International Law and Immigration

ILS News – January 2025

Message from the Section Chair
Theresa Leets
Theresa Leets

Did you know that CLA has a legal foundation? We do – California Lawyers Foundation (CLF). If you are a golf fan do not miss the CLF fundraiser at the iconic Pelican Hill Golf Club and Resort on April 17, 2025. The proceeds benefit CLF’s program that promotes civics to students and encourages them to consider the practice law as a career. The tournament is a fun way for attorneys, judges, law students and anyone else interested in networking with like-minded professionals in the legal industry to get to know each other.

If you are like me, and the idea of unforgettable golf experience on a world-class course, with stunning coastal views and breathtaking panoramas inspires the desire to play but your golf game is sadly only aspirational, there are still options for you to participate. There are up to 14 sponsorship packages and with the purchase of after party tickets you can celebrate with the golfers, enjoy food and drinks and find out who the recipient of the esteemed CLF Classic Leaders & Legends Awardee is. This award recognizes those who embody the core values of integrity, innovation, and service, and who have made significant contributions to advancing society and the legal profession through their work.

Theresa Leets
Chair, International Law and Immigration Section
California Lawyers Association

Meet Our Newest ExCom Advisors
Alyssa Broer
Alyssa Broer

Alyssa is a recent cum laude graduate of Northwestern Pritzker School of Law in Chicago, Illinois. She completed her undergraduate work summa cum laude in Journalism and Mass Communications from the University of South Carolina.

Alyssa has been appointed the ILS liaison to the New Lawyers Section (NLS) and will be instrumental in facilitating events, webinars and other collaborations between ILS and NLS.

 In addition to working at Sidley Austin on both litigation and environmental compliance matters, Alyssa interned at the New Jersey Office of the Attorney General in the Special Litigation Unit. While at Northwestern, Alyssa participated in a year-long international human rights clinic where she advocated for incarcerated children and young adults in Malawi. She has interned at the Lung Cancer Research Foundation and American Cancer Society where she created and promoted both social and traditional media content. Alyssa also participated in a six-week fellowship with the Survivor Justice Center in Los Angeles (formerly the Los Angeles Center for Law and Justice) working with their incredible team on immigration and domestic violence matters.

In addition to creative writing, horseback riding, cooking new recipes and hiking with her two goldendoodles, Alyssa is passionate about mental health both within the legal community and outside of it. She served as a volunteer crisis counselor for the Crisis Textline during the height of the Covid-19 Pandemic and is always looking for ways to contribute to mental health initiatives. 

Henna Pithia
Henna Pithia

Henna comes to the committee with nearly a decade of practice covering U.S. Immigration Law, international human rights issues, forced migration, and rule of law.

Since she graduated from the University of Southern California Gould School of Law, Henna has served as Interim Director and Visiting Assistant Clinical Professor of Law for USC Gould’s International Human Rights Clinic. She also served as an Asylum Officer with the United States Citizenship and Immigration Services, as well as a U.S. Business Immigration Attorney at law firms in Canada and the United States.

Henna currently operates as a Senior Strategy and Legal Consultant, focusing her time on U.S. immigration practice and procedure, international human rights issues, and the rule of law. Henna is also part of the Los Angeles County Bar Association’s International Law Section’s Executive Committee, and she has previously served as Co-President of the South Asian Bar Association’s Public Interest Foundation.

You can read one of her recent publications on the American Immigration Lawyers Association website here.

Join me in welcoming Alyssa and Henna to ILS, we are delighted to have such talented lawyers appointed to our ExCom as advisors.

Friendship Agreements

We enter into Friendship Agreements with foreign associations of lawyers to promote cooperation and education with fellow lawyers. We cultivate and advance cross-border understanding, professional practice, and commitment to justice. This includes invitations to various conferences, webinars and the Annual California Bar Meeting. Our current Friendship Agreements include lawyers from the following countries, organizations and territories:

Australia
Australia
Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan
Belgium
Belgium
Organization of Commonwealth
Caribbean Bar Association
Organization of Commonwealth
Caribbean Bar Association
Czech Republic
Czech Republic
European Association of Lawyers
European Association of Lawyers
France
France
Guam
Guam
Hong Kong
Hong Kong
Ireland
Ireland
Italy
Italy
Japan
Japan
Jamaica
Jamaica
Law Society of England and Wales
Law Society of England and Wales
Malaysia
Malaysia
Mexico
Mexico
Poland
Poland
Spain
Spain
Vietnam
Vietnam
Virgin Islands
Virgin Islands

Upcoming Events

Webinars
Webinar: IP Issues in International Technology Agreements

Thursday, January 16, 2025 @ 10 AM | REGISTER NOW
1 Participatory MCLE Credits

This program focuses on IP issues in joint development, collaboration, and consortia agreement from the U.S. and European perspective.  

We will discuss the comparative IP law underlying these agreements, potential IP ownership models, licensing considerations, and strategies for negotiating (and closing) these agreements.  After this webinar, attendees should have a good understanding of the comparative IP law underlying these agreements, IP ownership models, and approaches to negotiating (and closing) these agreements.  The key audience for this webinar would be as follows: IP law attorneys, international law attorneys, and business/commercial attorneys looking to learn more about IP issues in international technology agreements.

Free Webinar: AI and the Legal Profession: Czech, EU, and US Insights on Regulation and Ethics

Tuesday, January 28, 2025 | REGISTER NOW

California
9:00 AM – 10:30 AM (PST)

Czech Republic
6:00 PM – 7:30 PM (CET)

AI and the Legal Profession: Czech, EU, and US Insights on Regulation and Ethics. Register Now! Tuesday, January 28, 2025. California 9 - 10:30 AM (PST). Czech Republic 6 - 7:30 (CET)

After registering, you will receive a confirmation email containing information about joining the webinar.

Events
California Lawyers Foundation Charity golf tournament at the iconic Pelican Hill Golf Club
California Lawyers Foundation. Fairways to Justice. April 17, 2025. Pelican Hill Golf Course. 22701 S Pelican Hill Road, Newport Coast, CA
Conferences
California International Arbitration Week (CIAW)
Save the Date! California International Arbitration Week. March 10-13, 2025. West Los Angeles

Organized as a collaboration of the California Lawyers Association (CLA), California Arbitration (CalArb) and leading arbitration institutions and organizations from around the world, California International Arbitration Week (CIAW) is an annual week-long series of in-person and online programs celebrating international arbitration in California.

California Lawyers Association Annual Meeting
International Conferences
2025 CLA/Milan Bar International Law Conference
2025 CLA/Milan Bar International Law Conference.
October 15-18, 2025
Milan and Lake Como!
Enjoy fantastic Italian food and wine while networking with international attorneys
Article

MISTAKES TO AVOID IN FRANCHISE MEDIATIONS

by Charles (Chuck) Modell

Franchisors and franchisees who engage in early mediation of franchise disputes are often able to resolve their dispute and avoid expensive, time-consuming arbitration or litigation. They also find that mediated settlements can produce creative, win/win results that could never be achieved by having an arbitrator, judge or jury declare a winner and loser.

Unfortunately, some franchisors and franchisees, and/or their attorneys, participate in mediation only because the franchise agreement requires them to do so, and they need to “check the box” before starting the war. They often enter mediation with a chip on their shoulder and do things that can sabotage the mediation process – whether intentionally or not. As a frequent mediator I have seen how mediations can get derailed. By understanding the ways this happens, you can avoid these pitfalls and achieve more successful results from mediation.

Choose the right mediator.

Before you retain a mediator, think about your case and what you need from the mediator. If you are just “checking the box,” then select the least expensive mediator you can find, so that your wasted day will at least cost less. However, if you are looking to resolve a dispute, you want a mediator both parties will trust. This means finding a mediator whose opinion you value – and that your adversary will value. You also want a mediator who is not so busy that he/she will not have the time to review pre-mediation submissions, start thinking about ways to bring the parties together, and stick with the mediation, whether through a single long day or in follow-up communications with the parties. If the case is complicated, choose a mediator with a franchise background who can help you evaluate and formulate settlement offers that can work for both parties. It should not matter whether that person has a franchisee or franchisor background, because they are not making decisions for you. However, a person who knows how franchising works, the typical responsibilities of each party in the relationship, and limitations imposed by the franchise model, will understand issues unique to franchising that often need to be addressed.

Avoid coming into the mediation with a fixed bottom line.

Deciding on a bottom line before starting mediation sets you up for failure. It can box you into one avenue for settlement, when there may be other paths meeting your needs. Moreover, once you draw a line in the sand, even internally, it becomes harder psychologically to go beyond that point; the franchisor or franchisee (and their attorney if they have one) feels that if they go beyond that point, they have “lost.” 

Consider this in the context of buying a house. You decide you want to pay about $900,000 and absolutely will not pay more than $1,000,000. You picked those numbers because you know that at current mortgage rates, this is what you can afford. You look at dozens of houses in this price range, and they do not have the features you want. If I told you I had the perfect house for you for $1,300,000, you likely would not even consider it. However, you should have asked me if I was willing to finance it, because if I was willing to finance it with interest at 3% a year over 30 years, you actually would have paid less for that house than if you had gotten 30-year fixed rate financing at today’s rates for a $900,000 house!  The point here is that in any transaction, price is only one factor to consider. This is especially true in the franchise context where you not only have money involved, but precedence, other terms that can get people what they want in the relationship, the risk of suffering a total loss if you do not resolve the problem, and the time and cost of an adversary proceeding.  Thus, while you should certainly consider what you want before embarking on mediation, keep an open mind as to tradeoffs that can be made, and other avenues you can take to reach an agreement you can live with.

Do not start the mediation with an unreasonable offer/demand, hoping to split the middle or show how reasonable you can be.

Mediation involves compromise but it is not about reaching a middle ground. It is about trying to find a better resolution to a dispute than the lose/lose result that often follows a long, drawn-out dispute. Early impasses in mediation often occur because one party starts at such an extreme that the other side never seriously engages. You may think starting at one extreme gives you more room to compromise, but what often happens is the other side thinks you are so far apart that they do not even try to make a reasonable counteroffer. Think about this again in terms of buying or selling a house or business; if as a seller you list it too high, you will never have a chance to negotiate with many serious buyers, and if as a buyer you make an unreasonably low offer to purchase, you will never get a counteroffer. 

Let the mediator in on your discussion.

In a mediation, you have someone who is in both rooms, hearing what is important to each side, who can, without disclosing any confidences, help each side get what they need out of a settlement. This is a critical component of mediation, and if you kick the mediator out of your room whenever you talk, you lose the value the mediator can provide as you consider offers. All too often in a negotiation, the parties “talk around” each other; with each offering what they think is a reasonable proposal, but without fully understanding what the other side may need in order to reach an agreement. As a result, they may give away too much on one point (which becomes difficult to backtrack on), while offering too little to get a deal done. If the mediator participates in your internal discussions, he/she can help you fashion a proposal that gives away no more than you need to give away, while addressing the needs of the other side.

Avoid setting fixed timelines for the ending of the mediation.

Too often, parties come into a mediation with a fixed deadline for completion – say “5:00 tonight,” after which they have other commitments. It is fine to have a “target” stopping time, but with a fixed deadline, people tend to stop making offers as they approach the deadline, either deciding they cannot reach an agreement or hoping the other side will cave to their demands by the stopping time. In addition, when people approach deadlines, they are less inclined to try and be creative, figuring it is hopeless or focusing on their watches. Mediation is a process, and it takes time to help each side see the merits of the other side’s position, the weaknesses of their own position, and/or the benefit of resolving the dispute. Keep an open mind and a flexible schedule as you work with the mediator to resolve your differences.  

Charles (Chuck) Modell

Chuck has been a franchise attorney at Larkin Hoffman for more than 45 years. He was an early advocate of mediation of franchise disputes. Since 2020, a significant focus of his practice has been mediating franchise disputes.


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