Some of the important trends include:
Discretionary Cost-Shifting. While the federal rules are silent on who should bear the cost of retrieving “inaccessible data,” certain states (e.g. Texas) require that a judge order a party requesting inaccessible data to incur the cost of producing it. Other states (like California and Mississippi) give the judge the option to shift the cost of producing “inaccessible” ESI. Given that the retrieval and production of “inaccessible data” can easily run cost hundreds of thousands of dollars, the discretion (or obligation) to shift those costs can have a significant impact on the litigation budget.
The Meet and Confer. Some states (like New York and Delaware) have made the “meet and confer” the cornerstone of their methodology for managing e-discovery, while other states have abandoned the requirement altogether. Do not miss this opportunity to seize control of the e-discovery process. Skipping an early “meet and confer” may appear to save money and avoid the aggravation of dealing with the “unreasonable” opposition; however, more progressive literature on e-discovery suggests that the “meet and confer” actually saves costs in the long-run and helps insulates the parties against the risk of e-discovery “do-overs” and even more severe sanctions.
Safe Harbor. Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 37(e) forbids a court from ordering sanctions against a party who has destroyed potentially relevant ESI “as a result of the routine, good-faith operation of an electronic information system.” Although practitioners debate how “safe” the harbor really is in federal courts, several states have eliminated the “safe harbor” altogether. This means that litigation holds in state courts should be implemented as soon as litigation is reasonably anticipated.
Sanctions. It also is important to know what activities (or failure to act) will prompt the court in your jurisdiction to levy sanctions. Counsel should not assume (especially in states that don’t follow the federal rules) that state courts will levy sanctions in the same manner and for the same conduct as federal courts. This analysis will inform your discovery strategy and help insulate against the risk of state court sanctions.

