Before the ink was dry on Judge Scheindlin’s groundbreaking “no written legal hold = gross negligence” opinion in The Pension Committee of the University of Montreal Pension Plan, et al. v. Banc of America Securities, et al., 2010 WL 184312 (S.D.N.Y. Jan. 15, 2010) (Amended Order), subtitled “Zubulake Revisited: Six Years Later,” Judge Rosenthal, in Rimkus v. Cammarata, 07-cv-00405 (S.D. Tex. Feb. 19, 2010) drew careful lines around the court’s inherent power to sanction, even in the face of bad faith, and introduced the concept of preservation proportionality. Both opinions are available at the end of this article.
Both judges left it to the jury to determine whether to consider lost/destroyed evidence as being detrimental to the alleged spoliator. It is their analysis that causes Craig Ball to sound like Paul Revere , John Jablonski to describe the opinions in prizefighting metaphors and Ralph Losey to allude repeatedly to pole vaulting to underscore the extent to which the bar has been raised.
Judge Scheindlin put forth the following framework to determine whether sanctions attach:
The question, then, is whether plaintiffs’ conduct requires this Court to impose a sanction for the spoliation of evidence. To answer this question, there are several concepts that must be carefully reviewed and analyzed. The first is plaintiffs’ level of culpability – that is, was their conduct of discovery acceptable or was it negligent, grossly negligent, or willful. The second is the interplay between the duty to preserve evidence and the spoliation of evidence. The third is which party should bear the burden of proving that evidence has been lost or destroyed and the consequences resulting from that loss. And the fourth is the appropriate remedy for the harm caused by the spoliation.
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Source: discoveryresources.org
Read the full story originally posted by EDD Blog Online.
