What happens when the advice they give you is wrong? What if your accountant gave you the wrong tax advice or a solicitor failed to correctly convey some land or record your wishes under your will? Or what if your agronomist gave you the wrong advice and your entire crop failed?
Let’s take the example of the agronomist. With profit margins tight, farmers can no longer afford to guess their crop yields, and it is now commonplace to enlist the professional advice of an agronomists to ensure the crop is successful and in line with expectations. The agronomist will advise which herbicides to use, but what would happen if they got it wrong and the crop yield wasn’t up to scratch or even failed?
If a mistake has been made then it may be possible to bring a claim in negligence
against the agronomist. To establish any negligence claim you would need to demonstrate the following:
1. The agronomist owed a duty of care
2. That duty was breached
3. The loss suffered was caused by that breach
4. The loss suffered was reasonably foreseeable.
Claims for professional negligence can often be complex, and whilst establishing the duty is often straightforward (most professionals will be instructed through a contract) establishing that the duty of care was breached can often be contested.
Equally, difficulties can arise when you need to prove that the loss you suffered was directly related to the breach of duty - often there can be other contributing factors, such as bad weather. Finally, any losses claimed must have been reasonably foreseeable as a result of any incorrect advice. Whilst at first glance this may appear easy to establish in agronomist claims, there could be situations, which no agronomist could have reasonably foreseen.
With any complex dispute the legal fees will be of upmost concern to any client, often reaching between £50,000 - £100,000
per party. In comparison, a mediation will usually cost between £1,500 - £3,000 a day, with the cost split between the parties.
Farming involves a relatively small circle of connected businesses, and court action can often permanently damage
these relationships. Not only are the costs at stake but so too is your reputation. Also, any dispute with a trusted advisor may give rise to feelings of betrayal and mistrust - on both sides – which adds to the trauma of carrying on with the litigation. And then your solicitor cannot guarantee success but can only give you a percentage chance.
Remember, a 60% chance of success means that for every 10 times you go to court you would lose 4 – this is what a solicitor would call the risks of litigation!
The mediation process is well-suited to deal with all these issues and the legal arguments as the parties will be able to clarify their positions and agree on a settlement between them. It minimises the risk
and neither party has to face losing in Court.
Just as important, mediation is confidential, so business relations and reputations can be shielded.