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Today, the second edition of The Sedona Conference's Commentary on Rule 45 Subpoenas to Non-Parties was released. It's available here. Since the last edition was published in 2008, Federal Rules of Civil Procedure were revised in 2013 to make discovery from third parties easier. The revisions provide for the nationwide service of subpoenas, but subpoena recipients are only required to produce documents or ESI within 100 miles of their residence or place of employment.

Before issuing a subpoena, the Sedona Conference recommends that a threshold inquiry be conducted into whether or not a third party has possession, custody, or control of relevant ESI, and then determining what protections may be offered to a party. The Commentary specifically addresses common cloud storage arrangements that allow for a non-party to have possession of ESI, which a party has control over. "In such situations, the obligations and burdens to produce those documents and ESI, as well as the associated rights and protections regarding those documents and ESI, should be borne or exercised by the party to the litigation—rather than the non-party. Therefore, the request for documents and ESI should be made pursuant to Rule 34, not Rule 45, and directed to the party to the litigation in the first instance." Id. at 9-10.

While Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(e) allows for a party to be sanctioned for failing to preserve evidence, it does not apply to non-parties. Rule 45(g) provides for a sanction of contempt, usually resulting in a fine, for parties that fail to respond to a subpoena.

Rule 45(d) specifies that a party issuing a subpoena must take reasonable steps to avoid imposing an undue burden or expense on the non-party. The rule provides for cost shifting where significant expense is involved. This is mandatory when certain prerequisites are met and not within the court's discretion. A wider range of expenses are permitted for non-party discovery than for regular discovery. "Courts may allow non-party expenses to include printing costs and technology consulting fees as well as costs associated with collection, database creation, and, under certain circumstances, document review and privilege log preparation." Id. at 30. Attorney fees related to production may be included as necessary expenses, but those for litigating the subpoena will not be. Cost shifting may not be allowed if a non-party has benefited financially from a party.

Subpoenas may also be quashed pursuant to Rule 45(d) for imposing an undue burden; requiring the disclosure of privileged information; or failing to allow a reasonable time to comply.

The Commentary notes a six factor test used by many courts to determine if an undue burden has been imposed on a non-party:

1. The relevance of the requested information.

2. The requesting party's need for the ESI.

3. The scope of the request.

4. The time range of the request.

5. The particularity of the request.

6. The burden on the non-party.


 
 

The Tip of the Night for December 19, 2019 discussed the categorization of different platforms' emoji pictures by the Unicode Consortium. There are subtle differences in the images that different platforms, Google, Apple, Windows, and others, use for emojis of the same type - grinning face, heart, dog, and so on.

An emoji entered on one platform by an email author may be seen differently by her recipient using a different platform. So, in this example the bomb emoji, with a rather long fuse, I entered in a new message using my gmail account:

. . . is received in my hotmail account as a bomb emoji with a fuse that is exploding.

As pointed out in Eric Goldman's study, Emojis and the Law, "Individual emojis often qualify for copyright and trademark protection (and possibly other forms of IP protection), discouraging rival platforms from making identical emoji depictions and driving cross-platform depiction diversity." Eric Goldman, Emojis and the Law, 93 Wash. L. Rev. 1227, 1230 (2018).


 
 

The Unicode Consortium has categorized the world's emojis. Every emoji idea has unique five character alphanumeric code. See the full list here.

The standard smiley face emoji appears slightly different across platforms: Apple, Google, Facebook, Windows, Twitter, JoyPixels (an open source emoji designer); Samsung; and Gmail. Softbank, DoCoMo and KDDI are Japanese mobile phone providers. All are assigned the unicode 1F600. A slightly different version smiley face emoji with more expressive eyes receives a different unicode.

Emojis that can have quite significant evidentiary meaning can appear very different in different platforms. A variety of images are used for phones:

Standardizing emojis by unicode allows targeted searches to be run for particularly provocative emojis.

Emojis with the same unicode can convey subtly different meanings depending on which platform's emoji library they come from.


 
 

Sean O'Shea has more than 20 years of experience in the litigation support field with major law firms in New York and San Francisco.   He is an ACEDS Certified eDiscovery Specialist and a Relativity Certified Administrator.

The views expressed in this blog are those of the owner and do not reflect the views or opinions of the owner’s employer.

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