Attorney Richard Grossman will explain how this easily adoptable innovation of Comprehensive Adjudication is designed to provide a more expertly analyzed, enforceable legal decision.
Many experts believe that resolving legal disputes through litigation is far too costly and drawn out and that it risks an unfavorable outcome—which has resulted in widespread dissatisfaction with our court system.
However, the nonprofit Intelligent Justice is now advancing an innovative process, called Comprehensive Adjudication, that fully addresses those concerns for the first time in recent history. Its founder, Tiburon attorney Richard Grossman, successfully litigated multi-million dollar cases in the public court system for decades before turning his attention full time to championing a far more cost-efficient system through Intelligent Justice.
In this presentation, Grossman will explain how this easily adopted innovation is designed to provide a more expertly analyzed, enforceable decision, resolving a legal dispute of any size, in less than half the time, and at less than half the cost, of litigating that same dispute in court.
The Library was designed by the firm of Bull, Stockwell, and Allen. The architectural style is that of the 19th century railroad yard in Tiburon.
The site is part of the landfill of the 1890s done to create the railroad yard. Windows frame views of the marsh lands and Old St. Hilary's Open Space preserve.
The expanded library was designed by Brown Reynolds Watford Architecture and added approximately 9,000 square feet, bringing the total size of the library to about 19,500 square feet.