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Home > View From the Bench: Judges on E-Discovery at LegalTech Day Two

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View From the Bench: Judges on E-Discovery at LegalTech Day Two

By Evan Koblentz All Articles 

Law Technology News

January 31, 2013

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Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck (left), Southern District of New York, and Senior Judge Michael Baylson (right), Eastern District of Pennsylvania.

Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck (left), Southern District of New York, and Senior Judge Michael Baylson (right), Eastern District of Pennsylvania.
Image: Rick Kopstein, New York Law Journal

Judicial perspectives of e-discovery attorneys' worst and best practices were the subject of a keynote session at LegalTech New York on Wednesday.

Magistrate Judge Andrew Peck, of the Southern District of New York, and Senior Judge Michael Baylson, of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, led the session and presented their points of view to a packed house — starting with their peeves. The panel — The Morning Show! Episode 1: The Judicial Perspective – Managing Big Data, Proportionality, Data Security, and Privacy — also included LexisNexis' Matthew Gillis, vice president and managing director of litigation and professional services.

On the subject of cost-shifting, "When a lawyer says, 'Oh, this is going to cost us a fortune,' I think we take that with a certain grain of salt," Peck said. He told the story of an attorney claiming a possible $1 million discovery bill, then having a consultant say it's really $500,000, followed by an IT worker observing it would only require $25,000 — less than the client spent to fight discovery in the first place.

Panel moderator Patrick Oot, of the nonprofit E-Discovery Institute and an attorney at the Securities and Exchange Commission, added that lawyers should be cautious when using technology lingo that they may not understand. Peck agreed — cases should have a "Bring Your Geek to Court" day to get to the truth and please judges, he said. "There are probably geeks out there that are looking daggers at me, but we're blinded by the light" of industry buzzwords, he observed.

Some clients may be wary of their attorneys cooperating with the opposition. But, "One of the best ways to avoid excess costs of discovery is a reasonable dialogue with the other side," Peck said. Baylson concurred — "'I don't want to cooperate' may be a legitimate strategy, but it's going to cost them money in the long run," he added.

Peck, as he has in the past, also commented on legal technology industry trends. "If 2012 was the year of predictive coding or technology-assisted review, 2013 or '14 seems to be information governance," he noted. "I know there's no money in the corporate budget for this, but it really would be helpful if systems were in place to get rid of the junk. Get rid of the 'what time are we going to lunch' emails that nobody bothers to delete," because that would help reduce the effort and cost of discovery whenever it's needed, he said.

Peck advised that lawyers who are arguing against excessive discovery would be wise to explain how they or their clients have several other cases. Meanwhile, lawyers who are concerned about unintentional production of privileged documents should also seek rule 502(d) orders, he said.

"I'll give you a fairly straight takeaway on 502(d). In my opinion it is malpractice to not seek a 502(d) order from the court before you seek documents," Peck stated. "That doesn't mean you shouldn't carefully review your material for privileged documents before production, but why not have that insurance policy?"

Peck, in concluding, added that he and other federal judges should seek lessons from the Global Aerospace case, in which predictive coding — software using data analytics to help attorneys find relevant documents — was ordered despite plaintiff's objections. "That was a very, very successful use" of predictive coding, he noted.

Oot, in a brief audience poll, found that only 40 percent of respondents said they understood rule 502(d). Oot will blog about the rule on EDD Update next week, he said. (EDD Update is a Law Technology News blog.)

VENDOR NEWS

For all the attention on predictive coding, and the recent wave of alternative approaches, there are mixed impressions of the actual market for such software. "The majority of the time, people are asking about it, instead of asking for it," explained Rob Robinson, vice president of marketing at Orange Legal Technologies.

Similarly, "Folks are trying to use it, but I do say they're 'trying,'" said at Symantec Corp.'s Brian Dye, vice president of product management for the information management group, which includes the Clearwell Systems e-discovery unit.

Both executives shared 2013 road maps for their e-discovery products. Orange is developing its own deduplication technology and its own predictive coding, which is scheduled for shipping in the third quarter of this year. Currently the Salt Lake City, Utah-based company licenses such technology from OrcaTec, president Bret Laughlin said.

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Companies, agencies mentioned

    
  • LexisNexis
  • Data Security
  • IT
  • Southern District of New York
  • Clearwell Systems
  • The SEC
  • Global Aerospace
  • E-Discovery Institute
  • Orange Legal Technologies
  • United States Securities & Exchange Commission
  • US District Court
  • Symantec Corporation

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  • E-discovery
  • Technology
  • Executive Agencies

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