Archive - April 2017

1
Rockwell Medical, Inc. v. Richmond Brothers, Inc. (E.D. Mich., 2017)
2
Scott v. Eglin Fed. Credit Union (N.D. Fla., 2017)
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Meredith v. United Collection Bureau, Inc., No. 1:16 CV 1102, 2017 WL 1355696 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2017)
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Zamora v. Stellar Management Group, Inc. (W.D. Mo., 2017)
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Williams v. Angies List (S.D. Ind., 2017)
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Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Texas Alcoholic Beverages Commission, et al., No. 15-00134 (W.D. Texas, Apr. 10, 2017)
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Court Concludes Rule 37(e) Does Not Apply to “situations where, as here, a party intentionally deleted the recording”
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Sedona Principles Revised, Public Comment Welcomed

Rockwell Medical, Inc. v. Richmond Brothers, Inc. (E.D. Mich., 2017)

Key Insight: Can discovery be given an expedited time table in order to precede a preliminary injunction hearing? Is it proportional?

Nature of Case: Legislation on violations of the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934

Electronic Data Involved: Depositions and documents (defined very broadly)

Keywords: Preliminary injunction, expedited discovery, proportionality, unduly burdensome

View Case Opinion

Scott v. Eglin Fed. Credit Union (N.D. Fla., 2017)

Key Insight: Discovery of these things was blocked, since they were ruled to be only marginally relevant compared to the time and expense it would take to produce them.

Nature of Case: Employment Discrimination

Electronic Data Involved: emails and text messages

Keywords: relevance, marginal relevance, time and expense

View Case Opinion

Meredith v. United Collection Bureau, Inc., No. 1:16 CV 1102, 2017 WL 1355696 (N.D. Ohio Apr. 13, 2017)

Key Insight: A program to parse relevant data from an existing database may trump usual course of business format

Nature of Case: Telephone Consumer Protection Act

Electronic Data Involved: Electronic list of wrong phone calls

Keywords: computer program, usual course of business,

View Case Opinion

Zamora v. Stellar Management Group, Inc. (W.D. Mo., 2017)

Key Insight: Can the court order additional discovery if a party destroys evidence? Is a prejudice ruling required in a destruction of evidence case?

Nature of Case: Retaliation and discharge

Electronic Data Involved: text messages, emails, social media messages

Keywords: Prejudice, Destruction of evidence, Social media, Text messages

View Case Opinion

Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Texas Alcoholic Beverages Commission, et al., No. 15-00134 (W.D. Texas, Apr. 10, 2017)

Key Insight: Plaintiff objected to discovery requests and added that it was withholding documents pursuant to this objection . Judge suggested a clearer response would have been preferred, but denied motion to compel.

Nature of Case: State Statute Constitutionality

Electronic Data Involved: ESI – Communications and Documents

Keywords: Objection; Withhold

View Case Opinion

Court Concludes Rule 37(e) Does Not Apply to “situations where, as here, a party intentionally deleted the recording”

Hsueh v. N.Y. State Dep’t of Fin. Servs., No. 15 Civ. 3401 (PAC), 2017 WL 1194706 (S.D.N.Y. Mar. 31, 2017)

In this case arising from claims of sexual harassment at work, the court found that an adverse inference was the appropriate remedy for Plaintiff’s deletion of a recorded conversation with an HR representative. In the course of its analysis, the court agreed with Defendants that “Rule 37(e) applies only to situations where ‘a party failed to take reasonable steps to preserve’ ESI; not to situations where, as here, a party intentionally deleted the recording” and thus relied upon inherent authority to impose sanctions.

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Sedona Principles Revised, Public Comment Welcomed

The Sedona Conference has published revisions to its foundational Sedona Principles, The Sedona Principles, Third Edition: Best Practices, Recommendations & Principles for Addressing Electronic Document Production. As stated in the preface, the Third Edition was “necessitated by an even greater explosion in the volume and diversity of forms of electronically stored information, the constant evolution of technology applied to eDiscovery, and by further amendments to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure” as well as by many years of experience in e-discovery.  Thus, “[t]he Third Edition has been thoroughly updated to take into account evolving views on electronic discovery over the past decade, based upon the collective experiences of the WG1 membership in facing the myriad of practical issues that are influencing the development of the law in this area, the numerous important court decisions across the country, and, of course, the 2015 amendments to the Federal Rules [of] Civil Procedure.”

Interested parties are invited to “join the dialogue and expand the consensus” around the revised principles and may provide comments to the drafting committee until June 30, 2017.

The Sedona Principles, Third Edition is available for download, here.

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