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DOCUMENT RETENTION ISSUES FOR IN-HOUSE COUNSEL

DOCUMENT RETENTION ISSUES FOR IN-HOUSE COUNSEL. Rebecca A. Brommel BrownWinick 666 Grand Avenue, Suite 2000 Des Moines, IA 50309-2510 Telephone: 515-242-2452 Facsimile: 515-323-8552 E-mail: brommel@brownwinick.com. Document Retention - Generally.

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DOCUMENT RETENTION ISSUES FOR IN-HOUSE COUNSEL

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  1. DOCUMENT RETENTION ISSUES FOR IN-HOUSE COUNSEL Rebecca A. Brommel BrownWinick 666 Grand Avenue, Suite 2000 Des Moines, IA 50309-2510 Telephone: 515-242-2452 Facsimile: 515-323-8552 E-mail: brommel@brownwinick.com

  2. Document Retention - Generally • Purpose: Set forth how your company will preserve and destroy information • Purpose: Ultimately save time in searching for up to date and necessary information • Purpose: Helps business deal with documents when and if litigation or investigations occur

  3. In-House Counsel Responsibilities • Development of the Policy • Oversee records inventory and appraisal • Help identify legally required retention periods • Update policy as law or technologies change • Enforcement of the Policy • Training of employees • Review/audit procedures regularly

  4. In-House Counsel Responsibilities (con’t) • The “Litigation Hold” • Clear procedures set forth in policy • Be in charge (or determine who is in charge) of determining when the hold is in effect • Communication to employees • Determination of scope of hold • Determine when hold expires

  5. Litigation Holds Generally • May apply even if you are not a party to the litigation, but are simply a “holder” of documents/information • “Reasonably foreseeable” litigation • Service of petition/complaint • Demand letter • Subpoena or informal request for records • Legitimate verbal threat of litigation • Notice of investigation by law enforcement or government agency • Formal employee complaints to management • Incident involving personal/property injury

  6. Duty to Preserve • The litigation hold relates to company’s duty (and your duty as attorney) to preserve evidence • Minimum duty – develop and oversee and preservation process, even if you do not yet have a formal document retention policy • Also duty to alert others with relevant documents through issuance of hold letters

  7. What do you do? • Assess scope of necessary hold • Discuss with others internally who “hold” those documents • Determine whether there are those “outside” who also hold relevant documents • Discuss and determine the costs of review, retrieval, costs and strategy of the hold and any necessary response

  8. Duty to Preserve – Test for Sanctions • Is the document retention policy reasonable considering the facts and circumstances surrounding the records at issue? • Have lawsuits or complaints been filed concerning the types of records at issue? If so, what is the frequency and magnitude of those lawsuits or complaints? • Was the document retention policy instituted in bad faith?

  9. Duty to Preserve – Test for Sanctions (con’t) • Standards may be different pre v. post litigation commencement • Typically requires: • Evidence of intent to destroy • Intent to destroy is for purposes of obstruction or suppressing the truth • Evidence of bad faith/mal-intent • Opposing party is prejudiced by the destruction

  10. Duty to Preserve - Sanctions • Payment of reasonable expenses, including attorney fees • Adverse Jury Instruction • Orders from Court: • Establishing certain facts • Refusing to allow your company to support or oppose certain claims/defenses • Refusing to allow your company to introduce certain evidence • Striking parts of pleadings/defenses • Stay of proceedings until documents provided • Dismissal of action (if plaintiff) • Judgment by default (if defendant) • Contempt of court

  11. Likelihood of Sanctions • Sanctions decreased in 2010 – awarded 55% of time where they were sought • E-discovery sanctions reached all time high prior to 2010 • 410 cases where sanctions sought – awarded 230 times • Most common misconduct – failure to preserve electronic evidence, failure to produce, delayed production • Rarely sanctioned attorney without also sanctioning client • Most severe sanctions: dismissal, adverse jury instruction, significant monetary awards • Most common sanction: payment of attorneys fees and costs Source: Weiss, Debra Cassens, E-Discovery Sanctions Reach All-Time High for Litigants and Lawyers, (Jan. 13, 2011) posted on www.abajournal.com

  12. Case Law Examples • Nacco Materials Handling Group, Inc. v. The Lilly Co., 2011 WL 5986649 (W.D. Tenn. Nov. 16, 2011) • Lawsuit arose from Lilly’s alleged unauthorized use of Nacco’s secure dealer website • Lawsuit served 2/25/2011 • Lilly’s attorney sent litigation hold letter to Lilly’s President 3/09/2011 providing specific instructions as to issuance of a litigation hold and the wide sweep of the hold • Lilly’s President only sent letter onto 7 others in company • 5/2011 – Lilly searched electronic servers for term “Yale” (Nacco’s d/b/a)

  13. Case Law Examples (con’t) • Nacco Materials Handling Group, Inc. v. The Lilly Co. (con’t) • Lilly failed to: • Issue company-wide litigation hold (only sent to 7 of 160 employees, not even all the “key players”) • Provide additional instruction to employees re: the hold • Take steps to prevent emails from being deleted, to prevent data from being overwritten or to identify and preserve backup tapes • Take steps to collect evidence from key players or search key players’ computers to determine if information existed • Oversee or supervise the collection process (left it up to employees) • Did not follow up with employees to determine what efforts had been made • Document their search and collection efforts • Identify a person “in charge” of the preservation, search and collection • To retain a technical expert (because they were not equipped to handle the computer searches)

  14. Case Law Examples (con’t) • Nacco Materials Handling Group, Inc. v. The Lilly Co. (con’t) • Court first determined degree of culpability – was the conduct negligent, grossly negligent, or willful, wanton and reckless • Exhibits the “continuum” of fault that many courts are now using to determine sanctions in failure to preserve cases • Court found that Lilly was, at a minimum, neligent • Sanctions: • Reimbursement of costs to Nacco for its forensic examination of Lilly’s computers and forensic examination of hard drives • Payment for mirror imaging of computers of persons in Lilly’s parts department • Lilly also required to file an affidavit detailing each step it took to preserve, search for and collect potentially relevant information from date of service of complaint to present, detailing the date and person taking such steps • Also awarded Nacco its reasonable costs, including attorney fees, associated with bringing the Motion

  15. Case Law Examples (con’t) • Innis Arden Golf Club v. Pitney Bowes, Inc., 257 F.R.D. 334 (D. Conn. 2009) • Innis Arden sued Pitney Bowes and other “potentially responsible parties” (PRPs) under CERCLA and state law to recover costs incurred in removing PCB from its property • Innis Arden failed to preserve soil samples • Court held that duty to preserve began when Innis Arden’s counsel was actively involved in investigation and analysis of samples in preparation for legal action against the PRPs and when they hired the company to do the sampling • Even though Court did not find “purposeful destruction”, the loss was significant and could not be adequately remedied by an adverse jury instruction • Sanction imposed: preclude Innis Arden from introducing any evidence based upon the soil samples it took and then subsequently destroyed (note impact on expert witness testimony) • Lessons: (1) Plaintiffs have equal duty to preserve; (2) even if not purposeful destruction, importance of evidence can impact sanctions

  16. Ethical Implications • No specific rule related to document production/preservation (yet) • Court sanctions may = resulting ethical implications • Iowa Rule of Prof’l Conduct 32:1.3 – “A lawyer shall act with reasonable diligence and promptness in representing a client.” • Iowa Rule of Prof’l Conduct 32:1.17 – Organization as client

  17. Lessons Learned • Have a good written document retention plan • Be diligent upon receipt of anything that triggers a litigation hold • Control and oversee the hold process • Document the who, what, when and where of the hold process • Regularly review and audit procedures and employee compliance

  18. Website: www.brownwinick.com Toll Free Phone Number: 1-888-282-3515 OFFICE LOCATIONS: 666 Grand Avenue, Suite 2000 Des Moines, Iowa 50309-2510 Telephone: (515) 242-2400 Facsimile: (515) 283-0231 616 Franklin Place Pella, Iowa 50219 Telephone: (641) 628-4513 Facsimile: (641) 628-8494 DISCLAIMER: No oral or written statement made by BrownWinick attorneys should be interpreted by the recipient as suggesting a need to obtain legal counsel from BrownWinick or any other firm, nor as suggesting a need to take legal action. Do not attempt to solve individual problems upon the basis of general information provided by any BrownWinick attorney, as slight changes in fact situations may cause a material change in legal result.

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