As our world becomes more globalized, litigation with discovery requests for information outside the borders of the United States will become more and more common. Read this case law alert to decipher when such a request may be granted by a domestic court.
In this action between a motorcycle race participant and the race organizer, both parties requested that the court issue a letter of request for discovery from a third party located in Switzerland.
The parties claimed that the third party “is in the possession of records relevant to [plaintiffs'] claims” and defendants “assert that these documents will bear on plaintiff's claims of physical injury and property damage, and defendants' defenses to those claims.”
To request this evidence from a party located in a foreign country, specifically Switzerland, the Hague Convention, "prescribes certain procedures by which a judicial authority in one contracting state may request evidence located in another contracting state."
Download the PDF version of this case law alert here.
Getting evidence from abroad requires careful attention to the foreign country’s law and how it impacts the Aerospatiale analysis. (The GDPR, not applicable to Switzerland, makes obtaining information from EU countries particularly difficult.)The most important lessons from this decision are: (1) if the parties agree on the procedure, the Court is more likely to approve, and (2) requests should be carefully limited and requests for “all documents” should be avoided (especially where “documents sufficient to show” will suffice).