
Advanced Magnesium Alloys Corp. v. Dery (S.D. Ind. Aug. 5, 2022)
E-Discovery is an iterative process. In this case, the court re-affirmed that notion, ruling that search terms should evolve as the parties learn more about their case, including local jargon used in communications between custodians privy to the lawsuit.
In this case about two businesses accused of illegally conspiring to secure a third-party investment, the plaintiff requested that one of the defendants produce all text messages between two executives during a one-month period to provide context around already produced text messages.
During e-discovery, the plaintiffs requested that one of the defendants produce text messages surrounding an alleged meeting between defendants, as the prior production included messages with mysterious language that may have alluded to the alleged meeting.
In depositions, the defendants said they couldn’t recall using this mysterious language or if this meeting ever occurred. The defendants argued that this was a fishing expedition and that they were never involved in such a meeting.
Based on this ambiguity, the plaintiff moved to compel production of all text messages within a one-month period during the time when the meeting may have occurred.
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This case illustrates that courts will not support a “gamesmanship” approach to discovery. A party cannot shield information from discovery by using aliases (or code words) in communications, failing to reveal the aliases during search term negotiations, and then refusing to produce documents that did not hit the search terms.