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New York Law Journal

The Spoliation Cause of Action: A Vampire in the Court System

Joseph S. Bavaro and Daniel Justus Solinsky write that despite the Court of Appeals seemingly driving a stake through the heart of the spoliation cause of action in 'Ortega v. City of New York,' like any good movie monster, somehow it appears to have mutated and survived, as a common law claim of tortious interference by an employer with an employee's cause of action against a third party.
14 minute read

Legaltech News

ONE Discovery Looks to Expand E-discovery's UX Focus with New Solution

The new company is betting on the demand for a "for e-discovery professionals, by e-discovery professionals" tool in the enterprise space.
6 minute read

Legaltech News

ONE Discovery Looks to Expand E-discovery's UX Focus with New Solution

The new company is betting on the demand for a "for e-discovery professionals, by e-discovery professionals" tool in the enterprise space.
6 minute read

The Recorder

Goodyear Tire and Rubber Co. v. Haeger

By | April 18, 2017
12 minute read

New York Law Journal

Judge Rejects Bid for More Time in Slip-and-Fall Case

Dutchess County Supreme Court Justice Victor Grossman, saying defense attorneys neglected discovery in a slip-and-fall case for 18 months, has ordered the parties to proceed to trial in May. "Apparently, they believed they could try the case with limited discovery, and now they will be given the chance to do so," he wrote.
4 minute read

Legaltech News

Fire Hazards, and the Power of Checklists for Effective E-discovery New Matter Planning

An effective new matter planning checklist needs to address all six phases of your e-discovery project. Here's a 24 question example.
11 minute read

New Jersey Law Journal

Rule 30(e) and Changing Deposition Testimony in the Third Circuit

The Third Circuit Court of Appeals has provided guidance (and some degree of reassurance) to practitioners that Rule 30(e) has its limitations.
13 minute read

New York Law Journal

Internet of Things to Make Discovery Significantly More Expensive

Richard L. Reiter and Adam L. Sheps write: As the Internet of Things continues to mature, the sheer magnitude and complexity of information will become more difficult to govern. As a result, it is important that businesses properly manage their data to avoid incurring unnecessary litigation costs that can consume valuable employee time, funds and other corporate resources.
17 minute read

The Legal Intelligencer

Snyder v. DeCesare, PICS Case No. 17-0468 (C.P. Lackawanna Jan. 20, 2017) Minora, J. (8 pages).

By | April 14, 2017
Plaintiffs in a medical malpractice case were entitled to discovery of the personnel file for a nurse who allegedly engaged in negligent conduct, even though the hospital terminated the nurse several months after the incident at issue.
4 minute read

New York Law Journal

Court of Appeals' 'Facebook' Decision Leaves Many Questions Open

Maurice J. Recchia writes: Despite the potential for addressing broad substantive issues of privacy and freedom from unreasonable search and seizure, and issues of federalism and the applicability of a federal statute which establishes procedures a government body can use to compel information, the Court of Appeals in its recent Facebook decision hewed to the narrow procedural framework of the case and declined to address the broader issues.
25 minute read

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