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Last week, Judge Mark G. Masler, issued a decision , Matter of Homer DG, LLC v. Planning Bd. of the Vil. of Homer, No. EF21-276, 2021 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 4658 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. Sep. 1, 2021), ruling on the Respondents' motion to dismiss the Petitioner's request for a judgment annulling the decision of the Village of Homer Planning Board to deny his site plan application. The Respondents contended that statute of limitations barred the Petitioner's proceeding because it was not filed within 30 days of the filing of the Board's decision. The Board made its decision at a virtual Zoom hearing on April 12, 2021. The village clerk provided the Petitioner with a letter on April 19, 2021 that it stated was official notification that the plan application was denied. The Petitioners brought their proceeding for a judgment on May 17, 2021.


The Respondents contend that the statute of limitations began to run at the conclusion of the April 12, 2021 virtual meeting because a recording of the meeting, which included the Board's votes and resolution, was automatically saved to the cloud system used by the village, and was also streamed and remained posted on a YouTube page. The Petitioner noted that it contacted the clerk immediately after the hearing requesting an official notice of the decision, and was never notified that the video saved online was the official decision of the Board.


Judge Masler acknowledged that the statute of limitations does not specify that a decision be in writing, and that the Electronic Signatures and Records Act authorizes the electronic storage of records. However, the Court did not find that the automatic storage of the hearing recording in the cloud constituted a filing of the decision with the clerk. According to state law, a properly filed record can only be kept in an offi-site location, like the cloud, with the permission of the Commissioner of Education. "Although the recording of the April 12, 2021 meeting of the Planning Board may have been accessible to the Village Clerk or the public, it was not 'filed' with the Village Clerk. Notably, the Village Clerk did not provide any evidence demonstrating that the commissioner of education consented to the storage of such records by the Village of Homer on the Zoom cloud management system, or that Zoom storage meets the criteria established by the commissioner of education for storage of local government records in facilities which are not owned or maintained by the local government (see 8 NYCRR § 185.8). " Id. at *3-4.


Judge Masler also found that the Planning Board could be estopped from asserting the statute of limitations defense because they failed to notify the Petitioner of their novel argument that the video recording of the Board meeting constituted the record of its decision, despite repeated requests by the Petitioner for the official decision.


The Board's effort to get the Court to bar the Petitioner's proceeding seems to be particularly unwarranted in this case. But it's easy to see how the cloud storage of a video recording of a decision made at a hearing could provide a more persuasive argument that a statute of limitations had begun to run in other circumstances.





 
 

Be sure not to miss that Twitter has an advanced search tool that you can use to filter down anyone's Twitter feed to a particular date range. See: https://twitter.com/search-advanced?lang=en , where you can login to your Twitter account. Enter the account name you want to search through in the field labeled, 'From these accounts'.



. . .then scroll down and enter a date range at the bottom of the search tool interface.



A search can also be run in the main Twitter search tool in this format:

(from:PolatCanRojava) until:2020-04-01 since:2014-11-01


Be sure to click on the 'Latest' tab to get the full results. On the 'Top' tab the search results will be cut off.





 
 

The Relativity guide for analytics provides a typical scenario in which an admin would use a categorization set when faced with reviewing a raw document set for a legal dispute.


Categorization groups conceptually similar documents together and can assign the same document to more than one category.


A reasonable approach to categorization would involve the following steps:


1. If you have around 10M documents, a keyword search could narrow it down about 70% to 3 million.


2. Create a saved search with the narrowed down data set.


2. Ascertain the key concepts involved in the dispute.


3. Assemble a set of example documents that can be used to identify other documents that are representative of the same concepts.


4. Create a categorization set, with the saved search selected in the 'Documents to Be Categorized' field.


5. Create an analytics index for the saved search.


6. Select the index for the categorization set.


7. The other fields on the layout for the categorization set can be left at their default settings.


8. Create analytics categories for each of the key concepts involved in the dispute. These are added to the Analytics Category object in the section entitled, 'Analytics Category'.


9. Select documents which reference the concepts for each of the categories. These are added to the Analytics Example object in the section at the end of the layout.


10. Click 'Categorize All Documents' on the console for the layout.



Tags will be created for the categorized documents in the field tree.

 
 

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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