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  • videocam On-Demand
  • card_travel Class Action and Other Litigation
  • schedule 90 minutes

Litigation Holds in Class Actions: Triggering Events, Scope of Hold, Termination, Forms

Avoiding Costly Missteps that Empower the Other Side

$297.00

This course is $0 with these passes:

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Description

It is simple to say that there is a litigation hold obligation. It is harder to describe and comply with that obligation. Failure to do so gives up valuable ground in class actions. Counsel must arm themselves with the knowledge and tools necessary to comply with the litigation hold requirement.

A duty to preserve evidence arises when a party reasonably anticipates litigation. Although sometimes that point in time is clear (say, an explosion), more often, it is nebulous. Further, the party must determine what to hold and how to manage in the context of retention/disposal policies. Of course, once a party receives a notice letter or a lawsuit, clarity ensues.

Unlike in single-party litigation, where a company can isolate communications with its opponent and quickly identify those who dealt with the opponent, class action cases present all-encompassing obligations. A hold must only be "reasonable," but several factors determine what is reasonable. The breadth of the inquiry as to reasonability increases with the scope of the dispute.

Listen as this experienced panel of class action attorneys explores the challenges of litigation holds. The panel will discuss the starting point of such holds, the scope of those holds, and the oft-ignored issue of the end of the holds. The panel will also discuss form documents that counsel should have in its arsenal to address the issue.

Presented By

Melinda F. Levitt
Partner
Foley & Lardner LLP

Ms. Levitt’s practice focuses on complex commercial litigation, including the areas of antitrust, securities, intellectual property and class action defense work in matters pending before federal and state courts, as well as various federal agencies. She has developed particular experience in complex electronic discovery and obtaining discovery from companies abroad. She has also written extensively on the subject.

Ronni D. Solomon
Partner
King & Spalding LLP

Ms. Solomon co-leads the firm’s E-Discovery practice and focuses exclusively on e-discovery issues. She has significant experience managing e-discovery in crisis litigation that spans multiple regulatory, investigatory and civil matters and helping clients ensure that e-discovery does not become a costly sideshow. Ms. Solomon also serves as National E-Discovery Counsel for large corporations and works with clients on information governance and defensible deletion issues. She was a member of the Steering Committee of Working Group 1 of The Sedona Conference on Best Practices for Electronic Discovery and Records Management and sits on the Advisory Board of the Georgetown Law Advanced E-Discovery Institute. Ms. Solomon is Chairperson of the International Legal Holds Brainstorming Group for Working Group 6 of the Sedona Conference, International Electronic Information Management, Discovery and Disclosure, which focuses on international issues relating to disclosure, cross-border discovery, and privacy.

Credit Information
  • This 90-minute webinar is eligible in most states for 1.5 CLE credits.


  • Live Online


    On Demand

Date + Time

  • event

    Wednesday, February 5, 2020

  • schedule

    1:00 p.m. ET./10:00 a.m. PT

  1. Starting point of a litigation hold
    1. Reasonable anticipation of litgation
    2. Notice from an adverse party
    3. Commencement of litigation
  2. Scope of hold
    1. Self-started hold vs. demanded hold
    2. Relevancy
    3. Balancing and proportionality
    4. Ability to demand others to hold
  3. Consequences of failure
    1. Failure to hold at all
    2. Ineffective hold
  4. Termination of hold
    1. Anticipation hold not followed by litigation
    2. When does litigation "end"?

This panel will review these and other important and complex matters:

  • Aside from notice, or actual litigation, is there a specific time a hold must start?
  • What judgment and discretion can a party exercise before being guided by a court as to the scope of a hold?
  • What are the real dangers of improper or ineffective holds?
  • When can a party stop spending money and time on a hold?