Medical Malpractice Law Firm MEDLawLegalTeam.com
Medical Negligence Lawyers: Janet, Jenner & Suggs LLC 1-888-4-MEDLAW: Medical Malpractice Lawsuits
Maryland Prescription Drug Injury Attorneys Physician and Nurse Attorneys
About Our Medical Malpractice Law FirmOur AttorneysPractice Areas: Medical Malpractice, Birth Injury, Cerebral Palsy, Prescription Drugs, Nursing Home AbuseLawsuit Verdicts & SettlementsFirm NewsLegal Law Firm ArticlesContact Our Lawyers
    CEREBRAL PALSY
Does your child have cerebral palsy? Could a doctor error have been the cause?.
LEARN MORE

    MRI/NSF ALERT
The FDA has issued a warning for the use of Gadolinium based contrast agents used in MRI scans.
LEARN MORE

 

E-Data For the Rest of Us: Getting What You Need to Win (continued)

By Robert K. Jenner
Originally delivered in Toronto, July 26, 2005. AAJ's National College of Advocacy.

E-mail: A Treasure of Possibilities

E-mail is a vital source of communication in virtually every business.   In many instances, E-mail communications provide candid, if not incriminating, discussions amongst employees.  Also, simply because E-mail is deleted from a person’s hard drive, doesn’t mean that it’s not available for discovery.  In many instances, E-mail communications provide candid, if not incriminating, discussions amongst employees.  Discovery of E-mail, therefore, should be high on the priority list.

For example, in Linnen v. A.H. Robins Co., the family of a woman who died after taking the diet pill fen‑phen sued the drugs' makers. The plaintiffs claimed the drugs, taken in combination, caused the woman to develop a deadly lung disorder.[1]  Computer forensic engineers hired by the plaintiffs were able to recover an e‑mail from one A.H. Robins employee to another that read: "Do I have to look forward to spending my waning years writing checks to fat people worried about a silly lung problem?"  Shortly after this revelation, the case settled.

Motions to Compel

Surprising as this may come to some plaintiffs’ lawyers, the defendants do not always give over e-data willingly.  There are a number of hurdles to a defendant’s capacity to produce e-data.  First, it may be difficult, time-consuming, and/or expensive for the defendant to segregate relevant from non-relevant or privileged from non-privileged information when it is stored in electronic format.  For example, parties are often required to search back-up tapes, but such tapes are generally designed only for disaster recovery, not for retention and data retrieval.  The cost and burden of reconstructing, restoring, and searching data on such tapes, therefore, can be enormous.[2]  Second, the operating systems for both the producing and the discovering party may be incompatible. A further potential problem relates to "hidden" evidence. There may be more relevant information stored digitally than normally would exist in an all-paper environment. Deleted information may be stored unintentionally in backup files. However, the deleted data may not be stored indefinitely: information of this sort may be overwritten by the normal operation of the computer - once hard-drive space has been exhausted, the computer begins to write over old non-saved information bit by bit.  Solutions to this problem - to suspend business activity in order to preserve this information, an extremely costly solution for the producing party, or to preserve every document of the company, which could lead to a system crash - are imperfect at best.[3]

There are several cases that address the cost burden in e-discovery.  It is not the intent of this paper to go through an exhaustive analysis, as the law is constantly changing, and the subject matter is voluminous and often cases specific.[4]  However, any discussion of this topic must start with a reviewing of Judge Shira Sheindlin’s compelling analysis in Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, 217 F.R.D. 309 (S.D.N.Y. 2003) .  In a sex discrimination case against a financial services company, the plaintiff requested e-mail beyond the approximately 100 pages produced by the defendants.  She presented substantial evidence that more responsive e-mail existed, mostly likely on backup tapes and optical storage media.  The defendants objected to the production, which they estimated would cost $175,000.  The judge held that the plaintiffs were requesting relevant information, but the issue of payment became central.  The court held that for data kept in an accessible format, the usual rules of discovery apply.   The responding party should pay the costs of producing responsive data.  A court should consider cost shifting only when electronic data are relatively inaccessible, such as on backup tapes.[5] 

In its analysis, the court rejected the previously used factors set forth in Rowe v. William Morris Agency, Inc., 51 Fed R. Serv. 3d (West) 1106; aff’d, 53 Fed. R. Serv. 3d (West) 296 (S.D.N.Y. 2002).[6]  In Zubulake, Judge Sheindlin developed a seven factor test, which, in order of importance or weight, were:

1.         The extent to which the request is tailored to discovery relevant data;

2.         The availability of those data from other sources;

3.         The total cost of production, relative to the amount in controversy;

4.         The total cost of production, relative to the resources available to each party;

5.         The relative ability and incentive for each party to control its own costs;

6.         The importance of the issues at stake in the litigation; and,

7.         The relative benefits to the parties in obtaining those data.

The court in Zubulake stressed that the factors do not constitute a “check-list.”  In determining undue burden warranting cost-shifting, the first two factors are most important because they establish the marginal utility of the information sought.  The next three factors are second in importance because they show how relatively expensive the production will be.  The sixth factor is next to the least important.  And the final factor is the least significant because, typically, the request for production benefits only the requesting party. Id. at 323.

Conclusion

As the Court recognized in Linnen, companies avail themselves of technology to run their businesses.   “To permit a corporation . . . to reap the business benefits of such technology and simultaneously use that technology as a shield in litigation would lead to incongruous and unfair results.” Id. at *17.  Certainly, courts must be mindful to ensure that no party is put to an exorbitant burden, financially or otherwise.  Yet, fair discovery and disclosure of e-data is here to stay.  Plaintiff lawyers must aggressively pursue such discovery in order to ensure that no stone is left unturned for an aggrieved plaintiff.


[1] Linnen v. A.H. Robins, Inc.,  v. A.H. Robins Co., Inc., 10 Mass L. Rep., 189, 1999 Mass. Super LEXIS 240 (June 16, 1999).

[2] See Kozlowski, PPA v. Sears, Roebuck & Co., 73 F.R.D. 73, 75-76 (D. Mass. 1976)(justifying default judgment for failure to produce documents, in part, because “no evidence ha[d] been produced tending to establish the truth” of defendant’s attorney’s claim that defendant’s indexing system made compliance with plaintiff’s discovery requests a “Herculean” task). 

[3] http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/digitaldiscovery/digdisc_library_4.html

[4]  See, for example, Annual Survey of Electronic Discovery Law, 10 Rich. J. L. & Tech. 49 (Spring 2004); Withers, Annotated Case Law and Further Reading on Electronic Discovery (August 1, 2004).  Also, for excellent resources on electronic discovery information, go to http://www.fjc.gov/ and http://www.krollontrack.com.

[5] See also Daewoo Electronics Co. v. United States, 650 F. Supp. 1003, 1006 (Ct. Int’l Trade 1986)(“It would be a dangerous development in the law if new techniques for easing the use of information became a hindrance to discovery...The normal and reasonable translation of electronic data into a form usable by the discovering party should be the ordinary and foreseeable burden of a respondent in the absence of a showing of extraordinary hardship.”)

[6] The seven Rowe factors are: (1) The specificity of the discovery requests; (2) The likelihood of discovering critical information; (3) The availability of such information from other sources; (4) The purposes for which the responding party maintains the requested data; (5) The relative benefit to the parties of obtaining the information; (6) The total cost associated with production; (7) The relative ability of each party to control costs and its incentive to do so; and The resources available to each party.

Back to Article (Page 1)


RELATED INFORMATION:
Attorney Robert K. Jenner's Biographical Profile
Additional Articles
About Our Law Firm
Contact Us

Back To Top

Legal Information
  Our team of legal / medical professionals includes:

» Board Certified OB/GYN Physician-Attorney

» Registered Nurse Paralegals, including a former labor and delivery nurse.

» Attorneys with combined experience of more than 150 years in medical malpractice and pharmaceutical negligence.

» Access to nationally known expert physicians.


 
 
The MEDLaw Legal Team of Medical Malpractice Lawyers ABOUT US  |  OUR LAWYERS  |  PRACTICE AREAS  |  VERDICTS & SETTLEMENTS  |  CONTACT US  |  SITE MAP
Copyright Janet, Jenner & Suggs, LLC, Attorneys At Law: MEDLAW Legal Team Baltimore, Maryland; Columbia, South Carolina; Washington, D.C.; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; Nationwide; Medical Malpractice Personal Injury Lawyers Pharmaceutical, Vioxx, Bextra, prescription drug injury, nursing home abuse malpractice, cerebral palsy, cancer misdiagnosis, bronchoscope injuries malpractice, serious injuries, Actiq, Baycol, Rezulin, Viga, Ancure, Accutane, Cypher Stent, Cordis, Neurontin, Salmeterol, Serevent, Advair, Cerebral Palsy, Prempro, hormone replacement therapy, injury lawyers. Janet, Jenner & Suggs, LLC, with any questions about this medical malpractice Web site.
Site by Consultwebs.com: Law Firm Website Designers / Personal Injury Lawyer Marketing