Last week, I started to talk about one of the most important and influential electronic discovery cases of the past decade: Zubulake v. UBS Warburg. I'll pick up my discussion of this 2003 case where I left off...
Laura Zubulake had sued UBS, her employer, claiming gender discrimination. She asked UBS for emails relevant to her case. UBS said it did not have these emails, and that the costs of restoring its back-up tapes to recover the Zubulake emails would be very high (in the hundreds of thousands of dollars). UBS asked the court to consider first whether UBS had to give the emails to Zubulake, and if so, who had to pay the costs of getting the emails from storage on the back-up tapes.
Judge Shira Scheindlin looked to the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which allowed Zubulake to ask UBS for emails related to her case. The Rules presumed that UBS would have to pay the cost of recovering the emails from back-up tapes, but also gave the court the discretion to shift some or all the costs to the party asking for the emails (in this case, Zubulake).
This is the point where the case becomes very interesting to the electronic discovery world. Judge Scheindlin pointed out that in many cases involving restoring emails from a back-up tape, the party that is supposed to produce the emails argued that it would be far too expensive to recover the emails. In other words, why ask someone to pay $100,000 to find emails relevant to a case, when the case involves only $10,000? This was the argument made by many companies when they were asked for emails.
Judge Scheindlin noted that many courts had automatically assumed that electronic evidence meant much higher costs, and would deny email requests. This often ended the case, as a plaintiff couldn't get access to necessary evidence. Judge Scheindlin recognized that electronic data could be searched much more cheaply than paper documents could be read and reviewed - an office computer using a search engine could find something in seconds.
The judge created a three-step analysis:
First, how is the data stored? Is it accessible, or inaccessible?
The judge said 'accessible data' means data that is readily usable, and doesn't have to be restored. Examples include data stored on hard drives, CDs, DVDs, etc.
'Inaccessible data' means data that is on backup tapes, or has been erased or damaged. This data is inaccessible because something has to be done to it before it can be accessed. That "something" will cost time and money.
When faced with inaccessible data, the judge said that courts should consider shifting the restoration and production costs to the party asking for the data.
Second, in order to analyze whether to shift costs, the court needs to know what is in the inaccessible data. The judge suggested restoring a small sample of the requested inaccessible data to find out what is there.
Third, the judge developed a seven-step cost-shifting analysis:
1. How specifically is the request tailored to find relevant information? In other words, has the request been written so that it will discover documents relevant to the case?
2. Is this information already available from other sources?
3. What's the total cost of production, compared to the amount of the case?
4. What's the total cost of production, compared to each party's resources? (Does one party have deep pockets?)
5. Can each party control costs, and does each one want to?
6. How important are the issues at stake in the case?
7. What are the benefits to the parties of restoring the data?
The judge stressed that these seven factors are not a check-list and they don't have equal weight with each other. The first factors on the list are the most important, and they are less important as the list goes down.
The judge summarized the central questions of the seven-factor cost-shifting test as: 'does the request impose an "undue burden or expense" on the responding party?' and "how important is the sought-after evidence in comparison to the cost of production?"
In other words, "is it an undue expense?" and "is the data important enough to be worth the cost?"
Judge Scheindlin decided that UBS must produce accessible data, as UBS could do this quickly and cheaply.
The judge also decided that UBS must restore responsive emails from five back-up tapes so that the court could look at the data and begin its cost-shifting analysis.
And so ended the first Zubulake decision (known as Zubulake I). The story continues in Zubulake III! (The Zubulake II decision didn't address anything related to electronic discovery, so I won't talk about it.)
Monday, April 26, 2010
Monday, April 19, 2010
E-Discovery Basics, Part Two - Introduction to Zubulake
This post is the next installment in my survey of e-discovery basic principles.
One of the most important, and consequential, series of court decisions in the area of electronic discovery is the Zubulake v. UBS Warburg case, normally referred to simply as "Zubulake".
Zubulake is important because it deals with the question of who is responsible for paying the costs of e-discovery; the plaintiff or the defendant?
E-discovery can be very expensive. It is especially expensive when one party asks the other to hand over data, and that data is not easily accessible. For example, the data may exist only on back-up tapes, which forces the producing party to find the correct back-up tape, restore it so that the data is accessible, find the data, check to make sure the data hasn't become corrupted, make a copy of the data somewhere else, and only then begin to look at the data to see what is actually there, and what it says. All of this takes time and money, and diverts the producing party's resources away from other tasks (such as running a business). The question is: who should pay for this?
Zubulake is a series of five decisions released from 2003 through 2004 by Judge Shira Scheindlin of the U.S. District Court (a federal court) for the Southern District of New York.
Laura Zubulake sued her employer, claiming gender discrimination. She asked UBS for any emails or other documents discussing her case. UBS turned over a relatively small number of emails, while Zubulake herself produced almost five times as much email information. UBS did not search its back-up tapes or its other archives for emails related to the Zubulake matter, saying it would be a burden, and it would be expensive. UBS asked the court to shift the costs to Zubulake (and make her pay for retrieving the emails from the UBS archive).
The court considered the question of whether UBS should be required to produce relevant emails. If so, who should pay for this? Should the cost be shifted from one party to the other?
The exciting continuation of this case will be the next intallment of this blog. Stay tuned!
(For the curious, the Zubulake case is cited as Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, 217 F.R.D. 309 (S.D.N.Y. 2003).)
One of the most important, and consequential, series of court decisions in the area of electronic discovery is the Zubulake v. UBS Warburg case, normally referred to simply as "Zubulake".
Zubulake is important because it deals with the question of who is responsible for paying the costs of e-discovery; the plaintiff or the defendant?
E-discovery can be very expensive. It is especially expensive when one party asks the other to hand over data, and that data is not easily accessible. For example, the data may exist only on back-up tapes, which forces the producing party to find the correct back-up tape, restore it so that the data is accessible, find the data, check to make sure the data hasn't become corrupted, make a copy of the data somewhere else, and only then begin to look at the data to see what is actually there, and what it says. All of this takes time and money, and diverts the producing party's resources away from other tasks (such as running a business). The question is: who should pay for this?
Zubulake is a series of five decisions released from 2003 through 2004 by Judge Shira Scheindlin of the U.S. District Court (a federal court) for the Southern District of New York.
Laura Zubulake sued her employer, claiming gender discrimination. She asked UBS for any emails or other documents discussing her case. UBS turned over a relatively small number of emails, while Zubulake herself produced almost five times as much email information. UBS did not search its back-up tapes or its other archives for emails related to the Zubulake matter, saying it would be a burden, and it would be expensive. UBS asked the court to shift the costs to Zubulake (and make her pay for retrieving the emails from the UBS archive).
The court considered the question of whether UBS should be required to produce relevant emails. If so, who should pay for this? Should the cost be shifted from one party to the other?
The exciting continuation of this case will be the next intallment of this blog. Stay tuned!
(For the curious, the Zubulake case is cited as Zubulake v. UBS Warburg, 217 F.R.D. 309 (S.D.N.Y. 2003).)
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Monday, April 12, 2010
E-Discovery Basics, Part One
When talking about electronic discovery, it is helpful to have some context. This post is an attempt to give some quick background information that is useful but yet not too boring.
The United States is a common law country, which means that the law is usually created and updated through decisions made by the courts. When a judge decides a case, she normally looks to precedent to make her decision - how have other courts in her jurisdiction decided this kind of matter? The judge's decision usually then becomes precedent for future cases.
The common law system is contrasted with the civil law system, where laws are normally written by a legislature into a legal code - a list of statutes which are the body of the law.
There is another meaning to "civil law" in the U.S. - here, it is contrasted with criminal law. Civil law usually involves litigation between private parties.
Civil procedure is the body of law which describes how the court handles a civil case - these are rules describing how a case is started, how to communicate with the other side, how to interact with the court and the judge, how to request documents from the other side, etc.
Civil discovery normally takes place before a trial - each side follows the rules of civil procedure to request documents and other material from another party in the lawsuit. The party receiving the request is responsible for examining and searching its own data for anything responsive to the request.
At the federal level in the U.S., the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure describe how a civil case is handled by the court system. These rules also guide the discovery process.
At the state level in the U.S., most states follow the Federal Rules, usually adding some modifications. There are exceptions, though: California and New York (among other states) have their own civil procedure rules.
Electronic discovery is now a very, very large part of civil discovery. Because of the importance of e-discovery, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were updated in December 2006 to address electronic discovery. The impacts of these changes are still spreading through the legal system, and e-discovery has become an exciting area of the law.
The United States is a common law country, which means that the law is usually created and updated through decisions made by the courts. When a judge decides a case, she normally looks to precedent to make her decision - how have other courts in her jurisdiction decided this kind of matter? The judge's decision usually then becomes precedent for future cases.
The common law system is contrasted with the civil law system, where laws are normally written by a legislature into a legal code - a list of statutes which are the body of the law.
There is another meaning to "civil law" in the U.S. - here, it is contrasted with criminal law. Civil law usually involves litigation between private parties.
Civil procedure is the body of law which describes how the court handles a civil case - these are rules describing how a case is started, how to communicate with the other side, how to interact with the court and the judge, how to request documents from the other side, etc.
Civil discovery normally takes place before a trial - each side follows the rules of civil procedure to request documents and other material from another party in the lawsuit. The party receiving the request is responsible for examining and searching its own data for anything responsive to the request.
At the federal level in the U.S., the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure describe how a civil case is handled by the court system. These rules also guide the discovery process.
At the state level in the U.S., most states follow the Federal Rules, usually adding some modifications. There are exceptions, though: California and New York (among other states) have their own civil procedure rules.
Electronic discovery is now a very, very large part of civil discovery. Because of the importance of e-discovery, the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were updated in December 2006 to address electronic discovery. The impacts of these changes are still spreading through the legal system, and e-discovery has become an exciting area of the law.
Labels:
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Monday, April 5, 2010
Welcome to Discovering Electronic Discovery!
(also known as: "Discovering E-Discovery")
What's the purpose of this blog?
It is to share my insights about the world of electronic discovery (also known as e-discovery).
This answer leads to the next question: What is electronic discovery?
Well, e-discovery is legal discovery - part of the legal process where one side in a dispute can request documents from the other side. The 'electronic' part of e-discovery usually refers to documents that were created not on paper, but electronically - emails, spreadsheets, etc. This isn't some obscure legal issue - any person, company or institution that could be involved in a legal dispute should have some understanding of e-discovery.
And, finally, why would my insights matter?
I am an attorney with an undergraduate degree in computer science, so I have studied both the law and the technology of e-discovery. I spent many years in the legal department of a large investment bank, building and then managing a substantial in-house electronic discovery group. I keep myself up-to-date on how the world of e-discovery is growing and changing, and I'd like to share my thoughts and opinions.
My intention in writing this blog is to try to make electronic discovery easier to understand. This is not legal advice, of course, but simply my attempt to make e-discovery more accessable to more people.
Again, welcome to "Discovering Electronic Discovery", and I hope you enjoy your stay.
What's the purpose of this blog?
It is to share my insights about the world of electronic discovery (also known as e-discovery).
This answer leads to the next question: What is electronic discovery?
Well, e-discovery is legal discovery - part of the legal process where one side in a dispute can request documents from the other side. The 'electronic' part of e-discovery usually refers to documents that were created not on paper, but electronically - emails, spreadsheets, etc. This isn't some obscure legal issue - any person, company or institution that could be involved in a legal dispute should have some understanding of e-discovery.
And, finally, why would my insights matter?
I am an attorney with an undergraduate degree in computer science, so I have studied both the law and the technology of e-discovery. I spent many years in the legal department of a large investment bank, building and then managing a substantial in-house electronic discovery group. I keep myself up-to-date on how the world of e-discovery is growing and changing, and I'd like to share my thoughts and opinions.
My intention in writing this blog is to try to make electronic discovery easier to understand. This is not legal advice, of course, but simply my attempt to make e-discovery more accessable to more people.
Again, welcome to "Discovering Electronic Discovery", and I hope you enjoy your stay.
Labels:
background,
e-discovery,
electronic discovery,
intentions,
introduction,
reasons,
welcome
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