Resolving Disputes with
Skill & Integrity

Conner ADR provides experienced, impartial mediation and arbitration services for civil disputes throughout Georgia. We are seasoned neutrals for serious tort claims, personal injury and wrongful death cases, commercial and construction disputes, real estate claims, divorce and family conflicts, as well as trust and estate litigation.

30+
Years Experience
200+
Cases Resolved
High
Settlement Rate
100%
Confidential

A Better Path to
Resolution

Conner ADR was founded on the belief that most disputes can be resolved efficiently and fairly outside the courtroom — reducing risk to disputants and attorneys alike, lowering costs, and providing closure. With decades of legal practice experience brought to every case, Conner ADR offers the insight needed to guide parties toward meaningful resolution.

With deep roots in Georgia's legal community and hands-on experience in litigation — conducting trials in federal and state courts and before administrative bodies, orchestrating commercial transactions, bringing and resolving construction disputes, and closing real estate deals, transactions, and developments — we understand the issues from every angle and know how to move the needle toward agreement.

Mike Conner Mediator & Arbitrator

David Michael "Mike" Conner

Background

Mike Conner is a celebrated litigation attorney with a distinguished career spanning both defense and prosecution of catastrophic personal injury and wrongful death cases, commercial, business, and construction litigation, corporate planning, and estate disputes. As founder and managing partner of Conner Kutchey Law, he has built a reputation as one of South Georgia's most effective and respected litigators.

That same litigation experience — decades of trying cases, attending hearings, deposing witnesses, negotiating compromises, and ultimately understanding what drives outcomes at trial or a settlement — is what makes Mike an exceptionally effective mediator. He understands both sides of a dispute because he has lived both sides, and he brings that practical, real-life experience to every mediation and arbitration he conducts through Conner ADR.

Honors & Recognitions

Education

1992 – 1995
University of Georgia, Lumpkin School of Law
Juris Doctorate (1998) — cum laude with General Honors
1988 – 1992
University of Georgia, Terry College of Business
JM Tull School of Accounting — BBA Accounting (1992)
magna cum laude with Highest Honors
Beta Gamma Sigma Honor Society

Bar Admissions & Courts

  • State Bar of Georgia (1995)
  • Supreme Court of Georgia
  • Georgia Court of Appeals
  • United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
  • U.S. District Court — Northern, Middle, and Southern Districts of Georgia
  • United States Tax Court, Washington
  • American Bar Association
  • Georgia Bar Association

Practice Experience

Mike's litigation career has touched virtually every area of civil practice, giving him the breadth of experience that makes for an effective neutral. His representative areas of experience include:

  • Commercial and business litigation
  • Catastrophic personal injury and serious tort claims
  • Construction law and defect claims
  • Real estate development and property disputes
  • Employment law and FLSA litigation
  • Insurance coverage and bad faith claims
  • Banking and financial services disputes
  • Corporate governance and business organization conflicts
  • Tax controversies, including conservation easement litigation
  • Creditor rights and collections
  • Local government law
  • Estate, wills and trust litigation
  • Fiduciary litigation
  • Professional malpractice (both prosecution and defense)
  • Appellate practice

Over the course of his career, Mike has represented a broad spectrum of clients — from individuals suffering catastrophic loss and small businesses to national construction firms, brokerage houses, banks and financial institutions, convenience store chains, property developers, car dealerships, local city and county governments, development authorities, and insurance carriers — in a wide variety of matters.

Selected Speaking Engagements

2025
Conservation Easement Litigation (Savannah Estate Planning Council)
2021
Personal Injury and the Independent Contractor Defense
2020
Personal Injury 101: A Comprehensive Guide to Personal Injury Law and Procedure
2015
Authentication and Admissibility of Social Media and E-mail Evidence
2014
Drafting Business Contracts
2013
How to Select the Right Jury for Your Case (National Business Institute)
2010
Advanced Expert Witness Deposition Tactics (National Business Institute)
2007
What to Do When Construction Projects Go Bad (Lorman Education)
2007
AIA Contracts
2002
Eminent Domain Trial Practice (Georgia ICLE)

Community & Public Service

Mike also serves as City Attorney for the City of Jesup, Georgia, his hometown, and has served in multiple leadership positions in professional and civic organizations throughout his career. He also serves as legal counsel to numerous religious institutions and nonprofit organizations in the region. He has two college-aged sons and has been married to his wife Toni for 30 years.

Dispute Resolution Services

🤝

Mediation

Facilitated dialogue to help parties identify common ground and craft creative solutions. Ideal for preserving relationships while resolving conflict.

⚖️

Arbitration

When parties need a binding decision from an experienced neutral — a streamlined, private alternative to traditional litigation with the rigor the process demands.

🔄

Med-Arb

A hybrid approach that begins with mediation and transitions to binding arbitration for any unresolved issues, ensuring every opportunity for agreement.

🩺

Serious Personal Injury & Wrongful Death

Experienced mediation for catastrophic injury, wrongful death, and high-stakes tort claims. With decades of trial experience on both sides of serious personal injury litigation, Conner ADR brings the credibility and case valuation insight needed to bridge the gap in the most difficult cases.

🏢

Commercial Disputes

From partnership disagreements and contract breaches to corporate governance conflicts and franchise disputes, we help disputants navigate complex commercial litigation with efficiency and discretion.

🏗️

Construction Disputes

Specialized resolution services for construction defect claims, contract disputes, delay claims, and payment issues. With deep experience in construction law, Conner ADR understands the technical complexities involved.

🏠

Real Estate Disputes

Purchase and sale disputes, lease conflicts, boundary and easement issues, title claims, and development disagreements — we bring practical experience in real property matters to help parties find resolution without prolonged litigation.

⚕️

Professional Liability & Malpractice

Mediation and arbitration for claims involving professional negligence — including legal, medical, accounting, and design professional malpractice. These cases demand a neutral who understands professional standards of care, damages methodology, and the reputational stakes involved for all parties.

Church Governance Disputes

Sensitive, confidential dispute resolution for religious organizations facing internal governance conflicts, leadership disputes, property disagreements, or employment matters. With experience counseling churches and religious institutions, Conner ADR understands the unique dynamics and values at stake in these disputes.

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦

Divorce & Family Law

Mediation for divorce, child custody, property division, and support disputes. A confidential, less adversarial alternative to contested litigation that empowers families to make their own decisions about their future.

📜

Wills, Trusts & Estates

Resolution of will contests, trust disputes, fiduciary claims, and estate administration conflicts. Mediation helps families resolve deeply personal disputes privately, preserving relationships that litigation would destroy.

💼

Employment & Labor Law

Mediation for wrongful termination, discrimination, harassment, wage-and-hour, and non-compete disputes. With experience representing both employers and employees, Conner ADR brings credibility and balance to even the most contentious workplace conflicts.

📋

Case Evaluation

An impartial, experienced assessment of your case's strengths and weaknesses. Our evaluations help parties understand realistic outcomes and make informed decisions about settlement or further proceedings.

What Is Mediation?

A voluntary, confidential path to resolution — guided by an experienced neutral.

Mediation is a voluntary, confidential process in which a trained, certified neutral — the mediator — helps the parties communicate, identify their underlying interests, and negotiate a resolution to their dispute. Unlike a judge or arbitrator, the mediator does not impose a decision. Instead, the mediator facilitates the conversation and guides the parties toward crafting their own agreement.

Because the parties control the outcome rather than a judge or jury, mediation tends to produce results that are more satisfying to both sides, more creative in structure, and more durable over time. It is widely recognized as the most efficient and cost-effective method of resolving civil disputes outside of direct negotiation.

How Mediation Works

A typical mediation at Conner ADR follows a structured but flexible format:

  • Opening Session: The mediator explains the ground rules, sets the tone, and generally invites each party to make a brief opening statement describing their perspective on the dispute. This session is often the first time the parties hear each other's views in a non-adversarial setting.
  • Joint Discussion: When productive, the mediator facilitates direct dialogue between the parties to clarify the issues, correct misunderstandings, and begin to identify areas of potential agreement.
  • Private Caucuses: The mediator meets individually with each party in confidential sessions. Caucuses are where much of the real work happens — the mediator tests assumptions, explores the interests behind stated positions, helps parties realistically assess their case, and develops potential settlement options.
  • Negotiation & Settlement: Through a series of caucuses and, where appropriate, joint sessions, the mediator helps the parties narrow the gap and work toward a mutually acceptable resolution. When agreement is reached, it is memorialized in a written settlement agreement before anyone leaves the room.

When Is Mediation the Right Choice?

Mediation is particularly effective in situations where:

  • The parties want to preserve an ongoing business, professional, or personal relationship.
  • Both sides are willing to negotiate in good faith.
  • The costs, delays, and uncertainties of litigation outweigh the benefits of going to trial.
  • The dispute involves multiple issues where creative, non-monetary solutions might be part of the resolution.
  • Confidentiality is important — the parties want to keep the dispute and its resolution private.
  • The dispute is early enough that positions have not fully hardened and legal fees have not yet spiraled.

Georgia Law Protects the Mediation Process

Under Georgia law, mediation communications are privileged. Statements made during mediation cannot be used as evidence in any subsequent legal proceeding. This protection encourages candor and honest negotiation, which is essential to reaching resolution. The mediator cannot be called as a witness and cannot be compelled to disclose what occurred during the sessions.

What Types of Disputes Can Be Mediated?

Nearly any civil dispute is a candidate for mediation. At Conner ADR, we regularly mediate disputes involving:

  • Personal injury and catastrophic tort claims
  • Commercial and business contract breaches
  • Conflicts over the ownership and management of businesses
  • Partnership, LLC, and corporate governance disputes
  • Construction defects, delays, and payment claims
  • Warranty and workmanship complaints
  • Real estate purchase, sale, and lease differences
  • Property boundary and neighbor quarrels
  • Professional liability cases
  • Insurance coverage and bad faith contests
  • Employment disputes
  • Divorce and family law conflicts
  • Estate, wills and trust disagreements

Why Mediation Works

Mediation has a remarkably high success rate for good reason. The process puts the decision-making power in the hands of the people who know the dispute best — the parties themselves. A skilled mediator doesn't tell the parties what to do; instead, the mediator helps each side see the dispute more clearly, understand the risks they face, and find the common ground that almost always exists, even in the most contentious cases.

From the mediator's chair, Mike Conner brings the same skills that have made him an effective trial lawyer for decades — thorough preparation, sharp analytical thinking, and the practical judgment to know what the real issues are and where the settlement zone lies. The difference is that in mediation, Mike's skills are deployed not to win for one side, but to help both sides reach a result they can live with.

Mediation vs. Litigation: A Comparison

Factor Mediation Traditional Litigation
Timeline Weeks to schedule; often resolved in a single session Months to years from filing to trial
Cost A fraction of litigation costs; fees typically shared Discovery, depositions, motions, trial, and potential appeal
Privacy Entirely confidential; no public record Public filings, open courtroom
Control Parties craft their own solution Judge or jury decides
Relationships Designed to preserve professional, working or family relationships Adversarial process; regularly permanently damages or destroys relationships
Flexibility Creative solutions; non-monetary terms possible Limited to legal remedies
Finality Settlement agreement is binding and enforceable Subject to appeal; uncertain timeline to closure

What Is Arbitration?

A private, binding resolution from an experienced neutral — faster and more efficient than traditional courtroom litigation or trials.

Arbitration is a private adjudicative process in which the parties present their case to a neutral decision-maker — the arbitrator — who hears evidence, considers arguments, and renders a binding decision called an "award." Think of it as a private trial: the arbitrator serves as the judge, but the process is faster, more flexible, and entirely confidential.

Unlike mediation, where the neutral facilitates negotiation, the arbitrator's role is to decide the case. The parties agree in advance to be bound by the arbitrator's decision, and the grounds for challenging an arbitration award in court are extremely limited — which means arbitration delivers the finality that a trial often cannot.

How Arbitration Works

The arbitration process at Conner ADR is structured to balance thoroughness with efficiency:

  • Agreement to Arbitrate: Arbitration begins with the parties' agreement. This may be a clause in an existing contract (requiring future disputes to be arbitrated) or a submission agreement entered into after a dispute arises. The agreement establishes the scope of the arbitration and any rules that will govern the proceeding.
  • Preliminary Conference: The arbitrator meets with the parties and/or counsel to establish ground rules, set a discovery schedule (if any), identify the issues to be decided, and set the hearing date. This conference ensures the proceeding stays focused and moves efficiently.
  • Limited Discovery: Unlike litigation, where discovery can consume months or even years and enormous expense, arbitration typically involves limited, targeted discovery — document exchanges and, where necessary, depositions of key witnesses. The arbitrator has the authority to resolve any discovery disputes quickly and pragmatically.
  • The Hearing: The arbitration hearing resembles a bench trial. Each side presents opening statements, calls witnesses, introduces documentary evidence, and makes closing arguments. The rules of evidence are relaxed — the arbitrator has broad discretion to admit relevant evidence — and the proceedings move more quickly than a courtroom trial.
  • The Award: After the hearing, the arbitrator issues a written award, typically within 30 to 60 days. The award may be a simple decision or a reasoned opinion explaining the arbitrator's analysis. Once issued, the award is final and binding and can be confirmed and enforced by a court.

When Is Arbitration the Right Choice?

Arbitration is well-suited to disputes where:

  • The parties need a binding decision but want to avoid the cost and delay of litigation.
  • A contract between the parties contains an arbitration clause.
  • Confidentiality is important — the parties don't want their dispute aired in a public courtroom.
  • The subject matter is technical or specialized and benefits from a decision-maker with relevant experience (rather than a randomly assigned judge or jury).
  • Finality matters — the parties want a decision that is not subject to years of appellate review.
  • Scheduling flexibility is important — arbitration hearings can be set on the parties' timeline rather than the court's docket.

Advantages of Arbitration Over Litigation

Factor Arbitration Traditional Litigation
Speed Typically resolved in months Often takes years to reach trial
Cost Streamlined discovery; condensed hearings Extensive discovery, motion practice, and trial preparation
Privacy Entirely confidential; no public record Public filings, open courtroom
Decision-Maker Experienced neutral chosen by the parties Randomly assigned judge; lay jury
Flexibility Parties set the rules, schedule, and format Governed by court rules and calendar
Finality Award is final; very limited grounds for appeal Judgment may be appealed; further delay and expense
Enforceability Award confirmed and enforced by court under state and federal law Judgment enforceable, but subject to appellate modification

Binding vs. Non-Binding Arbitration

In binding arbitration, the arbitrator's award is final and enforceable — the parties agree in advance to accept the decision. In non-binding arbitration, the arbitrator issues an advisory decision that the parties can accept or reject. Non-binding arbitration is sometimes used as a reality check before trial or as a step in a broader dispute resolution process. Conner ADR offers both formats depending on the parties' needs.

The Arbitrator's Role

A good arbitrator is more than a private judge. A good arbitrator manages the process efficiently, understands the subject matter of the dispute, treats the parties fairly, and issues a well-reasoned decision in a timely manner. Mike Conner brings decades of litigation experience to the arbitrator's chair — he has tried cases, examined witnesses, and argued motions on both sides of the kinds of disputes he now decides. That experience translates directly into a more informed, more efficient, and more fair-minded arbitration process.

Types of Disputes Suited for Arbitration

  • Commercial contract disputes.
  • Construction defect, delay, and payment claims.
  • Real estate and property disputes.
  • Business partnership and corporate governance disputes.
  • Insurance coverage disputes.
  • Employment and compensation disputes.
  • Consumer and franchise disputes.
  • Any dispute where a contract requires arbitration.

Legal Framework

Arbitration in Georgia is governed by the Georgia Arbitration Code (O.C.G.A. § 9-9-1 et seq.) and, for disputes involving interstate commerce, the Federal Arbitration Act (9 U.S.C. § 1 et seq.). Both statutes strongly favor the enforcement of arbitration agreements and provide a framework for confirming and enforcing arbitration awards through the courts. The grounds for vacating an arbitration award are narrow and well-defined, providing the parties with confidence that the process will produce a final, durable resolution.

What Is Med-Arb?

The best of both worlds — negotiation first, with the guarantee of a final resolution.

Med-Arb (mediation-arbitration) is a hybrid dispute resolution process that combines mediation and arbitration into a single, seamless proceeding. The process begins as a mediation, giving the parties every opportunity to negotiate their own resolution with the help of a neutral facilitator. If some or all of the issues remain unresolved after mediation efforts are exhausted, the process transitions into binding arbitration, and the neutral (or a different neutral, if the parties prefer) renders a final, binding decision on the remaining disputes.

The result: the collaborative benefits of mediation, backed by the certainty that the dispute will be fully resolved — one way or another — by the end of the process.

How Med-Arb Works

The Med-Arb process at Conner ADR typically unfolds in two phases:

  • Phase 1 — Mediation: The proceeding begins as a standard mediation. The neutral works with the parties through joint sessions and private caucuses to resolve as many issues as possible through facilitated negotiation. The mediation phase follows all the same principles and protections as a standalone mediation — it is voluntary, confidential, and party-controlled.
  • Phase 2 — Arbitration: If the parties reach agreement on all issues, the process ends at the mediation phase and the settlement is memorialized in a binding agreement. If certain issues remain unresolved, the process transitions into arbitration. The parties present evidence and argument on the unresolved issues, and the neutral issues a binding award. The transition is governed by ground rules that the parties agree to at the outset.

The Same Neutral or a Different One?

One of the key decisions in structuring a Med-Arb is whether the same neutral who conducted the mediation will also serve as the arbitrator, or whether a different neutral will step in for the arbitration phase. Each approach has advantages:

Approach Advantages Considerations
Same Neutral Already familiar with the dispute, the parties, and the dynamics; more efficient; lower cost; seamless transition Parties must be comfortable that confidential mediation disclosures won't prejudice the arbitration decision
Different Neutral Clean slate for the arbitration phase; no concern about carryover from mediation caucuses Additional cost; second neutral must get up to speed; less efficient

At Conner ADR, we discuss this choice with the parties at the outset and structure the process according to their comfort level. Both formats work well when properly managed.

When Is Med-Arb the Right Choice?

Med-Arb is particularly well-suited when:

  • The parties want to negotiate but need the assurance of a guaranteed final resolution.
  • A court has ordered the parties to attempt mediation and the parties want a backup if mediation is only partially successful.
  • Deadlines are pressing — looming expiration of a limitations period, construction completion date, a contract expiration, a pending transaction — and the parties cannot afford an open-ended process.
  • The dispute involves some issues that are likely "bridge-able" through negotiation and others that are genuinely contested and may need a decision.
  • The parties want to minimize cost by resolving everything in a single proceeding rather than paying for a mediation and then starting over with a separate arbitration.
  • Multiple parties are involved and scheduling a single combined proceeding is more practical than staging separate processes.

Why Med-Arb Is Gaining Popularity

Med-Arb has become increasingly popular in commercial and construction disputes because it eliminates the biggest weakness of mediation (no guaranteed outcome) while preserving the biggest strength of mediation (party control). Parties get to try negotiation first — and in many cases, the existence of the arbitration "backstop" actually increases the likelihood of a mediated settlement, because both sides know that an unresolved dispute won't just drift back into litigation.

Comparing Your Options

Feature Mediation Arbitration Med-Arb
Who decides? The parties The arbitrator Parties first; arbitrator if needed
Binding? Only if agreement is reached Yes — award is final Yes — by agreement or award
Guaranteed outcome? No Yes Yes
Party control Maximum Limited High in Phase 1; limited in Phase 2
Best for Parties willing to negotiate; relationship preservation Parties needing a binding decision Parties wanting negotiation with a guaranteed endpoint

How Conner ADR Handles Med-Arb

Mike Conner's extensive litigation experience is a particular asset in the Med-Arb context. In the mediation phase, his understanding of trial outcomes helps parties realistically assess their positions and find common ground. If the process moves to arbitration, that same litigation experience ensures a thorough, fair-minded hearing and a well-reasoned decision. The transition between phases is managed clearly and professionally, with appropriate ground rules established at the outset to protect the integrity of both processes.

Disputes We Handle

Deep experience in the subject matter of your dispute — not just the process of resolving it.

An effective mediator or arbitrator needs more than process skills — they need to understand the substance of the dispute. Mike Conner's three decades of litigation practice across a broad range of civil matters means that when you bring your case to Conner ADR, your neutral already speaks your industry's language, understands the applicable standards, and knows what realistic outcomes look like at trial. That substantive expertise translates directly into more efficient proceedings and better results.

🩺 Serious Personal Injury & Wrongful Death

High-stakes personal injury and wrongful death cases present unique mediation challenges. The damages are often catastrophic and life-altering. The emotional stakes are extraordinarily high. The gap between the parties' positions can be enormous. And the insurance and coverage issues layered into these cases add further complexity. Mediating these disputes effectively requires a neutral who has actually tried serious personal injury cases and understands how juries evaluate damages, how defense counsel assesses exposure, and how plaintiffs' counsel values a case.

Mike Conner has prosecuted catastrophic personal injury cases throughout his career and is a member of both the Million Dollar Advocates Forum and the Multi-Million Dollar Advocates Forum. He has also defended injury claims on behalf of corporate and institutional clients and insurance carriers. That experience on both sides of serious tort litigation gives him the credibility and case valuation insight needed to help even the most adversarial parties find a path to resolution.

Types of personal injury and wrongful death disputes we handle:

  • Catastrophic personal injury — traumatic brain injuries, spinal cord injuries, amputations, and severe burns
  • Wrongful death claims — motor vehicle, premises liability, workplace, and product liability fatalities
  • Motor vehicle and trucking accidents — including commercial carrier and multi-vehicle cases
  • Premises liability — slip and fall, negligent security, and dangerous condition claims
  • Product liability — manufacturing defects, design defects, and failure to warn claims
  • Workplace injuries and employer liability claims
  • Nursing home and assisted living negligence and abuse
  • Insurance bad faith and coverage disputes arising from personal injury claims

Why Serious Injury Cases Benefit from an Experienced Mediator

In catastrophic injury and wrongful death mediations, the single most important factor is the neutral's credibility with both sides. Plaintiffs' counsel needs to know the mediator understands complicated liability theories and the true value of a serious case. Defense counsel and the carrier need to know the mediator can realistically assess exposure and deliver frank positions to both sides of the dispute. Mike Conner's track record as a trial lawyer — on both sides — provides that credibility.

🏢 Commercial Disputes

Commercial disputes strike at the heart of a business's operations, relationships, and bottom line. Whether it's a partnership gone wrong, a breached contract, a non-compete violation, or a dispute over the value of a business, the stakes are high and the issues are often both legally and financially complex.

Mike Conner has represented businesses of every size — from sole proprietors and family-owned companies to national corporations — in commercial litigation throughout his career. He has handled contract disputes, partnership dissolutions, corporate governance fights, franchise disputes, and business tort claims. That breadth of experience gives him the ability to quickly grasp the business dynamics driving a commercial dispute and help parties find practical, business-minded solutions.

Types of commercial disputes we handle:

  • Breach of contract claims — supply agreements, service contracts, and distribution agreements
  • Business partnership and LLC disputes — management disagreements, fiduciary duty claims, and dissolutions
  • Corporate governance disputes — shareholder rights, officer/director liability, and derivative claims
  • Non-compete, non-solicitation, and trade secret disputes
  • Franchise disputes — territorial rights, termination, and encroachment claims
  • Business valuation disagreements — buyouts, dissolutions, and fair value determinations
  • Creditor and debtor disputes — guaranty enforcement, collections, and workout agreements
  • Insurance coverage disputes — commercial general liability, professional liability, and D&O policies
  • Banking and financial services disputes

🏗️ Construction Disputes

Construction disputes are among the most complex in civil practice. They involve layered contractual relationships, technical building standards, competing expert opinions, and frequently multiple parties — from owners and developers to general contractors, subcontractors, architects, engineers, and sureties. A neutral who doesn't understand construction is a neutral who will spend the first half of your mediation getting educated at the parties' expense.

Mike Conner has spent a significant portion of his career litigating construction cases. He has represented owners, general contractors, subcontractors, and design professionals in disputes ranging from residential defect claims to multi-million dollar commercial construction litigation. That experience means he understands the contracts (AIA, ConsensusDocs, and custom forms), the technical standards, the insurance coverage issues, and the way these cases actually play out at trial.

Types of construction disputes we handle:

  • Construction defect claims — structural failures, water intrusion, code violations, and workmanship deficiencies
  • Delay and disruption claims — schedule impacts, acceleration costs, and consequential damages
  • Payment disputes — retainage, mechanic's liens, payment bond claims, and prompt pay act violations
  • Contract interpretation and scope disputes — change orders, extras, and differing site conditions
  • Design professional liability — architectural and engineering errors, design deficiencies, and code compliance failures
  • Warranty claims and post-construction defects
  • Surety bond disputes — performance bonds and payment bonds
  • Insurance coverage for construction losses — CGL, builder's risk, and professional liability policies

Why Construction Disputes Benefit from ADR

Construction litigation is notoriously expensive and time-consuming — multiple parties, extensive expert discovery, and complex damages calculations can turn a construction case into a multi-year, six or seven-figure legal expense for every party at the table. Mediation and arbitration offer a faster, less expensive path to resolution, and a neutral with construction experience can cut through the technical complexity to help parties focus on what actually matters.

🏠 Real Estate Disputes

Real estate disputes involve significant financial stakes, emotional investment, and often complex factual and legal issues related to title, disclosure, condition, and contractual obligations. Whether the dispute involves a failed residential closing, a commercial lease disagreement, or a multi-party development project gone sideways, an effective neutral needs to understand how real property transactions work and what can go wrong.

Mike Conner has extensive experience in real estate litigation and transactions, having represented developers, investors, brokers, property management companies, buyers, and sellers in a wide range of real property matters. He understands Georgia's real estate laws, the standard contract forms, the disclosure requirements, and the title issues that commonly give rise to disputes.

Types of real estate disputes we handle:

  • Purchase and sale disputes — contract breaches, failed closings, and earnest money claims
  • Seller nondisclosure and misrepresentation claims — latent defects, environmental issues, and material omissions
  • Commercial and residential lease disputes — defaults, security deposits, maintenance obligations, and early termination
  • Boundary, easement, and encroachment disputes
  • Title disputes — ownership claims, liens, and quiet title actions
  • Real estate development disputes — investor disagreements, joint venture conflicts, and entitlement issues
  • Broker and agent disputes — commission claims, fiduciary duty violations, and professional negligence
  • Homeowner and condominium association disputes
  • Landlord-tenant disputes — commercial and residential eviction, lease interpretation, and property damage claims

⚕️ Professional Liability & Malpractice

Professional liability disputes involve claims that a licensed professional — a lawyer, doctor, accountant, engineer, architect, or other professional — failed to meet the applicable standard of care, causing damages to a client or patient. These cases carry unique dynamics: the professional's reputation and livelihood are at stake, insurance carriers and coverage issues are almost always involved, and the standard-of-care analysis often requires specialized knowledge that many neutrals simply don't have.

Mike Conner has represented professionals and institutions in malpractice defense and has prosecuted professional negligence claims on behalf of injured parties. He has also represented law firms, accounting firms, medical practices, and design professionals in a variety of business and liability matters. That experience gives him a practical understanding of professional standards, the insurance landscape, and the reputational concerns that drive settlement decisions in these cases.

Types of professional liability disputes we handle:

  • Legal malpractice — missed deadlines, conflicts of interest, errors in advice, and settlement mismanagement
  • Medical malpractice — misdiagnosis, surgical errors, medication errors, and failure to treat
  • Accounting malpractice — audit failures, tax preparation errors, and negligent financial advice
  • Design professional liability — architectural and engineering errors, plan deficiencies, and construction administration failures
  • Insurance agent and broker errors and omissions
  • Professional fee disputes
  • Disciplinary and licensing matters arising from malpractice claims

⛪ Church Governance Disputes

Disputes within religious organizations are among the most sensitive matters a neutral can handle. They involve deeply held beliefs, long-standing personal relationships, and questions that touch on both spiritual authority and civil law. Church governance disputes can tear communities apart if not handled with care, discretion, and an understanding of the unique legal and organizational structures that govern religious institutions.

Mike Conner has served as legal counsel to multiple churches and religious institutions throughout South Georgia, advising on governance, employment, property, and organizational matters. That experience has given him a deep appreciation for the values, structures, and relational dynamics that define church life — and a practical understanding of how civil law intersects with ecclesiastical governance. He brings that sensitivity and knowledge to every church-related mediation.

Types of church governance disputes we handle:

  • Pastoral and leadership disputes — selection, removal, authority, and succession conflicts
  • Church property disputes — ownership, use, and disposition of real property, especially in denominational splits
  • Congregational governance conflicts — voting rights, bylaws interpretation, and decision-making authority
  • Church employment disputes — hiring, termination, compensation, and housing allowance disagreements
  • Financial management disputes — stewardship, accountability, and allegations of mismanagement
  • Denominational affiliation disputes — disaffiliation, realignment, and property trust clause conflicts
  • Nonprofit governance issues — board conflicts, fiduciary duties, and organizational restructuring

Why Churches Choose Mediation

Litigation is almost always the worst option for a church dispute. It is public, adversarial, and divisive — the opposite of what a faith community needs. Mediation offers a confidential, collaborative process that allows the parties to work through their differences with the help of a neutral who understands both the legal framework and the relational and spiritual dimensions of the conflict. The goal is not just a legal resolution, but a path forward that preserves the community to the greatest extent possible.

👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 Divorce & Family Law Disputes

Divorce and family law disputes are among the most emotionally charged matters that come through any dispute resolution process. The issues are deeply personal — the future of a marriage, the custody and well-being of children, the division of a lifetime's worth of assets and debts. When these disputes land in court, the adversarial process often makes things worse, hardening positions, escalating conflict, and putting the family's most private matters into the public record.

Mediation offers a fundamentally different approach. It gives the parties — not a judge — the power to make the decisions that will shape their family's future. A skilled mediator helps divorcing spouses move past the anger and hurt to have productive conversations about what actually matters: what's best for the children, how to divide assets fairly, and how to structure the transition so both parties can move forward with dignity and financial stability.

Mike Conner's broad litigation background and experience with complex financial matters — including business valuations, real estate, retirement accounts, and tax issues — makes him particularly effective in mediating divorces that involve significant assets, business ownership interests, or contested financial questions.

Types of divorce and family law disputes we handle:

  • Divorce mediation — contested and uncontested, including high-asset divorces
  • Child custody and parenting plan disputes — legal custody, physical custody, and visitation schedules
  • Child support disputes — initial determinations, modifications, and enforcement
  • Alimony and spousal support — amount, duration, and modification disputes
  • Property division — equitable division of marital assets including real estate, retirement accounts, and investments
  • Business valuation disputes in divorce — closely held businesses, professional practices, and partnership interests
  • Post-divorce modification disputes — changes in custody, support, or other terms
  • Prenuptial and postnuptial agreement disputes
  • Family business succession disputes arising from divorce

Why Families Choose Mediation Over Litigation

Research consistently shows that families who resolve their disputes through mediation report higher satisfaction with outcomes, better co-parenting relationships, and higher rates of compliance with the terms of their agreements compared to families who go through contested litigation. Mediation is also faster, less expensive, and — critically — private. Your family's financial details and personal conflicts stay out of the public record and out of the courtroom.

📜 Wills, Trusts & Estates Disputes

Few disputes carry as much emotional weight as conflicts over a loved one's estate. When a family member passes away, disagreements over the validity of a will, the administration of a trust, the conduct of a personal representative, or the distribution of assets can fracture families at the very moment they most need to support one another. These disputes also frequently involve complex legal questions — testamentary capacity, undue influence, fiduciary duty, trust interpretation, and tax consequences — that require a neutral with genuine legal sophistication.

Mike Conner has handled estate and trust matters throughout his career, including will contests, trust disputes, fiduciary litigation, and estate administration issues. His background in tax law — including a BBA in Accounting from UGA's Terry College of Business and admission to the United States Tax Court — provides an additional layer of expertise that is particularly valuable in estates disputes where tax planning, valuation, and generation-skipping issues are in play.

Types of wills, trusts, and estates disputes we handle:

  • Will contests — challenges based on testamentary capacity, undue influence, fraud, or improper execution
  • Trust disputes — interpretation, modification, termination, and challenges to trust validity
  • Fiduciary disputes — claims against executors, personal representatives, trustees, and guardians for breach of fiduciary duty, self-dealing, or mismanagement
  • Estate administration disputes — disagreements over asset valuation, distribution timing, creditor claims, and accounting
  • Disputes among beneficiaries — unequal treatment, perceived unfairness, and conflicts over specific bequests
  • Elder financial exploitation claims — allegations of financial abuse, undue influence over estate planning, and improper transfers
  • Guardianship and conservatorship disputes — contested appointments, removal actions, and scope of authority
  • Family business succession disputes — transition planning conflicts, buyout disagreements, and ownership disputes arising at death
  • Charitable trust and nonprofit succession disputes

Preserving Family Relationships Through Resolution

The greatest cost of estates litigation isn't the legal fees — it's the permanent damage to family relationships. Brothers and sisters who go to war over a parent's estate rarely come back together. Mediation offers a path to resolve these deeply personal disputes in a setting that is private, respectful, and focused on finding solutions the family can live with. A skilled mediator can help family members move past the grief, anger, and sense of betrayal to have honest conversations about what is fair — and what their loved one would have wanted.

💼 Employment & Labor Law Disputes

Employment disputes are among the most common — and most consequential — conflicts in business. For employers, an unresolved employment claim can mean significant financial exposure, operational disruption, and reputational damage. For employees, these disputes involve their livelihood, their career trajectory, and often their sense of dignity and fair treatment. The stakes on both sides are real, and the emotional intensity of these cases can make them particularly challenging to resolve through traditional litigation.

Mike Conner has represented employers and employees throughout his career in a broad range of employment matters — from wrongful termination and discrimination claims to wage-and-hour disputes, FLSA class actions, and NLRB proceedings. He has counseled employers on hiring, discipline, termination, and compliance, and he has prosecuted claims on behalf of employees who have been treated unlawfully. That experience on both sides of the employment relationship gives him the perspective and credibility needed to mediate these disputes effectively.

Types of employment and labor law disputes we handle:

  • Wrongful termination claims — including retaliatory discharge and constructive discharge allegations
  • Employment discrimination — Title VII, ADA, ADEA, and state law claims based on race, sex, age, disability, religion, and national origin
  • Sexual harassment and hostile work environment claims
  • Wage and hour disputes — FLSA overtime claims, misclassification, unpaid wages, and collective actions
  • Non-compete, non-solicitation, and confidentiality agreement disputes
  • Severance and separation agreement negotiations
  • Whistleblower and retaliation claims
  • Family and Medical Leave Act (FMLA) disputes
  • Workers' compensation retaliation claims
  • Executive compensation and bonus disputes
  • Employer-employee trade secret and intellectual property disputes
  • Public sector and government employment disputes

Why Employment Disputes Are Ideal for Mediation

Employment litigation is expensive, time-consuming, and unpredictable — juries are notoriously difficult to read in employment cases. Mediation allows both sides to control the outcome, avoid the uncertainty of trial, and resolve the matter confidentially. For employers, mediation eliminates the risk of a runaway verdict and keeps sensitive personnel matters out of the public record. For employees, mediation often produces faster results and more creative remedies — including reinstatement, references, and non-monetary terms — that a court cannot order.

Our Process

1

Initial Contact

Reach out to discuss your dispute. We'll learn about the parties, issues, and timeline to determine the best approach.

2

Case Preparation

We review submitted materials, identify key issues, and prepare a framework for productive sessions.

3

Resolution Session

Guided by an experienced neutral, parties work through issues in a structured, confidential environment.

4

Agreement

Upon reaching resolution, we memorialize the terms in a clear, enforceable agreement for all parties.

The Right Choice for
All the Right Reasons.

RightChoiceMediation.com

Seasoned Legal Practitioner

Your neutral has spent decades in the courtroom and at the negotiating table — bringing the practical judgment of an experienced trial lawyer to every dispute.

Deep Subject-Matter Knowledge

With focused experience in construction, commercial, real estate, personal injury, and insurance matters, we speak your industry's language and understand the details that matter.

Efficiency & Cost Savings

Resolve disputes in weeks instead of years. Our structured approach minimizes time and expense while maximizing the likelihood of a fair outcome.

Complete Confidentiality

Every proceeding is entirely private. What happens in our sessions stays in our sessions — protecting relationships, reputations, and business interests.

Conner ADR is a dispute resolution practice of Conner Kutchey Law, serving clients from Savannah and Jesup, Georgia.

What Our Clients Say

We had been in litigation for over two years with no end in sight. After a single mediation session with Conner ADR, we reached a settlement that both sides could live with. I only wish we had come here first.

— Commercial Real Estate Developer
Contract Dispute, Savannah, GA

Their understanding of construction law made all the difference. The mediator immediately grasped the technical issues and helped both parties see a path forward that our attorneys had been unable to find on their own.

— General Contractor
Construction Defect Claim, Atlanta, GA

Ready to Resolve Your Dispute?

Complicated disputes don't have to mean complicated resolutions. With 30+ years of litigation experience and a proven track record of getting cases resolved, Mike gets it done — efficiently, fairly, and confidentially.

Schedule a Consultation

Schedule a
Consultation

Ready to explore resolution? Contact us to discuss your dispute confidentially. There is no obligation — just a conversation about how we can help.

📍
Savannah Office 17 Park of Commerce Boulevard, Suite 101
Savannah, Georgia 31405
📍
Jesup Office 711 East Cherry Street
Jesup, Georgia 31546
📞
Phone 877-283-2745
✉️