LA Fires,
Alternative Dispute Resolution
Feb. 28, 2025
Mediation, time and the law of rebuilding Los Angeles
Rebuilding Los Angeles by 2028 is a legal test, with disputes risking delays; swift mediation and coordinated legal action are crucial to meet the urgent need for recovery before the Olympics.





Howard B. Miller
Howard is a contributing editor and podcast host at the Daily Journal. He is a JAMS mediator and arbitrator, a past president of the State Bar of California, and a former professor of law at the USC Gould School of Law.

The rebuilding of LA will be a test of our legal system.
Rebuilding as soon as possible is imperative for the future of
Los Angeles. The Olympics in the summer of 2028 will be a worldwide television
event. It may not be possible to entirely rebuild by then but if the images at
that time show no rebuilding, Los Angeles will be permanently seen as a city
that not only failed to prevent fire damage but also can't take
action when it's crucial for its residents and future.
There is a real risk legal proceedings will delay rebuilding. If
we review the existing and potential litigation and disputes and the normal
time for their resolution, almost nothing may be rebuilt by the summer of 2028.
Three types of disputes and litigation will delay construction:
The first will be preconstruction permit disputes revolving
around the dollar amounts of residential and commercial fire insurance that
will be paid by insurance companies. There are complex issues regarding the
amounts to be paid and the timing of those payments. Since an emergency has
been declared, insurance companies may reasonably take up to three years to
determine and pay the final amounts for many properties.
There will also be preconstruction permit disputes and potential
litigation between residential and commercial landlords and tenants, banks and
borrowers, and other lien and covenant holders. In the context of those issues,
condominiums will pose their own special issues because of separate insurance
policies for buildings and common areas and each condominium owner in the context
of complex homeowner association decision processes.
The second type will be disputes in the application to build and
post-application period. Even after a building application has been approved
there will be litigation over moving forward. Despite regulatory attempts to
limit their application, there will be issues and probable litigation involving
the Coastal Commission, CEQA, and private rights in existing community
covenants. Those issues will come to the fore especially if there has been a
zoning change, or there is not a rebuilding of what was there before the fire
but an attempt to consolidate separate parcels or build multifamily housing on
previous single-family lots.
All the above issues will have an impact on when construction
can begin.
The third type of dispute and litigation may not directly affect
when construction can begin, but it could have a significant indirect impact on
the process. They are the numerous individual and class actions filed against
Southern California Edison, and the City of Los Angeles and its Department of
Water and Power.
There have to date been four actions for compensation filed
against LA and the DWP on the Palisades fire, and forty-one actions filed
against Southern California Edison on the Eaton Canyon/Altadena fire. Many are
individual or individual joinder actions; some are class actions. However, the
amount of compensation and the amount of liability of the defendants will
impact decisions to rebuild.
Knowledge of the financial situation is essential to decisions
about moving forward. Uncertainty is the enemy of accomplishment. Lives are on
hold. Businesses and individuals cannot make decisions about rebuilding without
knowing what financial resources they have. Governments and utilities need
similar knowledge. Even the ultimate subrogation claims by insurance companies
need to be determined for utilities and the government to know the full cost of
the fires.
In addition to private interests, time is the essential public
interest. In all these disputes and litigation, who represents the public
interest in timely rebuilding? People cannot be asked to not assert claims they
believe they have. And the loyalty of lawyers must be to their clients, not to
public concerns.
There is one historical example that might help. London faced
the same public interest question after the Great London Fire of 1666. The city
was destroyed. Its wealth was held in leases and subleases on property. Until
those legal claims could be resolved there could be no rebuilding. The normal
legal process would delay rebuilding for years.
Parliament created a special fire court, which essentially wound
up serving as a court of mediation with special powers. The leading judges of
the time served on the fire court, pro bono, without compensation. The matters
were resolved in record time, as was the rebuilding of London. (See
Miller, "Los Angeles and the Great London Fire Court," Daily Journal, Jan. 10,
2025.)
The article suggested the same effect could be achieved in Los
Angeles through pro bono mediation. The response to that suggestion has been
gratifying. Dozens of mediators responded they would be happy to do pro bono
mediations on the fire cases. Seven major ADR organizations - JAMS, ADR
Services, Judicate West, ARC, Signature Resolution, FedArb and The Mediation
Center of Los Angeles - have agreed they would waive all their administrative
fees for the pro bono mediations so they would be cost-free.
The process for counsel to obtain the pro bono cost-free
mediation is straightforward. Counsel should simply call the ADR organization
they would normally call to schedule a mediation and indicate they are requesting
pro bono mediation for a fire case. They will then receive the names of
mediators in the organization who have volunteered pro bono and counsel may
choose the mediator and proceed at no cost.
For maximum effect, counsel should do this at the earliest
possible time. Early mediation may settle the matter immediately,
or result in an agreement on the process for resolving it quickly. This
could be especially helpful before litigation is filed.
For disagreements between policyholders and insurance companies
about the amount or timing of coverage, pro bono mediators engaged before any
litigation could help resolve the matter expeditiously and have an enormous
positive impact on rebuilding.
In complex cases, early mediation could help in developing
agreements on efficient procedures. But that may not be enough. If the cases
are consolidated and assigned to one judge in Judicial Council Coordination
(JCCP) Proceedings, there will be common questions of law or fact in those
proceedings.
If the central issues are factual, as they appear to be at first
glance in the Eaton Canyon/Altadena cases, vigorous supervision of the
discovery practice will be required to meet the public interest time
requirements. If a dominant issue appears to be legal, as in the claims of
inverse condemnation in the Palisades cases, early motions for summary judgment
with strict briefing schedules may be in the public interest.
These are all important issues - especially timing - and the
Daily Journal will report on their resolution and will periodically publish
articles highlighting organizations and individuals doing pro bono work or
otherwise helping to get results in a timely manner.
Following the work of the Great Fire Court of London Sir
Christopher Wren was able to rebuild St. Paul's cathedral, which had been
gutted in the 1666 fire. His crypt is in the basement of the cathedral, and its
inscription, in Latin, says: "Reader, if you seek his monument look around
you."
The rebuilding of LA depends on how our legal system will
perform. The result will be known in 2028 when you "look around you."
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