Business Disputes and Litigation

Most business disputes never reach a courtroom — they're resolved through negotiation, demand letters, or mediation. The ones that do reach court are expensive, slow, and unpredictable. Understanding the path through commercial disputes — what options exist, what they cost, what they accomplish — helps decide when to settle, when to fight, and when to walk away.

The dispute spectrum

Most commercial disputes follow a similar trajectory: a problem emerges; the affected party demands resolution; informal negotiation either resolves it or fails; the parties choose a formal mechanism (mediation, arbitration, or litigation); a resolution is reached either through settlement, judgment, or abandonment.

The dispute resolution choice is often pre-determined by contract. A contract with an arbitration clause forces arbitration; one with a forum selection clause forces a specific court; one with a mediation precondition requires mediation before litigation. Read the contract before deciding strategy.

Demand letters

The standard first formal step. A demand letter sets out the writer's position, describes the alleged wrong, identifies the remedy sought, and sets a deadline for response. Sent from counsel for greater weight; sent directly when proportion to the dispute suggests counsel isn't yet warranted.

A well-drafted demand letter:

Demand letters often produce settlement, especially for collection matters (overdue invoices, unpaid notes) and disputes where one side's position is clearly weaker. Many disputes never escalate beyond this stage.

What demand letters should not do: threaten criminal action (potentially extortion); misrepresent facts (basis for sanction or counterclaim); make defamatory statements (litigation privilege provides some protection but not against everything); demand outrageous amounts (signals lack of seriousness).

Direct negotiation

Most disputes resolve through direct negotiation between the parties or their counsel. Negotiation can happen at any stage — before any formal action, during litigation, on the courthouse steps. Settlement is the most common end-state of formally-filed disputes.

Effective negotiation requires knowing your BATNA (Best Alternative To Negotiated Agreement). If your alternative is a winnable lawsuit, the negotiation anchor is the expected value of that suit minus litigation costs. If your alternative is walking away, that's your floor.

Mediation

Mediation is facilitated negotiation. A neutral mediator (typically a retired judge, experienced lawyer, or trained mediator) helps the parties identify interests, evaluate positions, and reach settlement. Mediation is non-binding — the mediator can't impose a result.

Mediation works particularly well for disputes where:

Mediation is less effective for disputes where one party is fundamentally uninterested in settlement, where principles or precedent matter more than dollars, or where there's significant power asymmetry without effective representation.

Costs: Mediator fee (typically split between parties), often $5,000–$25,000 for a one-day mediation in a commercial dispute. Plus each side's legal fees for preparation.

Many commercial contracts include mediation as a precondition to litigation or arbitration — both sides must mediate in good faith before filing a formal proceeding.

Arbitration

Arbitration is binding dispute resolution by a private arbitrator (or panel) rather than a court. The arbitrator's award is generally enforceable as a court judgment under the Federal Arbitration Act (FAA) and the New York Convention internationally.

Common arbitration providers:

Arbitration characteristics:

Arbitration clauses are heavily negotiated. Key choices: provider, rules, number of arbitrators (one for smaller cases, three for larger), location, governing law, discovery scope, fee allocation.

Small claims court

Small claims courts handle disputes below a state-specific dollar threshold (typically $5,000–$25,000) on a simplified, fast track. Procedural rules are relaxed; lawyers are restricted or prohibited in some states; cases often resolve within weeks rather than years.

Small claims works well for:

Limitations: jurisdictional dollar cap means partial claims; limited or no discovery; limited remedies (typically money damages, not specific performance or injunction); appeal to higher court takes the case out of small claims.

Filing fees are low ($30–$200 typically). Cases are scheduled within weeks to months. Judgments are enforceable like any other judgment.

Civil litigation

The default path when no arbitration clause applies and the dispute exceeds small-claims thresholds. Stages:

  1. Pleadings. Plaintiff files a complaint; defendant answers or moves to dismiss. Counterclaims and cross-claims added.
  2. Initial disclosures and case management. Required in federal court; varies in state courts. Scheduling order sets deadlines.
  3. Discovery. Document production, written interrogatories, depositions, requests for admission. Often the longest and most expensive phase.
  4. Motion practice. Motion to dismiss, motion for summary judgment, motions to compel discovery, motions in limine.
  5. Pretrial. Pretrial conferences, witness lists, exhibit lists, jury instructions, trial briefs.
  6. Trial. Bench (judge) or jury. Opening statements, evidence presentation, closing arguments, verdict.
  7. Post-trial. Motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict, motion for new trial, attorneys' fees and costs.
  8. Appeal. Notice of appeal, briefing, oral argument, decision. Can take 1–2+ years.

Most cases settle before trial. Trials are infrequent and expensive; both sides usually find a settlement preferable to the cost and uncertainty.

Federal vs state court

Federal court jurisdiction requires either:

Without federal jurisdiction, the case proceeds in state court. State courts have general jurisdiction over essentially any dispute — including federal claims that aren't exclusively federal.

Federal court advantages: more uniform procedure (Federal Rules); often more experienced judges for complex commercial matters; sometimes faster.

State court advantages: more flexibility on procedure; "home court" jury pool for local plaintiffs; sometimes substantive state law more favorable than federal alternatives.

A case filed in state court can be "removed" to federal court if federal jurisdiction exists, on motion of the defendant. Strategy around forum selection (where the plaintiff files, whether the defendant removes) is a meaningful part of case planning.

Statute of limitations

Every cause of action has a statute of limitations — the deadline within which suit must be filed. Past the deadline, the claim is barred regardless of merit. Common state-law commercial limitations periods:

The clock typically starts running when the cause of action "accrues" — often when the breach or harm occurs, sometimes when it's discovered (discovery rule), sometimes later under tolling rules. Determining the applicable limitation period for any given claim requires careful analysis.

Limitations defenses are waivable but should be asserted as affirmative defenses in the answer.

Discovery

Discovery is the formal exchange of information between parties. Tools:

Discovery is where the legal fees go. Document review (particularly email production), deposition preparation and attendance, motion practice over disputes — these consume the majority of litigation budget.

Discovery disputes are common. Parties move to compel when the other side stonewalls or to limit when the other side overreaches. Judges resolve based on relevance, proportionality, and privilege.

Costs and timeline

ForumTypical legal fees per sideTimeline
Demand letter only$1,000–$5,000Days to weeks
Small claims$0–$1,500Weeks to months
Mediation$15,000–$50,000 (incl. mediator)1–3 months
Arbitration (commercial, mid-size)$100,000–$500,000+6–18 months
State court litigation (mid-size)$150,000–$750,000+1–3+ years
Federal court litigation (mid-size)$250,000–$1,000,000+1.5–4+ years
Complex commercial trial$1M–$10M+2–5+ years

These are rough ranges — specific cases vary widely based on complexity, opposing counsel, judge, jurisdiction, and willingness to fight.

When to settle

Settlement is the most common resolution to litigated disputes. The economic analysis:

Expected value of trial = (probability of winning × expected recovery) − (probability of losing × expected exposure) − remaining litigation costs.

If a defendant's expected exposure is $1M with 50% probability and remaining litigation costs of $300,000, the rational settlement is up to roughly $800,000. If the plaintiff's expected recovery is $1M with the same probability and same remaining costs, the rational settlement is at least $200,000. Settlement typically happens in the overlap.

Factors pushing toward settlement:

Factors pushing against settlement:

Collecting judgments

Winning a judgment is only the first step; collecting requires more work. Collection methods:

Judgment-proof debtors (no assets, no income) are uncollectible regardless of merit. Pre-litigation evaluation of the debtor's collectability often matters more than evaluation of the legal merits.

Common mistakes

FAQ

What's the difference between arbitration and mediation? Arbitration is binding decision by a neutral; mediation is facilitated negotiation. Arbitrator decides; mediator helps the parties decide.

How long does litigation take? Federal civil cases average 2–3+ years from filing to disposition. Complex commercial cases can take 4+ years. Most cases settle before trial; trial dates can be many years out.

Do I need a lawyer for litigation? Individuals can represent themselves; corporations and most LLCs generally cannot (a lawyer must appear). Even where allowed, self-representation in significant matters produces worse outcomes.

Can the loser pay attorneys' fees? American Rule: each side bears its own fees, unless a statute or contract shifts fees. Fee-shifting statutes apply in some employment, IP, civil rights, and consumer protection cases. Contractual fee-shifting clauses are common in commercial agreements.

What does it cost to file a lawsuit? Filing fees are typically $250–$500 in federal court, $200–$600 in state court. Service of process adds nominal cost. Attorneys' fees dwarf filing fees.

Can I sue in any state? Personal jurisdiction over the defendant is required; depends on the defendant's contacts with the forum. Forum-selection clauses in contracts dictate venue.

What happens if I ignore a lawsuit? Default judgment against you for whatever the plaintiff claims. Then the plaintiff can enforce the judgment via collection mechanisms.

Can I record settlement discussions? Rule of Evidence 408 makes settlement offers inadmissible to prove liability. Recording laws vary by state (one-party vs all-party consent).