When Litigation Becomes About the Lawyers Instead of The Clients

January 15, 2026

Most lawyers begin every case with the same goal: to serve their client’s best interests.

But over time, in long and hard-fought litigation, something subtle—and dangerous—can happen. The case slowly stops being about the client’s problem and starts becoming about the lawyers’ battle.

I see this more often than many would like to admit.


How It Happens

Litigation is, by design, adversarial. It rewards:

  • Strong positions
  • Aggressive advocacy
  • Winning motions
  • And proving the other side wrong

None of that is inherently bad. But when a case stretches on for months or years, it’s easy for the focus to shift from “What’s best for the client?” to:

  • “We can’t give in now.”
  • “After everything we’ve fought over?”
  • “We’ve already invested too much.”

At that point, sunk cost replaces strategy.


The Warning Signs

You can often tell when a case has crossed this line:

  • Settlement discussions are framed as “concessions” instead of solutions
  • Every issue becomes a matter of principle
  • The emotional temperature in the room is higher than the financial one
  • The client’s business or personal goals fade into the background

When that happens, litigation stops being a tool and starts becoming the objective.


The Real Cost

Clients don’t measure success in motions won or briefs filed.They measure it in:

  • Time
  • Stress
  • Money
  • Disruption
  • And uncertainty

When a case becomes lawyer-centered instead of client-centered, those costs quietly multiply.


The Mediator’s Role

One of the most important roles of a mediator is to recenter the conversation:

  • What does the client actually need?
  • What problem are we trying to solve?
  • What does a good decision look like today—not two years from now?

Good mediation is not about declaring winners. It’s about helping people make clear, forward-looking decisions in imperfect circumstances.


Final Thought

Strong advocacy is essential.But the best lawyers never lose sight of who the case is really for.

When litigation stays client-centered, resolution becomes possible.


Schedule your next ADR session via our convenient online calendar, or call Carol Waldrop at 855-754-8807.