
Meta Platforms, Inc. v. BrandTotal Ltd.
N.D. Cal. June 6, 2022
With the vast amounts of data organizations store and collect, it can become difficult to know when to suspend document retention policies and preserve the data those policies govern for litigation (or other reasons). In this case, the defendant’s failure to suspend their retention policies lead to spoliation and sanctions.
In this data privacy case around illegally collecting digital data, the plaintiff sought an adverse inference sanction against the defendant for deleting information relevant to the case.
During the discovery process, the defendant permitted the deletion of data from a log that was set for automatic deletion. As a result of the defendant’s failure to suspend their 30-day document retention policy, they failed to reserve data relevant to the matter. Based on deposition testimony, the defendant knew about the impending automatic deletion of this data and did nothing to stop it.
As a result, the plaintiff moved for spoliation sanctions against the defendant.
By, David Cohen, Esq., Chair - E-Discovery Group, Reed Smith LLP
This is not the first case where a judge avoided the sanctions limitations of FRCP 37(e) by instead relying on his “inherent authority.” Such rulings raise the stakes to avoid even negligent loss of electronic evidence from failing to suspend an automatic deletion protocol applicable to a non-traditional data source.