
Owen v. Elastos Foundation
S.D.N.Y. 3/16/23 7:00
As employees continue to use personal devices to manage both work and personal business, it’s important that legal teams understand their clients’ data maps and investigate whether data management policies exist to address the expanding landscape of remote, international, and BYOD work practices.
In this securities case, plaintiffs brought a motion to compel production from the personal Google Gmail account of one of the defendant’s employees.
Ben Li, employee, director of operations, and board member at defendant Elastos, was the focus of the plaintiffs’ request for additional discovery. Although he was not a named defendant, Li’s Elastos company account was searched in connection with this action, with defendants producing over 13,000 documents from Li’s company account. In addition, defendants produced more than 30,000 documents from various Li sources, including his laptop, phone, and personal WeChat account that he used for Elastos business.
Discovery showed that Li received emails concerning a personal investment at his company account on two occasions and forwarded them to his personal account, and on another occasion received an email concerning Elastos business at his personal email account, which he forwarded to his company account. Defendants advised that Elastos did not have a policy that would give it control over data on its employees’ personal devices.
Plaintiffs requested the defendants search Li’s personal Google account. However, Li refused to grant access, and defendants maintained that the account was outside their possession, custody, and control.
By, Patricia E. Antezana, Reed Smith
In addition to its “practical ability” analysis, the court considered whether Mr. Li actually used his personal Gmail account for business purposes. The court instructed that plaintiffs could renew their request if further discovery showed a justification to search the personal account. As employees may use personal accounts to conduct work in different jurisdictions, parties must consider the many nuances that might affect their discovery obligations, including choice of law factors, relevance and proportionality considerations, client policies, and employee practices regarding use of personal devices.