
                Email:@raggiolaw.com
Adapted from How to Divorce in New York by Grier Raggio
          and Michael Stutman (St. Martin's Press, New York, N.Y., 1993). 
  BARGAINING IN THE
    SHADOW OF THE LAW | YOUR JOB | YOUR ATTORNEY'S JOB | YOU AS A NEGOTIATOR | ANALYZING YOUR SPOUSE | WHAT DOES HE OR SHE WANT? | REMEMBER THE LONG
      TERM COSTS AND BENEFITS | RISK TAKING | THE COIN FLIP | TRIALS ARE ALWAYS RISKY
BARGAINING
          IN THE SHADOW OF THE LAW 
  
        
You have decided to divorce, have chosen a lawyer or have
          decided to represent yourself, and have gathered necessary
          information on the family's economic situation. What happens now?
          Usually negotiations. This is not a totally new skill you have to
          learn. We negotiate every day. Those who have children know that
          a normal three-year-old is an instinctive negotiator for the
          important things in life -- staying up another ten minutes, not
          eating the carrots until you promise candy, and so forth. we each
          bargain and attempt to persuade in just about every aspect of our
          relationships with other people, and we also do so when we
          divorce. 
  
        
In divorce, what do you negotiate? Potentially, everything.
          Who pays whom and how much? Who gets the house? Who get custody
          of the children and who pays for college? 
  
        
Except for those who ignore or boycott the divorce process,
          the economic, custody, and support issues in nine out of ten dead
          marriages are settled eventually by a private bargain between the
          divorcing spouses (often through their attorneys) rather than by
          a judge's decision after a full-scale trial in court. Settlement
          is highly probable unless one or both parties persist in being
          unreasonable, spiteful, or determined to prove that he or she
          alone is "right." 
  
        
The negotiations leading to agreement may take a week, they
          may take two years, or they may take even longer. The process may
          be businesslike and polite or it may be noisy, bitter, and
          interrupted by frequent tips to court. The husband and wife may
          do much of the bargaining directly, using their lawyers as
          advisers and draftsmen, or they may leave all of the face-to-face
          negotiating to the attorneys. They may use a mediator to assist
          them in their own direct negotiations, as described in chapter
          four. The bargaining may be completed before a lawsuit for
          divorce is even started; sometimes the parties do not settle
          until they are in the middle of a contested trial, after years of
          fighting. But the odds are that your case will in some way, at
          some time, be settled by you and your spouse rather than by a
          judge after a trial. 
  
        
Many divorce judges, before and even during a trial, strongly
          encourage the couple to reach their own settlement and thus
          conserve court time. The judges recognize that the lawyers, who
          may have represented the parties for two years or more before
          trial, know much more about their clients, the clients' needs,
          and their resources than a judge will learn in a trial. A
          settlement drafted by the lawyers is therefore more likely to
          maximize total benefits than is a judge's decision. 
  
        
In this chapter you will find basic information about
          negotiation techniques and strategy in divorce cases. There is an
          excellent Yale Law Journal article by Robert Mnookin,
          titled "Bargaining in the Shadow of the Law: The Case of
          Divorce." That title concisely states what a divorce case is
          often about, particularly where there is substantial property to
          be divided. 
  
        
Divorce negotiations are "in the shadow of the law"
          in the sense that they are shaped partially by the parties'
          estimates of what a court will do if no agreement is reached and
          the case goes to trial. For instance, until 1995 the Texas
          divorce law provided that one spouse had no right to receive
          alimony from the other spouse after a divorce. The financially
          weaker spouse, therefore, had a very weak bargaining position
          when asking the other spouse for financial help, even if he/she
          was rich and the other had difficulty supporting himself. If a
          spouse refused, the Texas courts could not help, since the law
          could not require anyone to pay alimony. 
  
        
Under present Texas law the court can require either spouse to
          pay maintenance (the term for what used to be called alimony),
          depending on the facts of the case. That gives the spouse who has
          difficulty supporting himself more bargaining muscle. If the
          financially stronger spouse refuses the request for support, one
          spouse can force the case to trial and the judge will have the
          power to order maintenance. 
  
        
So as we negotiate we look over our shoulder at what the court
          will do about property, maintenance, child support, and custody
          if you and your spouse do not reach a negotiated settlement.
          Obviously you need information about what a court would likely do
          if there were a contested trial. Your lawyer is your obvious
          source for those predictions. Most of the rest of this book
          focuses on giving you a general knowledge of the legal principles
          that courts use in deciding divorce cases and that your lawyer
          uses in predicting outcomes. That knowledge will empower you to
          participate more fully and more creatively with your attorney in
          negotiations. This chapter focuses on conventional adversary
          negotiations rather than the softer, problem-solving type
          negotiations, emphasizing the parties' emotional needs discussed
          in the chapter on mediation. The theory and technique of your own
          negotiations probably will be a blend of the two. Further, purer
          forms of both types of negotiations may be appropriate at
          different stages of the same case. 
  
        
You have already listed the property you and your spouse have
          accumulated, itemized your income and expenses, and gathered
          other facts your lawyer requested. Now think of what you most
          want in a negotiated divorce settlement. Your initial answer on
          maintenance and child support and property may be "As much
          as I can get" or "As little as I can give,"
          depending on your situation. Or it may be "I just want a
          fair result that ends the marriage and allows me to get on with
          my life quickly." 
  
        
Perhaps you can be more specific. If it is already agreed that
          you are to have custody of the children, sole ownership of the
          house may be very important to you and for your (and the
          children's) emotional and financial security. You may need a high
          income for a few years until you complete your work for a
          graduate or professional degree. You may have a business that you
          want to protect from your spouse. Your most important need may be
          quite narrow: we once represented a woman whose first priority
          was protecting her job with a large company that her husband's
          friends owned and her husband operated. She had worked there for
          many years and her job gave her much personal satisfaction. Her
          age and background made it very difficult to move to as good a
          job with another employer, so she wanted to stay in her position
          even though her ex-husband would be her boss. We negotiated a
          deal that made it risky for her ex-husband to have her fired. 
  
        
Look at your emotional attitudes toward the divorce and toward
          a negotiated settlement. Clients occasionally say things like
  "If you don't see that Jim is a horrible person, you aren't
          on my side." You may believe that your spouse is a miserable
          so-and-so, and by some objective criteria that may even be true.
          but if you feel you should use the divorce proceeding to punish
          your spouse for all of the bad things he or she has done to you,
          my strong recommendation is that you look at the costs of doing
          so. 
  
        
Your attorney should know your state's divorce law, his or her
          way around in divorce courts, and the facts of your case. Using
          this knowledge he or she may predict for you what a court is
          likely to do after a trial. These predictions are often very
          difficult to make early in the case, for several reasons. First,
          the statutes defining what is divisible property at divorce,
          which involves the dissolution of a couple's economic
          partnership, have changed substantially in many states over the
          last few years. It is uncertain how the courts will interpret and
          apply many of those legislative provisions. Second, the statues
          are complicated and often give the trial judge enormous
          discretion and flexibility in applying the law to the facts of an
          individual case. Third, your attorney may need time for a
          detailed investigation to gather important facts about your
          spouse's property and income or about how best to structure the
          custodial and visitation arrangements. 
  
        
If you are doing your own negotiating you need whatever
          predictions your attorney can give you before getting into the
          custodial or financial aspects of your divorce. You also should
          get his or her advice on negotiating strategy and tactics. If
          your attorney is doing the negotiating you should discuss what
          you most want in a settlement, given the attorney's evaluation of
          what negotiating leverage you have. Whoever bargains, both you
          and your spouse should be clear on what your negotiating
          objectives and priorities are before starting the process. 
  
        
In our experience strong, rational client involvement in the
          negotiating process usually leads to better agreements because
          the client's preferences are more fully incorporated in the deal.
          You know what your needs are better than your attorney does. It's
          your life, and you should participate in the choices necessary in
          dividing property, in setting maintenance and child support, and
          in all other aspects of terminating the economic partnership that
          is part of your marriage. 
  
        
We sometimes encourage our clients to negotiate the basic
          terms of divorce settlements directly with their spouses. This
          works best where there is approximate equality between husband
          and wife in bargaining ability and both want to reach an
          agreement. Many clients, particularly women, come to us wanting a
          champion and protector and do not feel inclined or equipped to
          participate directly in negotiations. We, of course, respect
          their wishes and do the negotiating personally, with frequent
          consultations with the client. Even when appropriate, direct
          participation in negotiations does not mean that the client
          writes the agreement or negotiates all of the details. The
          settlement agreement, particularly where large amounts of
          property have accumulated during the marriage, will be
          complicated, technical document requiring good legal drafting.
          The husband and wife often can define the broad outlines of
          settlement for themselves -- who gets custody, who gets the
          house, how much maintenance and child support will be awarded.
          After each discussion the couple has, we confer with our client
          to evaluate whether the tentative results of the negotiations are
          reasonable and to suggest additional issues that need to be
          resolved. 
  
        
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You and your lawyer have discussed your wants and needs and
          the strengths and weaknesses of your case, and you are
          emotionally able to move toward a negotiated settlement. Now you
          should listen carefully as your spouse communicates his or her
          needs and analyze what you have that your spouse most wants. The
          idea is to give the other party something you have that is very
          important to him or her but less important to you. In return you
          get something that is more important to you than it is to your
          spouse. Let us illustrate with a hypothetical case, where ongoing
          negotiations cost unnecessary time and pain. 
  
        
John and Ann's marriage clearly was over by the time John
          moved out of their house and went to live with his girlfriend.
          Ann sued for a divorce, then refused to go ahead unless John gave
          her more money than he felt he could pay. New York is among a
          minority of states where divorce still requires fault, such as
          adultery, abandonment, or cruelty by one of the parties unless
          the parties reach an agreement. The vast majority of states bury
          a dead marriage at the unilateral request of one spouse who
          alleges "breakdown of the marriage,"
  "incompatibility," or similar no-fault ground. 
  
        
Ann used New York's fault law as a negotiating tool and
          dropped her divorce suit after a year, even though the marriage
          clearly was over. She thought John's impatience for a divorce
          meant that she could get more money negotiating with him than a
          court would give her after a trial. John knew he could not get a
          fault divorce against Ann if she contested his lawsuit. Ann had
          good negotiating leverage; John wanted a divorce badly while Ann
          did not mind staying legally married, so long as she did not have
          to live with John. She used that leverage openly, telling him,
  "You can have your divorce anytime you want," so long
          as he first met her financial demands. 
  
        
Ann's cards were good, but she overplayed the hand and failed
          to make a quick deal. After two years of stalemate John was very
          frustrated at the law's failure to solve his problem and remained
          unwilling to give Ann as much money as she wanted. John
          considered moving to another state to get a no-fault divorce
          there, but decided against it. He then tried another approach,
          which was to give Ann what she didn't want -- namely, John at
          home. He walked into the house and said, "Sweetie, you're
          right. We're married and I'm coming home tonight." Ann left
          unhappily when John insisted on staying in the marital home that
          night and the following nights. His actions led to a property
          settlement after a few weeks and then to a divorce. 
  
        
This illustrates several points. There was a good negotiating opportunity, but it was lost shortly after John left the house. Ann had something, the power to give John a divorce, which was very valuable to John and had little or no value in itself to Ann. It was reasonable for John to pay Ann something extra for a quick divorce, and initially he was willing to do so. A settlement would have allowed both parties to get on with their lives and avoid the stress on themselves and their children, which years of uncertainty and legal fighting always produce. The settlement opportunity passed, and John then forced the issue by doing something that he found unpleasant but that was even more unpleasant for Ann: returning home.
REMEMBER
          LONG-TERM COSTS AND BENEFITS
  
        
Again, keep in mind that where there are children, an
          ex-couple will continue to be involved with each other even after
          divorce. Support, custody, and visitation are ongoing processes,
          and negotiation or litigation tactics that leave one party or the
          other bitter may turn out to be quite expensive. If you both
          focus on giving your ex-partner what is comparatively more
          valuable to him or her and taking back what is comparatively more
          valuable to you, the chances are high that you will reach an
          agreement quickly and move on with your lives. But it takes two
          sides to negotiate, just as it takes two to fight. You should not
          allow yourself to be bullied or threatened as you negotiate your
          divorce agreement. If the other party tries to get an unfair
          agreement by intimidating you, you need to show firmness. Perhaps
          your resoluteness, and your attorney's, will change your spouse's
          attitude over time. Meanwhile, patience -- and going to court for
          whatever temporary protections you need -- is the proper
          strategy. 
  
        
It also is wise not to box yourself in with ultimatums or
          written-in-stone positions. Have a clear idea of your interests
          and be creative and flexible in negotiating to advance those
          interests. Negotiation becomes difficult when the parties think
          in terms of absolutes and dictate terms to which they become
          glued. 
  
        
Part of bargaining "in the shadow of the law" is
          knowing that if you and your spouse do not reach an agreement, a
          court is available to impose its solution on both of you. To
          illustrate some principles of risk taking in negotiations, here
          are some examples that ignore both the uncertainties usually
          present in real divorce cases and the non-economic costs of
          matrimonial litigation we have discussed. 
  
        
Imagine that you and your spouse have $100,000 to divide
          between you. Imagine further that if you cannot agree on how to
          divide the $100,000, the two of you will spend $20,000 of the
          $100,000 in lawyers' fees before a judge decides the case.
          Finally, imagine that both you and your spouse know that the
          judge probably would divide the remaining $80,000 evenly between
          you, so that after a trial you would each have $40,000. 
  
        
If you conclude that the judge would divide the $80,000
          evenly, why not agree between yourselves to divide the $100,000
          equally, thus saving the $20,000 in lawyers' fees and other
          costs? You may do so, but it is quite rational for your to push
          for close to $60,000 of the $100,000. This is because your spouse
          knows that if there is no agreement and the case is litigated, he
          or she will get only $40,000; thus any settlement that gives him
          or her more than $40,000 is an economic improvement over the
          probable results after litigation. There is a $20,000 range in
          which both parties will get more by settlement than by
          litigation; dividing that $20,000 may require some pushing and
          shoving between the two of you. If one party insists on $55,000
          and will not be moved, the other has the choice of taking $45,000
          in a settlement or litigating and getting $40,000. The first
          spouse runs risks in demanding $55,000; the second may choose to
          give up $5,000 and litigate, perhaps even out of spiteful desire
          to cost the first spouse the $15,000 difference between the
          $55,000 settlement demand and the $40,000 litigation result. 
  
        
Your tolerance for uncertainty and risk may affect your
          success in negotiating such problems. Imagine that you had the
          choice between a sure $50 and a coin flip that would decide
          whether you took $100 or nothing. If you have a strong desire to
          choose the coin flip over the certain $50, you are a risk
          preferer in the situation. If you have a strong preference for
          taking the sure $50, you can be said to be risk averse. The risk
          preferer has an advantage over the risk-averse spouse in
          negotiations -- for example, the dividing up of the $100,000
          discussed above -- for he or she has a greater tolerance for the
          possibility of losing. The risk-averse spouse may take the
          $45,000, particularly if he or she is convince that the other
          party is comfortable with the risk that a deadlock will leave
          each with $40,000. The risk preferer will, other things being
          equal, be more inclined to push for the lion's share of the
          $20,000 at the risk of losing half of it. The risk-averse party
          will tend to settle for less than $50,000. 
  
        
Whether you are risk averse or a risk preferer may depend not
          only on your psychological makeup but also on your economic
          ability to tolerate the prospective loss. Herb Cohen, in his book You Can Negotiate Anything, illustrates the point. He
          frequently asks his audience how many would accept a bet where
          Cohen would pay $1,000,000 if a coin toss came up heads and the
          audience member would pay Cohen $100,000 if it were tails. Very
          few people offer to take the bet because very few people can
          afford to lose $100,000. Cohen states that many would accept if
          the bet were $100 against $1,000 because most of us can afford to
          lose $100, and ten to one is a very good potential gain. Risk
          aversion may greatly diminish negotiating strength if the other
          side knows and chooses to exploit that aversion to risk. 
  
        
The inherent uncertainty in the judicial process gives the
          risk-preferring spouse an advantage over the risk-averse spouse.
          Your lawyer will give you his or her best estimates of what is
          likely to happen at trial, but courts often are given enormous
          discretion by statutes in divorce cases and the judge's decision
          may be quite different from your attorney's prediction, for
          better or for worse. You can avoid that uncertainty by reaching
          agreement now, but a relatively small tolerance for uncertainty
          may leave you needing an agreement more than your spouse does.
          One of the basic rules of commercial negotiations is that to make
          a good deal you should seem prepared to walk away without a deal.
          If your spouse knows that you cannot stand uncertainty and risk,
          he or she may insist on unfair concessions before giving you the
          certainty you want, the signing of a divorce settlement. 
  
        
Finally, it is a cliche that a good settlement is one that completely satisfies neither party but with which each can live. If your side wins too much and the opposition gets too little, the whole agreement is more apt to come unhinged, and costly litigation may ensue. Where both sides feel that the terms are fair and reasonable and were arrived at by give-and-take, there is psychological and moral pressure to abide by the agreement, in much the same way you are honor-bound when you "shake on it." Studies have shown that where the parties arrive at support terms by negotiation and agreements, which are acceptable, to the court, the obligor pays, and pays on time, more frequently than when support terms are imposed by the court. A word to the wise may be sufficient: try to minimize implementation and enforcement problems by making reasonable settlement agreements with your spouse.












