Catagory:Case Summaries

1
Keathley v. Grange Insur. (Eastern Division Michigan, Southern Division, 2017)
2
Walker v. Geico Indemnity Company, 6:15-cv-1002-Orl-41KRS (M.D. Fla, 2017)
3
Estate of Vallina v. County of Teller Sheriff?s Office (D. Colo., 2017)
4
FCA US, LLC v. Cummins, Inc., No. 16-12883 (E.D. Mich. Mar. 28, 2017)
5
Horn v. Tuscola County (Eastern District Michigan, Southern Division, 2017)
6
Twitch Interactive, Inc. v. Johnston (N.D. Cal., 2017)
7
TLS Mgmt. and Mktg. Services v. Rodriguez-Toledo, No. 15-2121 (BJM), 2017 WL 115743 (D. P.R. March 27, 2017)
8
Crow v. Cosmo Specialty Fiber (W.D. Wash., 2017)
9
Harmon v. United States (D. Idaho, 2017)
10
Sanctions Imposed for Loss of ESI Transferred in Sale of Business

Keathley v. Grange Insur. (Eastern Division Michigan, Southern Division, 2017)

Key Insight: Spoliation sanctions for missing insurance photos premature before clarifying deposition from party

Nature of Case: insurance coverage litigation

Electronic Data Involved: photos

Keywords: amended declaration inadequate, IT protocol

View Case Opinion

Walker v. Geico Indemnity Company, 6:15-cv-1002-Orl-41KRS (M.D. Fla, 2017)

Key Insight: Whether a determination of an inadvertent production of documents was erroneous or that the attorney didn’t follow reasonable steps to prevent disclosure.

Nature of Case: Personal Injury, insurance bad faith

Electronic Data Involved: Inadvertently produced documents, produced work product/ACP

Keywords: work product, inadvertent disclosure, claw back, reasonable steps to avoid disclosure

View Case Opinion

Estate of Vallina v. County of Teller Sheriff?s Office (D. Colo., 2017)

Key Insight: Sanctions under rule 37(e) must show actual prejudice, not merely theoretical.

Nature of Case: Wrongful death

Electronic Data Involved: Prison video

Keywords: Spoliation sanctions, actual prejudice, failure to preserve, adverse inference

View Case Opinion

Horn v. Tuscola County (Eastern District Michigan, Southern Division, 2017)

Key Insight: The loss of surveillance video was unrelated to defendant’s liability, so spoliation determination was unnecessary

Nature of Case: 8th Amendment

Electronic Data Involved: video

Keywords: failure to preserve ESI,

View Case Opinion

Twitch Interactive, Inc. v. Johnston (N.D. Cal., 2017)

Key Insight: Is expedited discovery warranted, and how extensive can Twitch seek discovery on the bot company. Are the non-respnding defendants’ financial informations avle to be discovered?

Nature of Case: Trademark, Contract, unfair competition, cybersquatting

Electronic Data Involved: financial/billing information

Keywords: Immediate discovery, video games, internet, third party discovery

View Case Opinion

TLS Mgmt. and Mktg. Services v. Rodriguez-Toledo, No. 15-2121 (BJM), 2017 WL 115743 (D. P.R. March 27, 2017)

Key Insight: ESI “willfully discarded or deleted”

Nature of Case: Alleged violations of the electronic Communications Privacy Act against defendants accused of stealing plaintiff’s clients and confidential information.

Electronic Data Involved: defendant’s iPhone, laptop and external hard drive

Keywords: adverse-inference instruction, forensic examination of a flash drive.

View Case Opinion

Crow v. Cosmo Specialty Fiber (W.D. Wash., 2017)

Key Insight: When ESI is recovered, it is not lost, and thus no spoliation. Further, there is no evidence that the delay was prejudicial.

Nature of Case: Workplace injury

Electronic Data Involved: an e-mail

Keywords: Spoliation sanctions, recovered ESI, prejudice

View Case Opinion

Harmon v. United States (D. Idaho, 2017)

Key Insight: Inherent authority was used by the court to find a spoliation violation in failing to keep records as legally required. FRCP Rule 37(e) not cited, but the outcome would likely have been the same.

Nature of Case: Negligence

Electronic Data Involved: Maintenance logs and records

Keywords: Spoliation, sanctions, adverse inference

View Case Opinion

Sanctions Imposed for Loss of ESI Transferred in Sale of Business

ILWU-PMA Welfare Plan Bd. of Trs. v. Connecticut Gen. Life. Ins. Co., No. C 15-02965 WHA, 2017 WL 345988 (N.D. Cal. Jan. 24, 2017)

In this case, ESI was lost when Defendant’s parent company sold another of its companies—on whose servers Defendant’s ESI was inexplicably stored—resulting in the transfer of that company’s servers and the ESI thereon to the third-party buyer. Concluding that Defendant failed to take reasonable steps to preserve the at-issue data, the court rejected Defendant’s argument that clauses in the sale agreement providing for “reasonable access to business information” including for “litigation purposes” and requiring the parties to retain information until the sixth anniversary of the agreement and not to destroy such information without notifying the other party were sufficient, particularly where despite such clauses, the information was not, in fact, available.  While the court concluded that additional information was required to proceed with a full Rule 37(e) analysis, it reopened discovery and ordered monetary sanctions to address the prejudice already established.

Read More

Copyright © 2022, K&L Gates LLP. All Rights Reserved.