Posts Tagged ‘Qualcomm Barbara Major’

What You can Learn from Qualcomm v. Broadcom

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

While not quite rising to the level of the Tiger Woods affair, the 2008 Qualcomm v. Broadcom brouhaha was the leading electronic  discovery scandal for two years.  Finally, the other shoe has dropped and despite all the handwringing and speculation, nobody will be disbarred.  Even so, there are many lessons to be learned from this case, but first a quick summary of the latest ruling.

On appeal, United States Magistrate Judge Barbara Major provided a quick summary for those who haven’t been following the trials and tribulations closely.  During the initial hearings, Judge Major found that Qualcomm “intentionally withheld tens of thousands of documents” during discovery.  In reaching this conclusion she also stressed the “quantity of suppressed documents, the ease with which Qualcomm ultimately was able to locate the documents, the simplicity and relevancy of the search terms and search locations that led to the discovery of the documents, and the lack of evidence indicating that Qualcomm had engaged in any meaningful oversight of its document production.”

As to finding the scapegoats, and levying $8.5M in sanctions, Judge Major held that six attorneys assisted Qualcomm in withholding the critical documents by “failing to conduct a reasonable inquiry into the adequacy of Qualcomm’s document production.”  She specifically identified several inadequacies in Qualcomm’s document search, including “the failure to search the computers belonging to, or used by, deponents and trial witnesses, the failure to adequately investigate when significant, relevant, and unproduced documents were discovered, and the failure to ensure there was a legitimate factual basis for the legal arguments made to the Court before making them.”

After her initial sanctions order was set aside, on remand Judge Major provided the responding attorneys with “an almost unlimited opportunity to conduct discovery,” and during fifteen months, the parties undertook a massive discovery effort – including searching and reviewing over 1.6 million documents.  In resolving the Order to Show Cause, Judge Major reversed tracks despite concluding “this massive discovery failure resulted from significant mistakes, oversights, and miscommunication on the part of both outside counsel and Qualcomm employees.”  Yet, the testimony “also revealed that the Responding Attorneys made significant efforts to comply with their discovery obligations,” causing the Court to ultimately decline to sanction any of the Responding Attorneys.

Judge Major, in an effort to better educate the bar, goes on to detail some of the many electronic data discovery abuses. This provides a set of important lessons that for anyone in the practice of e-discovery:

  1. “The fundamental problem in this case was an incredible breakdown in communication. The lack of meaningful communication permeated all of the relationships (amongst Qualcomm employees (including between Qualcomm engineers and in-house legal staff), between Qualcomm employees and outside legal counsel, and amongst outside counsel) and contributed to all of the other failures.” The communication issue has been raised by many including Judge Scheindlin (who quoted Cool Hand Luke) and is one of the many reasons that Sedona had pushed for more cooperation in the discovery process.  I cannot stress the important of transparent communication in the e-discovery process.  Not only is it mandated, it’s simply a wise practice.
  2. “Moreover, outside counsel did not obtain sufficient information from any source to understand how Qualcomm’s computer system is organized: where emails are stored, how often and to what location laptops and personal computers are backed up, whether, when and under what circumstances data from laptops are copied into repositories, what type of information is contained within the various databases and repositories, what records are maintained regarding the search for, and collection of, documents for litigation, etc.” This failure too, first widely articulated in Zubulake V (and followed by Phoenix Four, Inc.,) requires counsel to discover all sources of relevant information involving substantial communicating with information technology personnel and key players in the litigation to understand how electronic information is stored.  Failure here (even absent spoliation) is grounds for sanctions.  See, In re A&M Fla. Props. II, LLC, 2010 WL 1418861 (Bankr. S.D.N.Y. Apr. 7, 2010)
  3. “Finally, no attorney took supervisory responsibility for verifying that the necessary discovery had been conducted (including ensuring that all of the correct locations, servers, databases, repositories, and computers were correctly searched for potentially relevant documents) and that the resulting discovery supported the important legal arguments, claims, and defenses being presented to the court.” Where does the buck stop? It’s clear that a supervisory role with the proper experience in e-discovery is a critical component to an efficient and defensible e-discovery process.
  4. Another factor that contributed to the discovery failure was a lack of agreement amongst the participants regarding responsibility for document collection and production. See previous comments about the importance of cooperation and communication.

So despite all those blunders Judge Major wasn’t able to find any evidence that the involved attorneys acted in bad faith, which allowed her to rationalize her change of heart.  But, if I were counsel reading the opinion I wouldn’t take this reversal as a license to conduct shoddy legal discovery because the bar (pun intended) is quickly rising such that missteps occurring two years ago probably won’t be tolerated today (see Judge Scheindlin’s latest opinion – Pension Committee).

Qualcomm is still a wake-up call, but just one that (fortunately for the involved attorneys) won’t end up an enduring disaster.

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