If you received food not cooked to your specifications, you’d send it back, right? Funny, but it’s the same with electronically stored information (ESI).
In a very recent case, Jannx Med. Sys. v. Methodist Hosps., Inc., 2010 U.S.Dist. LEXIS 122574 (N.D. Ind. Nov. 17, 2010), the requesting party did not specify the format of the documents it was requesting. Seizing upon this perceived “opening,” the producing party delivered documents in PDF format.
Was the receiving party stuck? No. First, the court agreed with the requesting party that the ESI that had been produced did not comply with Rule 34, in that the ESI had not been produced “in a form or forms in which it is ordinarily maintained or in a reasonably usable form or forms.” Fed. R. Civ. P. 34(b)(2)(E)(ii).
But, more to the point, the court referred to Paragraph 13 of the Advisory Committee’s Notes to the 2006 ESI amendments. The Advisory Committee cautioned that
the option to produce in a reasonably usable form does not mean that a
responding party is free to convert electronically stored information from
the form in which it is ordinarily maintained to a different form that makes
it more difficult or burdensome for the requesting party to use the
information efficiently in the litigation.
via ESIgns: E-Discovery Food for Thought: Unless You Ordered PDFs or TIFFs, Send Them Back.





