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Don’t Point Your Finger at My Index! (Or lack, thereof…)

Posted By Frank Gonnello On February 16, 2009 @ 8:21 pm In e-Lessons Learned | 4 Comments

Index not required if produced data is searchable
By MWS

In re Lorazepam and Clorazepate Antitrust Litig., 2004 WL 77921 (D.D.C. Jan. 16, 2004).

Employee Implicated: Counsel for Health Insurance Company

e-Lesson Learned: A recipient of produced ESI can’t complain that the data isn’t indexed, so long as it’s readable and searchable.

 

This will teach you to keep your complaints to yourself, or at least to think outside the box a bit before you file a motion to compel production of an index.  Mylan Laboratories, a company which produced certain generic anti-anxiety medications, was charged with having entered into illegal agreements to monopolize the markets for those medications.  Certain health insurers opted out of the settlement of that cause and separately sought to recover from Mylan.

 

In response to the health insurers’ discovery requests, Mylan produced what the court called “a mountain of information.”  Some of this was produced in hard copy format, but much of it was produced in electronic format on 23 CDs.  The insurers complained to the court that Mylan did not index the data on the CDs.  The insurers argued that, because of the immense amount of information contained on the CDs, it would take the insurers too long and would cost too much for them to have to sift through all of such data.

 

The court implicitly chastised the insurers for so complaining, noting that it had previously urged the parties to “use their creative imaginations to see how the prior discovery responses could be rendered mutually searchable by electronic means.”  The court then held that, so long as the data on the CDs is readable and searchable, no index would be required.  The court then required the insurers to make the CDs available (at the insurers’ expense) to a company that specializes in electronic discovery so that it could be ascertained whether it would be too burdensome (primarily in terms of cost) for the insurers to simply search and index the documents on their own.

 

Prudent counsel will at least try to come up with some creative ideas for sifting through “mountains” of production received before wasting time and clients’ money on easily resolvable motions to compel.

 

MWS is a third-year law student at Seton Hall University in Newark, New Jersey.

 

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