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For The Defense, February 2012 - DRI Today

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gram (2011), http://www.discoverypilot.com/.<br />

<strong>The</strong> order, through defined principles, lists<br />

the e- discovery topics that parties should<br />

discuss, including the scope of preservation,<br />

how parties should identify ESI, and<br />

production format. <strong>The</strong> order also provides<br />

proportionality guidance, stating that proportionality<br />

“should be applied in each case<br />

when formulating a discovery plan” and<br />

“[t]o further the application of the proportionality<br />

standard in discovery, requests<br />

for production of ESI and related responses<br />

should be reasonably targeted, clear, and<br />

as specific as practicable.” Id. at 2. Additionally<br />

the order describes how parties<br />

should use knowledgeable e- discovery liaisons<br />

to resolve e- discovery disputes and<br />

provides a list of examples of ESI that parties<br />

cannot discover in most cases, such as<br />

deleted, ephemeral, and temporary data,<br />

and it strongly suggests that litigating parties<br />

should tailor e- discovery to the issues<br />

at stake pinning down the parameters during<br />

discussions among knowledgeable persons,<br />

crafting well- defined preservation<br />

and production requests, and using technology<br />

intelligently to identify potentially<br />

relevant information.<br />

Approaching the issue from a disclosure<br />

angle, the U.S. District Court for the<br />

Southern District of Florida has adopted<br />

procedures mandating the disclosure of<br />

record- keeping information relevant to<br />

e- discovery. A Discovery Practices Handbook<br />

developed by that court appended<br />

to the local rules states that a “producing<br />

party has an obligation to explain the<br />

general scheme of record- keeping to the<br />

inspecting party” to acquaint the inspecting<br />

party with how and where documents<br />

and electronically stored information is<br />

maintained. S.D. Fla. L. Rules, Appx. A,<br />

Discovery Practice Handbook at 103. Under<br />

this court’s procedures litigating parties<br />

identify these items in specific paragraphs<br />

of production requests when practicable,<br />

unless a producing party “exercises its<br />

option under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure<br />

34(b) to produce documents as they<br />

are kept in the usual course of business.”<br />

Id. When a party produces documents in<br />

bulk, the party should identify categories,<br />

although the producing party does not<br />

have an obligation to reorganize the materials.<br />

See S.D. Fla. L. Rules, Appx. A at 104<br />

(Dec. 1, 2011).<br />

<strong>The</strong> U.S. District Court for the District of<br />

Maryland has detailed guidelines on managing<br />

e- discovery titled Protocol for Discovery<br />

of Electronically Stored Information. At<br />

29 pages long, the protocol describes in<br />

detail actions that parties should take to<br />

comply with their e- discovery obligations.<br />

See D. Md., Suggested Protocol for Discovery<br />

of Electronically Stored Information,<br />

available at http://www.mdd.uscourts.gov/<br />

news/news/ESIProtocol.pdf (last visited Dec.<br />

22, 2011). However, while the protocol provides<br />

a comprehensive overview of the<br />

complexities of e- discovery and alerts the<br />

e- discovery practitioner of the high costs<br />

of such discovery when litigation might<br />

involve extraordinary information collections,<br />

it does not suggest reasonable<br />

e- discovery restrictions and instead only<br />

suggests shifting costs.<br />

Due to the range among court<br />

e- discovery procedures, litigating parties<br />

need familiarity with more than state rules,<br />

federal rules, and case law on e- discovery:<br />

they need to know local rules, procedures,<br />

and orders as well. Local practice requirements<br />

can be relatively straightforward.<br />

<strong>For</strong> instance, a court may require early<br />

e- discovery conferring. But local requirements<br />

can also be quite complex, more akin<br />

to the U.S. District Court for the District of<br />

Maryland protocol discussed above. Practitioners<br />

should also understand that courts<br />

will move to enforce local practice when<br />

parties do not follow local practice rules.<br />

See DCG Sys., Inc. v. Checkpoint Tech., LLC,<br />

No. C-11-03792 PSG, 2011 WL 5244356<br />

(N.D. Cal. Nov. 2, 2011) ([Model] Order<br />

Regarding E- Discovery in Patent Cases<br />

implemented, subject to further requests<br />

to modify it); Osborne v. C.H. Robinson<br />

Co., No. 08-C-50165, 2011 WL 5076267, at<br />

*8 (N.D. Ill. Oct. 25, 2011) (discovery violations<br />

found where the defendant’s “actions<br />

were not in line with the letter or spirit of<br />

the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the<br />

Proposed Standing Order from the Seventh<br />

Circuit, or the Sedona Principles describing<br />

best practices for electronic discovery”);<br />

Anderson v. Reliance Standard Life Ins.<br />

Co., No. WDQ-11-1188, 2011 WL 4828891,<br />

at *3 (D. Md. Oct. 11, 2011) (“Counsel are<br />

required to have read the Federal Rules of<br />

Civil Procedure, Local Rules of this Court,<br />

Discovery Guidelines of this Court (Appendix<br />

A to the Local Rules), and, with respect<br />

to discovery of Electronically Stored Information<br />

(ESI), the Suggested Protocol for<br />

Discovery of ESI”); AF Tech, Inc. v. Trumpf,<br />

Inc., No. 11-C-367, 2011 WL 4824449 (E.D.<br />

Wis. Oct. 6, 2011) (requiring the parties to<br />

comply with the Principles Relating to the<br />

Discovery of Electronically Stored Information.);<br />

Seven Seas Cruises S. De R.L. v. V.<br />

Ships Leisure SAM, No. 09-23411-CIV, 2011<br />

WL 772855 (S.D. Fla. Feb. 19, 2011) (granting<br />

a motion to compel ESI and admonishing<br />

that the parties should have consulted<br />

section III of the Discovery Practice Handbook<br />

attached to the S.D. Fla. L. Rules).<br />

Meaningful Limitations<br />

on E-Discovery<br />

While many courts require litigating parties<br />

to address e- discovery as early as practicable<br />

in a case and to compile a laundry<br />

list of things that they will discuss, other<br />

courts have gone further. <strong>For</strong> instance,<br />

Judge Nancy F. Atlas of the U.S. District<br />

Court for the Northern District of Texas<br />

requires that the parties have a person with<br />

detailed knowledge of the particular computers<br />

and electronic databases available at<br />

all conferences addressing e- discovery disputes.<br />

As discussed above, Judge Virginia<br />

Kendell of the U.S. District Court for the<br />

Northern District of Illinois has a similar<br />

procedure. Likewise, as mentioned above,<br />

Magistrate Judge Michael Mahoney of the<br />

U.S. District Court for the Northern District<br />

of Illinois has pronounced firmly that<br />

certain inaccessible information is per se<br />

burdensome. Mahoney, Parties Proposed<br />

Case Management Order, supra. And many<br />

of the practices discussed above at least<br />

attempt to lend credence to the notion of<br />

cost shifting or dispel the taboo that using<br />

proportionality to limit discovery is unfair.<br />

A singular and extensive model order<br />

governing e- discovery in patent cases was<br />

recently proposed by Chief Judge Randall<br />

Rader of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the<br />

Federal Circuit. Drafted by a subcommittee<br />

of the Advisory Counsel for that circuit<br />

court and designed specifically to curb<br />

the high costs associated with e- discovery<br />

in patent litigation, the model order provides<br />

concrete and objective guidance on<br />

numerous aspects of e- discovery. See Fed.<br />

Cir., An E- Discovery Model Order, available<br />

at http://www.cafc.uscourts.gov/images/<br />

stories/announcements/Ediscovery_Model_Order.<br />

<strong>For</strong> <strong>The</strong> <strong>Defense</strong> ■ <strong>February</strong> <strong>2012</strong> ■ 33

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