SHARE
Follow this article on Twitter Facebook LinkedIn Bookmark and Share
Home >> Government >> Policy

Total disclosure – making e-discovery work for you

Total disclosure – making e-discovery work for you

By:  Joaquim P. Menezes  On: 12 Jun 2006 For: IT World Canada Creator

With legal obligations around "e-discovery" getting increasingly rigorous – in North America at least – enterprises better be getting their act (and their documents) together before it's too late, cautions Ron Walker, a litigator with law firm Fasken Martineau. Read the article, watch the video.

"While Zubulake produced around 450 pages of internal company e-mails to support her contention that women – and she in particular – had been held back, the company got off on the wrong foot by producing only around 100 pages of e-mails [to back its position]." Zubulake argued that key evidence to support her case resided on various e-mails exchanged among UBS employees and that these e-mails only existed on backup tapes. She petitioned that the backup tapes be restored. UBS objected saying the restoration cost would be $175,000, not counting attorney costs to review those e-mails.

As an initial compromise, he said, the judge had Zubulake's lawyer specify five time frames for which UBS should retrieve data on back up tapes. "Lo and behold there was very relevant stuff on those tapes." Walker said the court eventually concluded there was "intentional withholding of information by UBS" and a failure to fulfill their obligation to search diligently and produce the required documentation.

Zubulake, he said, also petitioned that the jury be instructed to infer that anything that could not be found would have gone against UBS. "The judge agreed and instructed the jury accordingly. The jury awarded Zubulake $9 million to compensate her for the economic loss she was able to prove, and awarded $20 million as straight punitive damages against the company for its conduct."

E-discovery in Canada

While the law and legal precedent relating to e-discovery is much more developed in the U.S., Canadian companies (or firms operating in Canada) also have certain obligations.

In Ontario, some of these are specified in a document published by the Task Force on the Discovery Process. Walker related some of these in his presentation. He said in Ontario every comp








Sign up for our Newsletters
Tags: e-discovery












Print |  Views: 2109   |   Rating:offoffoffoffoff  (0 votes)
Rate this article on a scale of
1 to 5 stars,5 being the best.




Joaquim P. Menezes Joaquim P. Menezes is a contributor to the International Data Group (IDG) News Service, which publishes global technology stories from bureaus around the world to more than 300 publications in more than 60 countries.
blog comments powered by Disqus