Using Modern Techniques for an Age-Old Battle: The Scope of E-Discovery

[caption id="attachment_9572" align="alignnone" width="620"]

Credit: pling/Shutterstock.com[/caption] In May 1997, IBM’s Deep Blue defeated grandmaster Garry Kasparov in a highly publicized chess match. The match is cited as the exemplar of the oft-romanticized battle between mankind and machine. What happened next is not as well known, but perhaps more important for all mankind—including lawyers. Chess champions developed the idea that, instead of pitting humans against machines, they should explore the true heights of chess mastery through man-and-machine teams. The man-and-machine teams came to be known as “cyborgs.” Flashforward to 2005, when two men disrupted the world of chess cyborgs. Unheralded amateurs Steven Cramton and Zackary Stephen, alongside three of their computers, defeated a tournament pool of cyborg competitors that included teams of celebrated grandmasters and name-brand chess machines. These historic events in chess teach lessons that have significant application for litigators. Computers cannot match the ingenuity and inventiveness of the human mind. Meanwhile, humans cannot match the calculating power and speed of the computer. When litigators and computers work cooperatively, prior beliefs as to advocacy limitations no longer apply. And that is particularly true for one of the most tried battles waged among litigators: the scope of discovery. This article discusses two circumstances in which a litigation cyborg can hold an advantage over a human lawyer when arguing discovery’s scope. The first concerns the e-discovery plan, which is a counsel-to-counsel agreement encouraged by federal courts as part of a global discovery agreement. The second concerns disputes as to search terms, i.e., the parameters guiding a party’s quest to collect discoverable documents. But before either of the two circumstances can be explored, some background is necessary. General Background on Discovery E-Discovery is merely one piece of the larger discovery picture. For that reason, it is important to understand the general principles guiding all discovery before diving into the specific principles particular to e-discovery. Discovery is guided by certain rules. In federal litigations, those rules include the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, the venue’s local rules, the judge’s individual preferences, the Federal Rules of Evidence, well-favored secondary sources (e.g., The Sedona Principles), and case law interpreting all of the above. Those rules set the scope of discovery: “[N]onprivileged matter that is relevant … and proportional to the needs of the case.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 26(b)(1). The factors considered in assessing discovery’s scope for a case include: importance of issues at stake in the action; amount in controversy; parties’ relative access to relevant information; parties’ resources; importance of discovery in resolving issues; whether the burden or expense of discovery outweighs its likely benefit. Those rules also identify sanctions for failing to either comply with a discovery order or respond to a production request. See, e.g., Fed. R. Civ. P. 37(b)(2)(A). Specific Principles for E-Discovery While the general rules discussed above are indisputably applicable to e-discovery, there are specific principles governing e-discovery that must also be noted. First, electronic documents typically exist in quantities much larger than paper documents. The amount of email correspondence on a typical 2018 day dwarfs that of paper correspondence. The disparity only grows when multiplied for the years-long temporal windows that are applied to most types of litigations. Second, electronic documents are often dynamic in nature. That is, they are more susceptible to modification than a piece of paper that is created and then stored in a filing cabinet. The dynamics can be visible to the typical lawyer, such as variations of the same Word document that have been marked up through Track Changes. Other dynamics might be invisible to all but a forensic technician, such as modifications to a document’s metadata. Third, the administration of electronic documents can and should be automated within the e-discovery context. Support personnel need not be dispatched to distant warehouses to thumb through files on a folder-by-folder, page-by-page basis. The retrieval instructions in e-discovery are communicated to the platform containing the electronic documents, and the documents are culled, flagged or archived as necessary. Applying the General Rules and Specific Principles in Two Common Battles The opportunities to employ a litigation cyborg are growing with each advancement in technology, and may one day overlap all areas of the lawyer’s daily activities. For now, I will discuss two areas in which the benefits of a cyborg approach outweigh the apocryphal fears of e-discovery costs.