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This page archives the Consent - CN PDF from Oregon small claims case 26SC06134, Benjamin Schneider v. Joshua Johnson. It is indexed for searches involving Reckless Ben, Benjamin Schneider, small claims, Joshua Johnson, and the broader Bricks & Minifigs dispute archive.
Court file 26SC06134
Parties Benjamin Schneider v. Joshua Johnson
Document type Consent - CN
Source Oregon Judicial Department small claims court file
Pages 1 page
SEO terms Reckless Ben; Benjamin Schneider; small claims; Joshua Johnson; Bricks & Minifigs
Original archive file Oregon-Small-Claims-26SC06134-benjamin-schneider-v-joshua-johnson-consent-cn-176214847.pdf
Searchable court-file text
Extracted text excerpt for search visibility and reader context. Phone, email, SSN, DOB-style fields are redacted or omitted where detected.
5/12/2026 11:08 AM
IN THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE STATE OF OREGON
26SC06134
FOR THE COUNTY OF MARION
Mediation Information & Consent Form
Case No: 26SC06134 Date: 5/12/2026
Please review the following information about mediation:
1. Mediator Role and Neutrality. The mediator is a neutral third-party who facilitates the
mediation process, but who does not decide any issues in dispute. The mediator helps the parties
discuss their conflict, assists in exploring settlement options, and making informed decisions.
2. Court Process. Mediation is part of the court process used to resolve civil disputes. The mediator
works under the supervision of the court and is guided by very specific ethical codes. Public
information about the mediator is available at the Information Window.
3. Mediator Assistance is Not Legal Advice. The mediator may not give legal advice to either
party. Each party reserves the right to proceed to trial as a means of resolving this dispute. Each
party has the right to obtain independent legal counsel, including review of any proposed mediation
agreement before it becomes final. Any suggestions or opinions shared by the mediator is not legal
advice and the parties should not rely on it as legal advice.
4. Good Faith Participation. The court expects the parties to participate fully and mediate in good
faith. However, only the parties can reach agreement and reaching agreement is voluntary.
The mediator will not judge the case or force settlement. The parties may withdraw from mediation
after a good faith effort is made and the mediator may end the mediation if the mediator believes
that continuing the process will not benefit the parties.
5. Confidentiality. Mediation communications are confidential. If the case proceeds to trial, the
mediator cannot be called as a witness to testify for or against any of the parties, nor may the
parties refer to any communication that took place during mediation.
All participants shall protect the confidentiality of all communications made during mediation
subject to the following exceptions:
a. The mediator shall report allegations of child abuse or elder abuse to the appropriate
authorities. The mediator shall report any allegations or threats that are likely to result
in death or substantial bodily injury to a specific person.
b. Subject to the exceptions noted above, information disclosed in private session shall
remain completely confidential unless permission is given for disclosure in mutual
session.
c. Without identifying the parties, the mediator may seek advice from court personnel.
The mediator may discuss the case with other mediators for training purposes.
d. A fully executed mediation agreement becomes part of the court file and will not be
confidential; however, the parties may agree that all or part of the terms of a mediation
agreement are confidential.
I UNDERSTAND AND AGREE TO THE ABOVE TERMS:
NEIGHBOR TO NEIGHBOR
HAS COLLECED CONSENT
TO MEDIATE FROM ALL
PARTIES ELECTRONICALLY.
MEDIATION INFORMATION & CONSENT FORM Page 1 of 1 FC (3/09/22)