| Law firms, client sanctioned: $1.25 Million for discovery games |
| Tuesday, June 19 2007 @ 04:22 PM EDT |
|
You are going to like this story from Law.com. Counsel and their client have just been sanctioned to the tune of $1.25 million for withholding evidence in discovery: Wiley Rein and its client and co-counsel were sanctioned $1.25 million Monday by a federal judge in Manhattan for withholding and trying to destroy evidence in a case that concerns insurance coverage for the World Trade Center, which was destroyed by terrorists on Sept. 11, 2001. Here's the ruling [PDF], hot off the presses. It's a New York case, so not in the same circuit as Utah, but if ever you wanted to know what it takes for a lawyer to get sanctioned, this is your day. Here's part of how the ruling reads, the part you will enjoy, in the sanctions section which begins on page 16 of the PDF: Rule 11 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure governs the conduct of attorneys in connection with their representations to the court, whether by signing, filing, submitting, or later advocating a pleading, written motion, or other paper. Fed. R. Civ. P. 11(b). Rule 11 provides that an attorney shall not make any representation to the court for any improper purpose, such as to harasss or cause unnecessary delay or needless increase in the cost of litigation... that an attorney shall not assert claims, defenses, or other legal contentions unless warranted by existing law or by a non-frivolous argument for the extension, modification or reversal of existing law or the establishment of new law... that an attorney shall not make allegations and other factual contentions without evidentiary support unless, if specifically so identified, such contentions are likely to have evidentiary support after a reasonable opportunity for further investigation or discovery... and similarly that an attorney shall not deny factual contentions unless the evidence warrants such denials or unless, if specifically so identified, such denials are based on a lack of information or belief.... The evidence that was not timely produced was actually erased from computers, and the paper copies, according to the ruling, was obtained by the law firm who copied it "but they left it buried in a box for nearly two years and failed to timely produce it. Counsel's failure to recognize the importance of this document, and to produce it timely, especially when alerted to its possible existence by opposing counsel, also constitutes a violation of discovery obligations." Why $1.25 million? Because the judge wrote, sanctions should be "limited to what is sufficient to deter repetition of such conduct or comparable conduct by others similarly situated." I told you you'd like this. I wonder if SCO no regrets asking the court to revisit a couple of motions, including the one about trying to include evidence it didn't timely present? The public, the judge continues, has an interest in "fair adjudication" of litigation: Clearly, Zurich's decision to assert and maintain its denials and defenses regarding the Port Authority's status as Additional Insured multiplied proceedings, causes substantial expense to the parties, caused substantial waste of court time, and insulted public and judicial expectations of the standard of conduct expected of attorneys....And having multiplied proceedings by asserting denials and defenses that could not be supported by the evidence, the conduct of Zurich and its counsel, in their efforts to do away with evidence, to not produce evidence, and to slow up production of evidence until its utility might be attenuated, compounded the wrongdoing that they perptrated. Zowie. You might also find a case referenced on page 23 of interest: "Although a party's uncommunicated subjective intent cannot supply the ultimate meaning of an ambiguous contract, it is quite another thing to hold that such evidence is wholly irrelevant and inadmissible for other purposes." SR Int'l Bus.Ins.Co.... SCO's "evidence" regarding the meaning of the APA and amendments, should the judge find that the contract is ambiguous, probably won't help it, then, since most of it is precisely subjective intent, folks telling now what they thought it was supposed to mean back then. |
|
Groklaw © Copyright 2003-2007 Pamela Jones. All trademarks and copyrights on this page are owned by their respective owners. PJ's articles are licensed under a Creative Commons License |
Site layout based on Woodlands theme by Bryan Bell. Groklaw logo by John Crowley. News Picks logo by Ted Thompson. Powered By GeekLog Created this page in 0.19 seconds |