By Marianna Wharry | October 8, 2024
"All things being considered, fifty custodians certainly provide a reasonable opportunity—at the very least—for the plaintiffs to reasonably investigate their case. Adding three or four in-house counsel to that list is out of proportion to the needs of the case. The aphorism, 'the book is not worth the candle' is not out of place here," wrote U.S. District Magistrate Judge Jeffrey Cole for the Northern District of Illinois.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Kevin V. Small, Joseph J. Saltarelli and Charlotte Leszinske | September 25, 2024
This is Part IV in a series of articles explaining the fundamentals of Commercial Division practice. The article addresses key differences in discovery procedure in the Commercial Division.
By Colleen Murphy | September 17, 2024
"During discovery in the present matter, defendants provided to plaintiffs the public summary, but withheld the internal report, without expressly claiming the attorney-client privilege and work-product doctrine protected its disclosure," the opinion said.
The Legal Intelligencer | Commentary
By Jeff Wilson | September 16, 2024
As law offices of all sizes look for ways to streamline and automate their document processes, many are turning to managed print services (MPS) as a possible cost-effective solution.
By ALM Staff | September 12, 2024
This ruling was selected and summarized by the New York Law Journal's decisions editors.
By Rick Cofer and Megan Rue | September 10, 2024
"'Heath' dramatically expands prosecutorial duties and discovery obligations under Article 39.14(a)," write Rick Cofer and Megan Rue of Cofer & Connelly.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Joel R. Brandes | September 4, 2024
"In situations of negligent destruction of evidence, the court must consider the prejudice resulting from spoliation in determining what type of sanctions are warranted," writes Joel R. Brandes.
New Jersey Law Journal | Commentary
By Peter Espey | August 28, 2024
"The opinion in 'Keyworth' brings to the center the importance of compliance with the PSA and regulations as a prerequisite for the privilege to apply," writes Peter Espey.
By Cheryl Miller | August 22, 2024
In a unanimous ruling, the court held that judges have a broad, although not limitless, authority under statute to impose reasonable sanctions for discovery misconduct.
New York Law Journal | Analysis
By Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood | August 22, 2024
"Not surprisingly, privilege disputes constitute a frequent topic of litigation in connection with Section 1782 proceedings," write Edward M. Spiro and Christopher B. Harwood.
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