An expensive eDiscovery lesson taught by the D.C. Circuit

February 27th, 2009   Filed Under E-discovery  

An important lesson to practitioners courtesy of the D.C. Circuit. 

A recent decision from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit affirms an order requiring a nonparty to spend $6 million (9 percent of its annual operating budget) to comply with an e-discovery subpoena.  

The D.C. Circuit’s ruling in In re Fannie Mae Securities Litigation, 552 F.3d 814 (2009), highlights the importance of counsel understanding issues related to e-discovery, and the potential scope of that discovery, before entering into any type of agreement governing the future conduct of discovery in the case.

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In re Fannie Mae serves as a cautionary tale to all practitioners faced with discovery demands. Agreements should be carefully negotiated and counsel should not agree to unmitigated keyword searches without reserving the right to negotiate search terms and without waiving the right to pursue cost shifting.

If the producing party cannot reach a fair agreement with the requesting parties, nonparties may be better served by refusing to comply with subpoenas until the court considers the burdens and rules on cost-shifting rather than entering into broad agreements.

Attorney barred in the District of Columbia and California currently looking for opportunities in the private and government sectors.  Specializes in ediscovery/litigation efficiency project management but can do straight litigation or litigation management.  Feel free to contact me with opportunities at info@sentrycg.com