First Department Decision Adopts Requirement for Preservation of Electronic Evidence When a Party "Reasonably Anticipates Litigation"
Yesterday, the First Department issued a decision in VOOM HD Holdings v. EchoStar Satellite that is must reading for any potential litigant. The court adopted the federal “Zubulake” standard that “once a party reasonably anticipates litigation, it must suspend its routine document retention/destruction policy and put in place a litigation hold to ensure preservation of relevant documents.” Litigation is reasonably anticipated when an organization is "on notice of a credible probability that will become involved in litigation, seriously contemplates initiating litigation, or when it takes specific actions to commence litigation."
Because of defendant’s purported failure to preserve electronic data when litigation was anticipated, and its failure to halt email purges after litigation was started, and its prior issues with destruction of electronic evidence, the decision also discusses the standards for spoliation of evidence and sanctions. The court was not impressed with defendant's argument that it was seeking an amicable business solution so there was no reasonable anticipation of litigation.
The bottom line is that defendant will be subject to an adverse inference -- the a jury will be charged to presume the relevance of the evidence that is not available. In addition, the defendant will return to a judge who has already determined that it is grossly negligent in its management of litigation.
