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E-Discovery Update

August's Notable Cases and Events in E-Discovery

August 14, 2019

This Sidley Update addresses the following recent developments and court decisions involving e-discovery issues:

  1. a U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Texas ruling that the fiduciary exception to the attorney-client privilege could not be invoked by assignees of beneficiaries’ rights as participants or beneficiaries in an insurance plan because the assignment did not assign the beneficiaries’ rights to assert the attorney-client privilege or to sue for breach of fiduciary duty
  2. a U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon decision addressing several discovery issues, including that (1) sanctions or an adverse inference were not warranted in connection with defendants’ failure to produce notebooks allegedly used by a witness to take notes during meetings, (2) a union president’s deletion of his electronic calendars was spoliation, (3) additional Rule 30(b)(6) testimony was appropriate due to defendants’ failure to adequately prepare a designated witness and (4) additional Rule 30(b)(6) testimony was not required on the defendants' litigation hold process because plaintiff did not specifically mention that topic in the Rule 30(b)(6) notice
  3. a New Jersey Superior Court, Appellate Division, ruling affirming a trial court dismissal of claims against Ford for the alleged failure of its airbag to deploy, finding that plaintiff was responsible for spoliation of an airbag restraint control module (RCM) by failing to preserve it
  4. a Florida District Court of Appeal decision quashing an order allowing forensic examination of lawyers’ data due to overbroad search terms and remanding with directions to limit the search terms to protect against the disclosure of privileged or irrelevant information

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