Connecticut Alternative Dispute Resolution: Mediation, Arbitration, and Court Programs
Connecticut's alternative dispute resolution (ADR) sector encompasses a structured set of processes — mediation, arbitration, and court-annexed programs — that operate alongside the state's formal judicial system to resolve civil, family, commercial, and housing disputes outside of full trial proceedings. These mechanisms are governed by state statute, Judicial Branch rules, and, where applicable, federal arbitration law. Understanding how Connecticut's ADR landscape is organized is essential for parties, attorneys, and researchers navigating the Connecticut legal system and evaluating when litigation is and is not the appropriate path.
Definition and scope
Alternative dispute resolution in Connecticut refers to any structured process by which parties resolve legal disputes without proceeding to a court-adjudicated trial. The Connecticut Judicial Branch recognizes three primary ADR classifications:
- Mediation — a facilitated negotiation in which a neutral third party helps disputing parties reach a voluntary, mutually acceptable agreement. The mediator does not issue a binding decision.
- Arbitration — a quasi-adjudicative process in which a neutral arbitrator (or panel) hears evidence and arguments, then issues an award. Arbitration may be binding or non-binding depending on the parties' agreement or court order.
- Court-annexed ADR programs — formal programs administered by the Connecticut Superior Court that require or strongly encourage parties to participate in mediation or other ADR before trial.
Connecticut General Statutes (C.G.S.) §§ 52-408 through 52-424 govern written arbitration agreements and proceedings in the state. The Federal Arbitration Act (FAA), 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq., governs arbitration clauses in contracts involving interstate commerce, which frequently overlaps with Connecticut commercial disputes. The regulatory context for Connecticut's legal system provides the broader statutory framework within which ADR operates.
Scope limitations: This page addresses ADR as practiced within Connecticut's state court system and under Connecticut law. It does not cover federal agency ADR programs (e.g., EEOC mediation), tribal dispute resolution processes, or international commercial arbitration governed by the New York Convention. Connecticut's ADR rules apply to parties subject to Connecticut Superior Court jurisdiction; disputes governed exclusively by federal law or litigated in U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut fall outside this scope.
How it works
Mediation
Connecticut Superior Court operates mandatory mediation programs in family, housing, and civil dockets. The process follows a standard sequence:
- Referral or agreement — A judge refers a case to mediation, or parties voluntarily agree to mediate before or during litigation.
- Mediator selection — Parties select a mediator from approved rosters maintained by the Judicial Branch's Office of Alternative Dispute Resolution (ADR Office), or they retain a private mediator.
- Session conduct — The mediator facilitates joint and separate sessions, helping parties identify interests and explore settlement options. Sessions are confidential under C.G.S. § 52-235d, which prohibits the use of mediation communications as evidence in subsequent proceedings.
- Agreement or impasse — If parties reach agreement, terms are reduced to writing and may be entered as a court order. If mediation fails, litigation continues.
Arbitration
Arbitration in Connecticut proceeds under either contractual provisions or court referral:
- Initiation — A party files a demand for arbitration per the terms of the arbitration agreement, or a court orders arbitration under C.G.S. § 52-410.
- Arbitrator appointment — Parties appoint arbitrators by agreement; absent agreement, the Superior Court may appoint under C.G.S. § 52-411.
- Hearing — The arbitrator conducts a hearing with evidence and testimony. Formal rules of evidence (see Connecticut evidence rules) do not strictly apply unless the parties specify otherwise.
- Award — The arbitrator issues a written award. Under C.G.S. § 52-417, a binding award may be confirmed by the Superior Court, giving it the force of a court judgment. Grounds for vacating an award are narrow — fraud, corruption, evident partiality, or arbitrator misconduct (C.G.S. § 52-418).
Court-Annexed Programs
The Connecticut Judicial Branch's ADR Office administers programs including:
- Civil case mediation — Available in the Complex Litigation Docket and general civil dockets.
- Family case mediation — Mandatory mediation is required in contested custody and visitation matters under the Family Services Unit.
- Housing mediation — The Housing Mediation Program addresses landlord-tenant disputes, including eviction proceedings (Connecticut housing court procedures provides related procedural context).
- Foreclosure mediation — Administered under C.G.S. § 49-31l, the Foreclosure Mediation Program requires lenders to participate in mediation before obtaining a foreclosure judgment on owner-occupied residential properties.
Common scenarios
ADR in Connecticut is most frequently used in the following dispute categories:
- Family and divorce matters — Custody, visitation, and property division disputes. Connecticut family courts routinely refer contested parenting plans to mediation before scheduling trial (Connecticut family court procedures).
- Commercial contract disputes — Business-to-business contracts frequently include binding arbitration clauses; disputes over contract performance, payment, and breach are among the most common arbitration subjects (Connecticut contract law basics).
- Employment disputes — Wrongful termination, discrimination, and wage claims are arbitrated under employer-employee arbitration agreements, though the enforceability of pre-dispute agreements in employment is subject to both state and federal scrutiny (Connecticut employment law framework).
- Construction disputes — The American Institute of Architects (AIA) standard contracts, widely used in Connecticut construction projects, contain mandatory arbitration clauses administered through the American Arbitration Association (AAA).
- Landlord-tenant disputes — Housing mediation is available at the Housing Session of the Connecticut Superior Court.
- Personal injury and tort claims — Parties in pending civil litigation may agree to non-binding arbitration to value claims prior to settlement negotiation (Connecticut tort law fundamentals).
- Small claims matters — While the small claims docket has its own procedures, parties in small claims disputes may be referred to mediation (Connecticut small claims court).
Decision boundaries
Choosing between mediation, binding arbitration, and litigation involves distinct trade-offs across five dimensions:
| Factor | Mediation | Binding Arbitration | Litigation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Control over outcome | Parties retain full control | Arbitrator decides | Judge or jury decides |
| Confidentiality | Protected by C.G.S. § 52-235d | Generally private; no public record | Court records are public |
| Finality | Agreement is binding if memorialized | Award is final; limited appeal grounds | Subject to full appellate review |
| Speed | Fastest — sessions can occur within weeks | Faster than full trial; months to a year | Potentially years |
| Cost | Lowest — mediator fees shared | Moderate — arbitrator fees, AAA administrative costs | Highest — extended attorney and court costs |
Mediation vs. arbitration — key distinction: Mediation produces no decision unless the parties agree. Arbitration produces a decision regardless of party agreement. This distinction is the primary driver of which process is appropriate: parties who need a neutral to decide — not facilitate — should use arbitration. Parties who retain ability to walk away require mediation.
When ADR does not apply or fails:
- ADR cannot resolve disputes involving constitutional rights violations that require injunctive relief from a court.
- Matters requiring a public record or precedent — such as Connecticut criminal procedure or significant civil rights enforcement — are not candidates for private ADR.
- If one party refuses to participate in good faith, courts can compel participation in court-annexed programs but cannot compel settlement.
- Arbitration clauses in consumer contracts are subject to unconscionability challenges under Connecticut common law and the Connecticut Unfair Trade Practices Act (CUTPA), C.G.S. § 42-110b (Connecticut consumer protection laws).
Parties evaluating whether ADR is appropriate for a specific matter should assess whether the dispute type is arbitrable under applicable statute and contract, whether the selected ADR method aligns with the desired outcome (settlement vs. decision), and whether the confidentiality of the process is consistent with any public interest in the matter.
References
- Connecticut General Statutes § 52-408 through § 52-424 (Arbitration)
- Connecticut General Statutes § 49-31l (Foreclosure Mediation Program)
- Connecticut General Statutes § 52-235d (Mediation Confidentiality)
- Connecticut Judicial Branch — Alternative Dispute Resolution
- Connecticut Judicial Branch — Family Services / Mediation
- Federal Arbitration Act, 9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq. (Cornell LII)
- Connecticut General Statutes § 42-110b (CUTPA)
- American Arbitration Association — Construction Industry Rules